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Aila Nelson, 10, ran on a human hamster wheel to make her sno-cone.
Collin Torres, 3, got his face painted to look like the Hulk.
Reagan Torres, 4, showed off her beautiful face painting.
Christopher Gil, 3, was all smiles after playing in a bounce house.
Remi Russell, 4, loved playing with the hula hoops.
Lawrence and Lauris Johnson, owners of MyFamily Orthodontics and V’s Barbershop, brought along 5-year-old Leilani and 1-year-old Liana to enjoy the event.
Johanna Padilla took a look at the map of Horizon West.
Goldendoodle Amos was a hit among block-party attendees.
Zoey Van Lue, 5, painted a kindness rock.
Block party attendees wrote out messages to the survivors of the Parkland school shooting.
Madison Zimmerman watched as her sno-cone was filled with blue syrup.
Healthy West Orange representative Tricia Wiles and Horizon West Alliance board member Jeff Loeffert quizzed Aayan Imran on safety knowledge.
Aila Hendry, 5, and Skye Hendry, 2, dug into their sno-cones.
Healthy West Orange representative Tricia Wiles was all smiles with Aayan Imran and Emma Hendry.
Dr. Cheri Richardson, vice president of the Windermere Wolverines Legacy Fund, held up some of the notes attendees wrote to survivors of the Parkland school shooting.
HORIZON WEST The blazing sun didn’t stop hundreds of Horizon West residents from coming to their community’s block party in Hamlin on Saturday, Feb. 24. The block party featured dozens of local vendors, many of which focus on health and safety, as well as bounce houses, face painting, a human hamster wheel, food and more. Kids loved running on the hamster-wheel contraption, which doubled as a sno-cone maker, and everyone had a chance to enter a raffle and win fun prizes.