Sunday, 18 December 2022

Walking down a street

 

WORD ON THE STREET

Resident? Visitor? Tourist, troubador or ghost, we’re looking for poems, snippets and short stories that celebrate ( or haunt, or disturb) Buxton’s Spring Gardens


Deadline: 31st January 2023

Send as word doc to: creepingtoad@btinternet.com



Main project information on this blog, here


This post is to share images of Spring Gardens…..old photos a painting and generally though-provoking scenes…where we have dates, they’ll be dated


These images are here to intrigue, provoke, and hopefully inspire! If you live in Buxton, try standing in the same place as the photo and reflect on the changes you can see, feel, imagine....this is a rather random selection. We'll post more streamlined selections over the next few weeks


1820, view along Spring Gardens - Sheffield turnpike road
Grove Hotel and bottom of Terrace Road
Lawson's Vaults, No 2 Spring Gardens
Miller's Cafe, Spring Gardens, 1928
Milton's Head pub
corner of Spring Gardens and Terrace Road
looking towards the Crescent and the Slopes, including Winster Place and Royal Hotel
a parade in the rain
Shakespeare Hotel

Friday, 16 December 2022

All teeth and claws

 The Lost Cats of Derbyshire
a new project, public events and a wonderful procession

cave lion skull in Buxton Museum

Once upon a time, big cats roamed the hills round Buxton. Scimitar-toothed cats* (Victory Quarry, Dove Holes) were here when humans wandered into the Peaks about 30,000 years ago, while cave lions lingered until about 12,000 years ago, (Hindlow Cave, near Earl Sterndale). Lynx loitered longer than anyone realised and might have been prowling Scottish forests into this millennium. Then there are our domestic moggies now, offering affection and purrs and sometimes causing chaos among our small birds and mammals

And, of course, at the moment, we have Mysterious Big Cats being reported like shadowy ghosts from across the county!

 

We’re celebrating cats! Especially the Lost Cats of our hills, cats who knew this land in different climates, with warmer– or colder – days and using their stories to look at the world around us as it changes again

 

cave lion reconstruction
As part of the Our Street programme with Buxton’s Heritage Action Zone, Buxton Museum and Art Gallery are bringing these lost cats back to the town. We’ll look at the animals that used to live here, reflecting on their lives as climates changed and wondering what they might make of our modern world and how our cats will respond to current climate changes. Connecting with the Art Fund’s The Wild Escape initiative, this project will use museum collections (we have amazing fossils and bones in Buxton Museum) to inspire people to reach out from those Museums and explore the world around us in new ways

 


Homotherium reconstruction

A partnership between the Museum, and Our Street, Lost Cats will draw together other local groups as well. Buxton Civic Association, the Babbling Vagabonds, Stone and Water and ourselves here at Creeping Toad are all involved. There will be a programme of events encouraging public participation. As the project develops further, there might be art exhibitions, origami cat workshops and a mysterious cat trail along Spring Gardens with the Our Street Youth Board.
 

 

Events will be posted on the Museum, Creeping Toad and Stone and Water blogs and through the social media of all the partners (links below)

 

Getting started

drawing a tiger's eye

Big Cats: Big Pictures:
our first event on Thursday January 5th at Buxton Museum and Art Gallery….details to follow. This will be a free event, inviting people to look at the Collection’s fossils and bones, handle models, sketch, draw, colour and while we can’t do lifesize pictures of scimitar-toothed cats, we can probably manage a picture as big as a cave lion’s face….

 

Look out for:

  • Another event on Thursday 23rd February
  • d-i-y guide to making your own Big Cat Puppet to join the procession
  • more events in March and April
  • workshops for local schools

 

All this activity, will build up to a procession, the Carnival of the Cats on Earth Day, Saturday 22nd April 2023. A parade of big cats, small cats, cat-masked children, ancient ghost cat puppets will prowl along Spring Gardens and into Pavilion Gardens.There in the gardens, we’ll invite people to bring along their own snacks for a Kitty-cat Picnic (what would you bring for such a picnic? Mouse-shaped cakes? Sabre-tooth baguettes? Crunchy cat claws?). 

 

From museum displays, through the shopping streets of our town and into the Gardens that grow in the heart of Buxton, we’ll bring lost cats, forgotten cats, modern cats and maybe even future felines and have a celebration of the wildlife of Derbyshire.




 

*Our cats are Homotherium: their teeth aren't as big as those of "sabre-tooth" cats so they are usually labelled scimitars!

Images: 

  • photos are from Buxton Museum and Art Gallery's collection
  • "Tiger's eye" and "scribbled lion" are by Gordon MacLellan
  • Cave lion and Homotherium reconstructions are from online sources with thanks and apologies to the artists responsible





 



 

 

Sunday, 11 December 2022

Spring Garden's stories

 A WORD ON THE STREET 

we're looking for new poems about Buxton's Spring Gardens
Resident? Visitor? Tourist, troubadour or ghost, we’re looking for poems, snippets and short stories that celebrate ( or haunt, or disturb) Buxton’s Spring Gardens


Shakespeare Hotel

Deadline: 31st January 2023

Work needs to be your own (or submitted with original author's credit and permission!)

Length: please keep it short: no more than 500 words/ Ownership remains yours....if further publication of work arising from this project looks likely, we'll come back to you for formal agreements

Send as word doc to: creepingtoad@btinternet.com

 


Miller's Cafe and Tea Room

To take a walk along Spring Gardens in Buxton is to wander through a slice of the town’s history. The Grove Hotel at one end is said to have been named in memory of a sacred grove from the town’s Roman and pre-Roman history. Metal arcades hail from the heyday of  visitors “taking the waters” (baths can still be seen (but not taken) in the Cavendish Arcade and the Pump Room). The Springs Arcade is more recent, as are many of the shops, but they still hold secrets, hide secrets, and sit squarely beside or on top of relics of other times. 

Memories linger. The Shakespeare Garage is the last legacy of the Shakespeare Hotel and the Shakespeare Theatre. Tucked away courtyards speak of other street patterns.

Everything changes. The Picture House that became the Spa Cinema has gone but the NatWest corner that once sported an ice cream parlour and an intriguing flight of steps is now going to change again.

 

What matters to you when you walk along the Gardens: a shopping list, a café, this shop or that shop, a friend you’re going to meet, a pigeon sitting on an awning watching you?

 

Milton's Head Pub?

As part of the Our Street project within the Buxton Heritage Action Zone, “Word on the Street” is collecting poems. What might inspire you to scribble a sketch with words? To tell us a tale of shopping? To slide through time to earlier days? To turn a shopping list into rhythm and rhyme? We are mostly looking for poems (or short prose pieces) around spring Gardens but if you wanted to write about Buxton as a whole or other aspects pf the town, please do! All of this work will feed into a drop-in day for the public on February 19th 2023 at The Pump Room (times will follow) where some of the work received will feature in a small exhibition. Work will also appear in a series of posts here for you to read, laugh at and share with all your friends, relatives and the neighbours who really annoy you….Sorry, no prizes but our thanks, no reward but public delight (hopefully) in your words

 

Where might you start?

  • New shops, old shops
  • Go shopping through time – look at the photos!
  • Or people-watching through time
  • hidden places: the River Wye runs in culverts under The Springs
  • lost places: Shakespeare Theatre for one
  • Charity shopping
  • Café life (so many tables in the Gardens, so many places to stop and chat – both now and 100 years ago)
  • Wells: the Children’s Well at the western end is the most recent addition to our town’s collection of wells
  • Individual shops and spaces: an assignation in Hargreave’s Tea Rooms (now, or maybe 100 years ago?)
  • Music, celebration, an older route for the carnival….
  • Winter in Buxton…..(there's a lovely post by Buxton Museum and Art Gallery about winters here....)

 

The Picture House

Writing ideas? Need a thought to get you started?


Take a word, add another, add a feeling, season and spice and see what comes next

 

Inspiration: there are some historic images of Spring Gardens here, more will follow

 

Stuck for what to write? Try: 

  • an acrostic: take the name of a shop perhaps and let the letters of that become the first letters of the lines of a poem
  • a haiku: three lines, 5 syllables, 7 syllables then 5 again: ideally there are two observations (lines 1 and 2) then your own response (line 3)…the syllables aren’t fixed…think as 2 observations, a breath and a reaction and improvise!
  • Rhyme if you want to (street, feet, neat, door, more, sore, shop, drop, pop….lots of easy rhymes along the Gardens) but you don’t have to!
  • Take a set of phrases about Spring Gardens and try jumbling them up and create a journey of images along the Gardens
  • limerick if you need to! usually lines 1, 2 and 5 rhyme with 8 or 9 syllables, while 3 and 4 rhyme and have 5 or 6 syllables...

 

OUR STREET

‘Our Street’ will bring Buxton people together. Through a series of events and activities, we’ll support local artists and organisations to connect communities with Spring Gardens and its surrounding streets. We’ll celebrate the heritage of the area, have fun and create lasting memories for participants and audiences, locals and visitors, young and old.


Buxton Museum and Art Gallery

many thanks to Buxton Museum and Art Gallery and Derbyshire County Council for supplying these (and more) wonderful images of an older version of Spring Gardens


Spring Gardens looking towards the Crescent

Lawson's Vaults, No. 2 Spring Gardens

corner of Spring Gardens and Terrace Road: look at the level of the road!









Sunday, 7 August 2022

City dreaming

 


New city dreamings:

a few days in Reykjavik

 

I have a few days here in the Land of Fire and Ice – neither of which have I seen much of. I’m in Reykjavik. I was due to be here for The Creativity Conference but when the 2022 conference went entirely digital and left Iceland behind, I thought I would come anyway (it's not too late to connect up with this year;'s Conference and see all our sessions recorded...and there will be mor next year! follow the link above))

 

And no, I haven’t done Golden Circles, or plunged into hot springs, or gone skinny-dipping in lava or wind-surfed a glacier or pursued whales on waterskies (go on, visualise it:  a whale on waterskies….seal yes, but whale….). And I have got very tired of people telling me where I should go, and what I should do but never asking what I want to do….

 


I can walk to the seafront with its piled-boulder defences in just a few minutes from my apartment. I can sit here in one of those late northern evening and watch the clouds gather, piling up and then resting on the mountains across the bay. Mountains! Mountains holding cloud and suddenly I am somewhere warmer watching Table Mountain and the cityscapes of Cape Town.

 


 

 

So what do I want to do? Did I want to do?  That made me reflect on how I visit new places and I realise that especially in cities I don’t know, I just wander. Museums, yes. Art Galleries, yes. Castles, dungeons, ruins, yes. Botanic Gardens, always. But more than anything, I love new cities for simply watching.

 

I want to know “what makes this place home” or maybe “how would I live here?”. So I watch people. Listen to people. Talk to strangers. Have conversations with the Hidden Folk (as Those Others are called here), watch birds, miss amphibians (here) and generally revel in the quiet things. I ask myself lots of questions. Sometimes I ask other people, but mostly I just wonder

 


I love places for themselves: not for the spectacles they offer but for the lives they reveal. So, here, yes, food is expensive (but how high are wages?). Here, I meet very few e-cigarettes compared to UK and see what feels like a lot of people smoking. Here, I don’t walk through the sudden sweet smell of pot. Good buses, quick buses. People who smile. Electric scooters whizzing about. Street art. Public art. Amazing statues. Statues of people who were doubtless worthy but did they have to be turned into such tedious statues (same goes for most municipal areas in the world it would seem)? Lots of languages and especially exciting when the dominant language is not English. Humbling at how good Icelanders’ English is. Here, my tatooed feet inspire wonder.

 

 

 

And how could I not love a city who turns out in such revelry and diversity and enthusiasm for Pride? And who even have a street painted with rainbows and include pink flamingoes in the march (I am pretty sure the Flamingo Animateurs with Brits…)

 

More street trees than I was expecting…rowan, hairy birch, sweet-scented poplars, leathery tea-leaved willow but it took several days before I saw blackbirds and fieldfares and starlings. There is a little auk in the bay – or maybe it’s a murrelet. I’m not sure but have enjoyed its disappearing acts: dives without effort and is gone. There are gulls and more gulls and terns lilting along the line of the seafront. And in the evening the moon jellies show as they hover in the waves below the great boulders that protect the shore

 

And there is the Sun Voyager monument and I wonder all over again how fascinating it is for people to know their history in this land so precisely. Yes, there are challenges about the Book of Settlement but when those Vikings arrived they were the first: for once no native people to displace (there were rumoured to be some Celtic monks but no-one knows for sure). The story of people in this land of fire and ice is remarkably charted and the sense of place and belonging this might offer – must offer? That is what I would like to talk to people about...


 

 

Friday, 15 July 2022

Mouse maps and free events

 

Mouse Maps and wandering creatures
free events in Buxton
Summer 2022


As the summer opens up around us, working with the Stronger Roots project and the Buxton Civic Association, Creeping Toad is organising a spire soft free public events through the rest of July and August….


You can follow updates on event plans through

Stronger Roots/BCA: events page: https://buxtoncivicassociation.org.uk/events-and-bookings/

Eventbrite: Buxton Civic Association Limited Events | Eventbrite

Facebook: @BCABuxtonCivicAssociation

Twitter: @BCA1967


Creeping Toad:

Facebook: @creepingtoad

Twitter: @creepingtoad



Sunday 24th July

A Mouse’s Journey

how do we understand the world – as mice, moles, birds and people

11:00 – 15:30

Venue: Buxton Country Park, Green Lane, Buxton, Derbyshire, SK17 9DH


Follow the flags from the steps into the wood

 

A mouse builds its own map of the world around it: places for food, for shelter, for safety, of danger. Every journey  – even the water running through the caves beneath Buxton’s hills – tells a story that can cross time as well as landscapes. We will be building our own maps of animal journeys through Grinlow Woods: mice in the undergrowth, moles underground, bees among the flowers, birds through the tree tops.  We’ll also look at the long-distance adventures of our swallows and curlews and pick up ancient human journeys through our hills: packhorse paths, Stone age tracks, Roman roads can all be found here. 


No bookings necessary - just drop by and join in!

 


This event is part of the Festival of Archaeology. You might like to visit their event programme and see what other explorations of the ancient and the not so old you might venture into!

 


Woodland Tuesdays

Last summer we had a great time doing something creative and often rather crazy (I’m thinking of pom-pom monsters in the pouring rain and discussions about the Gadley Pirates ailing boats over the woodland floor) every Tuesday through the school summer holidays. Our Woodland Tuesday sessions are back again this summer…

 

For all these events: 

·      when you reach the wood, follow the flags to find the activity

·      you can book a free place through Eventbrite – but you can also just turn up on the morning! (Eventbrite links are placed for each session)

·      allow 30 – 45 minutes to do the activity (but remember you can go exploring the woods afterwards!)

 


1. Tuesday 26
th July 

The Wild Beasts of Buxton

in Corbar Woods, Corbar Road, Buxton, SK17

What3words location: pill.friends.snooping 

10:30 – 13:00

Making crazy puppets inspired by the woods: foxes with furry paws and snapping jaws, long wriggling snakes and cute mice

Eventbrite link

 


2. Tuesday 2
nd August 

Pom-pom wonders

in Grinlow Woods, Buxton Country Park, Green Lane, Buxton, SK17 9DH

10:30 – 13:00

Pompom-flowers, woolly bumblebees, fluffy butterflies or unknown creatures that sit on your nose! Where will our pompoms take us today? Join us to invent some fabulous pompom creatures and the world they live in. bring your own pompom maker if you have one (we have lots but more are always helpful!)

Eventbrite link



3. Tuesday 9th August

Woodland Art

in Corbar Woods, Corbar Road, Buxton

What3words location: pill.friends.snooping 

10:30 – 13:00

Capture our woods, the animals, the trees, the stories, the monsters with pencils and paper, and pictures made from natural materials, or paint made from mud. A careful session or maybe a messy one! It’s up to you! 

Eventbrite link 




4. Tuesday 16th August 

The Gadley Pirates

in Gadley Woods, Gadley Lane, off A53 Leek Rd, Buxton

What3words: oatmeal.shelter.flickers

10:30 – 13:00

The Gadley Pirates are back! Join us to make tiny pirate puppets, devise treasure maps, find some nature treasures and go home with a box full of wonders – and a pirate to guard it!

Eventbrite link

 



5. Tuesday 23
rd August 

Fairies, goblins and dragons

in Grinlow Woods, Buxton Country Park, Green Lane, Buxton, SK17 9DH 

10:30 – 13:00

Twigs, leaves, mud and more will help, a twist, a tie and a face will give us some strange and wonderful creatures that might (or might not) live in our woods. Time to think and experiment and make a world of adventures

Eventbrite link


explore,     

walk,    

wander,    

make,   

talk

celebrate....a summer of creativity 

in the woods of Buxton!