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!

 




Wednesday 13 July 2022

Digging, shovelling, sowing and growing


Growing gardens, stories and wonder
Botany Bay project, summer 2022


We are

Diggers and shovellers,

Weeders and waterers.

We are strawberry-savers

And raspberry-tasters.

(Medlock Primary School, Manchester)

 


Hurst Drive, 1
We had started with plans. There were discussions, visits to museums, to gardens, visits from storytellers, gardeners, cultural experts. Our new gardeners sowed ideas, watered imaginations, got carried away. Eventually there was earth and digging and grubby hands and seeds in pots

 

There were successes. There have been disasters. There have been slow starts and reluctant germinations, but gradually our Botany Bay gardens are taking shape. 

 

We’re proud of our team

And all our hard work

We’re proud that we can deal with our problems.

We want to start eating the food that we grow,

And we want to grow to help each other,

To help our school, to help the animals that visit us.

(Oswald Road Primary School, Manchester)

 

“BOTANY BAY is a Participation and Learning project, supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund.  The project makes use of the migration histories of plants and crops, and their Indigenous cultural heritage in relation to ecology and reciprocity, as a way to stimulate young people to explore new ways of living.  The Covid-19 pandemic and the climate crisis have made a re-assessment and recalibration of human relationships to the non-human an urgent necessity, and young people have to be at the heart of this process, forging a future for humanity and the planet.” (Introduction from the ORIGINS website)

 

I was one of those early visitors and this summer returned to 4 of our gardening schools. I was shown round vegetable beds, introduced to sunflowers, had a club's organic principles explained to me, sampled raspberries and commiserated with one group who had seen all their work trampled by other children at their school – not maliciously, just people who did not realise that these were seed beds and not just bare patches of earth. 

Hurst Drive sunflower

We have a garden waiting

Like an idea in the dark of the earth,

Children waiting to dig,

Seeds waiting to grow,

Dreams waiting to flower

Into a garden of wonders. 

 

Our garden will be a bright garden,

And have a beautiful blossom tree

And there will be strawberries…

Juicy strawberries,

The juiciest strawberries in all of London!

And when our strawberries are ripe and ready 

We’ll pick them and wash them and eat them.

(Cavendish Primary School, London)

 

Part of my role within the wider Botany Bay project is to help the Gardening groups build the stories of their gardens. On this trip we were looking at words: harvesting, tasting, enjoying words like strawberries. In the autumn or winter, we are planning on creating Garden Ceremonies – or Sharings or Events (we’re not quite sure what!) and the collective poems that are growing out of these sessions will feed into those occasions….


Oswald Road gardeners are also poets and artists


For now, I’d like to share some of our words and some pictures of progress with a round of applause for all our gardeners (schools are listed below!) and with many thanks to the teachers, support staff, volunteers, and simply everyone who has been helping these gardens grow!

 

In our garden

Chamomile beams a sunny smile
And garden queens grow ivy-white crowns.

The massive hearts of squash leaves

Shade their sisters from the sun

While sunflowers grow as bright as the sun and stars

And the forget-me-nots never forget us.

Here rosemary grows with frosted leaves

And chives are spicy although garlic is best.

 

We are proud of this garden and

How quickly it grows, and

How richly it flowers, and

How friendly it becomes, and

How delicious it will be.

We are proud of our garden and all it holds,

We are proud of our gardeners and all their hard work.

 

In our garden,

Everyone deserves a crown

We are proud of our garden. 

It deserves to be treated with respect and love.

(Hurst Drive Primary School, Waltham Cross)



Woven into all this digging and sowing is an awareness that when we plant a garden we are also planting stories and connecting to cultures - both our own and cultures and communities in far away places. We hope  that if we listen to the stories that belong to those people and their plants it might help us appreciate our gardens more deeply and grow those gardens more effectively. So we know we are growing stories as we grow gardens: old stories, ancient stories and brand new ones of our own.


In our garden,

We have snail-rails

And parties for bees,

Logs for woodlice

And tree-stumps for beetles...


In our garden,

We are growing a team,

Who work together,

Who help each other,

Who support each other,

Who care for this garden.

(Medlock Primary School)


With many thanks to the Botany Bay team and to our schools and their gardening teams

Cavendish Primary School, Chiswick, London

Chiswick High School, London

Hurst Drive Primary School, Waltham Cross, Herts

Medlock Primary School, Manchester