Monday 27 February 2023

Words in bombazine and crepe

 


Words in bombazine and crepe...

Words on the Street
final collections



In bombazine and crepe,

Public attention she’d crave

So magazines she courted

And with photographers flirted….

(Vol 1, p11)


We asked the questions 

 

What words might tell 

The tale of a town?

What rhymes might wreck reputations

And wake a tourist’s frown?

 

 

We scattered images over tabletops: 100 years of Spring Gardens’ shops, cafĂ©, hotels and more.


We scribbled, talked, laughed, composed more carefully and generally dived into the richness of a single street. That in itself is intriguing: following the changing patterns of shopfronts, street furniture and the buildings themselves. And the wonders of shop window displays from the Ladybird Book fortnight (1960s) to knitting displays, sweet shop temptations….

 


As workshop artists we loved it all and were delighted when our visitors responded with as much enthusiasm. Enthusiasm that went in direction we wouldn’t have expected – words from the pigeons who’ve seen it all, thoughts about geese passing high overhead, a reflective monologue over a flat white, Greek Mythology (go on, find the Medusa story in Volume 3 and then go and find Medusa’s daughter among the carved faces on our buildings)…


As we reach the end of the Words on the Street project from the Buxton Our Street initiative, we'd like to share the richness (and craziness) of the work that we've received. We ended up with so much material that we can’t just post it here but you can download the work through the link, here:


Words on the Street poems and stories


There are three files. They are not particularly big files or really that long, just hugely varied!


You will find:

  • Volume 1: contributions we received by email and our own practice pieces, sued to give participants ideas
  • Volume 2: work from our friends at Borderland Voices: the BV regular writing group took Buxton’s Spring Gardens and the thought of a town’s “High Street” as a theme for their writing for a couple of sessions.
  • Volume 3: Buxton Community School: here is an explosion of poems and stories from year 7 students at Buxton Community School.

Through the Words on the Street project we have been hugely helped by Buxton Museum and Art Gallery, Borderland Voices, and Buxton Crescent Heritage Trust. Our thanks go to these friends and to all the authors, poets, storytellers and troublemakers who have contributed to the project!
 

SPRING GARDENS

Should we plant

Pear trees and pink

Roses

In tubs and beds

Neatly along the

Gardens?

 

Gathering apples and 

Red, ripe raspberries might

Delight

Everyone, inviting them to

Nibble greedily

(Vol 1, p11)

 








Saturday 25 February 2023

Lost Cat Puppets - make your own

 Snow cats, flower cats,  fierce cats, friendly cats
Make your own Lost Cat Puppet

 

We’ve been making some wonderful Lost Cat puppets. If you missed us at Buxton Museum, why not have a go and make your own puppet?



Once upon a time, big cats roamed the hills of 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 our own 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

 

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. Building up to a wonderful Carnival of the Cats on Sunday 23rd April (times and meeting points to follow!), there are events making Lost Cat Puppets, masks, small puppets and helping make a large cat puppet

 

Today we’d like to invite you to make your own Lost Cat puppet, a mini-sabre-tooth to walk beside you. The instructions feel quite long but the making is quite straightforward and you can improvise around the instructions!

 


You will need:

  • 2 sheets of card (A4 size) – or an empty cereal packet
  • Some old socks or a T-shirt to cut up ( we also used strips of fur fabric for legs and tails)
  • Pens for colouring in
  • Scrap paper and double-sided tape (or a gluestick)
  • Strong sticky tape
  • A stapler
  • Some thin string
  • 2 pea-sticks or other thin canes
  • A sharp spike for making holes
  • An empty plastic bottle – about 1 litre size should do

 



1. First Steps (pawprints?).
Cut your T-shirt (or whatever) into strips about 60 cm long (they don’t need to be quite that long) and about 8cm wide – you’ll need 6 of these strips

Take 4 of these strips and tie a knot at one end and then about a finger-length further along the the strip – this gives you a paw and a knee joint.

 


Lay one sheet of card flat on a table and place your plastic bottle on it with the top at one end of the sheet. Mark where the base of the bottle comes to – hopefully a few cm short of the other end of the sheet. Mark that point – later on this will be the Cat’s bottom! If your bottle is longer than the card, use some strong scissors to cut the top end off the bottle so it will fit. 

 

If you are using a box….go on to #2

 

2. Fold your card in half lengthways and a small curve off the front corners. Using a cereal packet? Start at one corner and measure along the long side about 30 – 35 cm. You need to cut the box so we have 2 panels joined by the side of the box with those panels being about 35 cm long and maybe 10-12 cm deep. Draw the shape with a pen then cut it out.

 

3. Now, staple (or tape) your legs into the inside/underside of the card or box. Two should go by those curved corners and the back legs about 6 cm in from the end of the sheet of card – or at the back of the card box. The legs will probably be too long, so look at them and decide how long (or short!) you want the legs to be. Fix them in place and then cut off the extra (keep these bits)




 

4. Decorate the outside/other side of the cat’s body. Use pens or crayons or torn up paper and tape or glue. Maybe use the extra cloth from the legs? A furry ridge along the cat’s back often looks good. What sort of cats are you making? We have had snow cats that hunt icicle mice, party cats, flowers cats that hide in gardens, as well as stripy tigers and leopard-spotted hunters.

 

zigzag lines show cuts where a fold is needed

5.
Done? Let the body dry if it needs it and look at the head. The pdf attachment has copies of some templates (copies also at the end of this post) but you could draw them yourself. You could also change your mind and decide you’re making a wolf or a bear! Use a piece of card about the same size as the card you used to make the body. Fold the card in half and either draw round a template or draw your own head shape.  We use a cut between the ears and a fold there to make a forehead and 2 cuts each side of the “chin” to shape that . Cut and fold to make cat heads. Add teeth? Decorate!

 




notice the folds that give the head shape


6. Done? Now use one of the last strips of cloth to make a neck – it needs to be longer than a real one would be. Staple the neck to the inside of the body and fix it to the head between the ears (not at the chin). You could also go to the other end and make 2 cuts and fold the cats bottom like a box, giving it a bit of shape. If you’re using a cereal pack you’ve got that rump ready already. Stick or staple on a tail



 

this puppet has a string for its tail as well

7. Last steps in sight!

Strings: cut 4 pieces of string, maybe 75 cm long. Tie one end or each string to a matchstick.

Head: make a hole about half-way between the eyes and the ears on each side of the face. Thread a string through each hole so that the matchstick catches on the inside. Tape over this to anchor it. Then tie or tape the other nd of the string to a short garden cane. Try to balance this so the head hangs evenly. We’ll adjust for your height in a few minutes

Body: this time we need 2 holes on the cat’s spine, maybe 5 cm in from each end. Again thread and tape the strings. Attach the strings to a longer garden cane (about the same width apart n the cane as they are on the puppets.

Stand up, gently pick up your rods ad find a cat lolloping around beside you. Adjust strings simply by winding the strings onto their rods and taping in place. Aim for a length that has the cat “walking” beside you while you hold the cane about waist height.

 

8. Fixing the bottle. We’ve been fitting a bottle inside the puppet to keep the card open and give the cat a stronger tummy. Tuck the bottle into that space and tape it in place.

 

Now practice going for a walk.

Can your cat jump onto a chair

Lie down

Go to sleep

Wake slowly.

Make a noise….









CAT HEAD TEMPLATES (YOU CAN ALSO DOWNLOAD THEM HERE)

Cat

wolf? or good for a cat with a longer face

Bear



Wednesday 15 February 2023

A season for stories, schools 2023


 Summer stories, 2023

Stories in school and other excitements with Creeping Toad


celebrating the richness of the changing year, here are stories, puppet-making story-building, pop-up landscapes 
and boxes of treasures 

Scottish dates:

15th – 26th May 2023

4 – 12th September 2023


other areas: just get in touch


With stories spinning from the first signs of spring through earth giants and thunder-tigers to summer flowers, here are tales and activities to enchant and inspire.



Drawing on 30 years of professional experience, Gordon’s work blends environmental experience with creativity. “Much of my work uses storytelling and story making but I also make small masks, giant masks, flags, lanterns, pop-up landscapes and create wild and wonderful occasions”

 

A day’s visit to your school might include:

storytelling performances: lasting up to 60 minutes for up to 90 children at a time



stories out of anything
outdoors or in, we'll use leaves and pine cones, twigs and stones and shells to inspire words, create poems and shape a set of stories never told before (allow 60 minutes for a class session)




finger puppets: we can make quick finger puppet animals or adventurers and create instant stories





From across lands and times: I can select stories to suit times and places: so we have had days of Native American stories, or Egyptian or Greek or Roman, there have been Chinese tales and African animal stories….lots of exciting resources to draw on here, to make new writing vibrant and lively. Castles are popular, too, with boxes of treasures to inspire a new adventure and release a bold princess or courageous dragon



story and book workshops: taking a bit longer (allow 90 minutes for a class) as well as discovering those stories no-one has ever heard before, now we will build those into the books that no-one has ever read before and leave the classroom with a library no-one has ever visited before!



pop-up storyscapes:
 allow an hour for a class: gathering ideas, images and words we’ll make quick 3-d landscapes holding the essence of a story in a setting, key characters and the words that set the adventure running



tales of old Scotland: a collection of stories of Highland folklore and Scottish histories, of heroes and sorrows, bravery and the magics of sea, mountain and moor. These can be steered in various directions and we might listen to stories from Viking days or medieval and Stuart stories and even add some Scottish explorers and their adventures and disasters…



your own themes and ideasor are you exploring a particular theme that you would like to involve some stories in? In recent projects, we have also made talking stone puppets, a giant eagle to hang from a classroom ceiling, prehistoric rockpools, a swarm of shadow dragons, pop-up castles


 

Charges: £280 a day 

Fee includes storyteller’s fee, travel and materials. Can be paid on the day or I can invoice you. 

 

Activities can be adapted to suit groups from P1 through to Secondary

 





For further information: 

explore the rest of this blog or

visit the Creeping Toad website at

https://creepingtoad.com/


To book: contact Gordon directly at

         creepingtoad@btinternet.com

         or by telephone: mobile: 07791 096857





Thursday 9 February 2023

Words on the Street

 

Words on the Street

a celebration of Spring Gardens
The Pump Room, The Crescent, Buxton SK17 6BQ

public event Sunday 19th February 2023
11am - 3pm
story and poem exhibition also open on Saturday 18th

strange stories, gruesome anecdotes, ridiculous rhymes, poignant poems and the changing faces of shop windows all wrapped around 100 years of photographs,



What words will tell the story of a street? What words would raise a shopping smile, or provoke a cafe frown? What pictures get us talking? Join us for a walk through time in the comfort of the Pump Room in Buxton. With photographs from more than a hundred years of shops and shoppers on Buxton’s Spring Gardens, we’re inviting people to stop, chat, maybe pick up a cuppa and talk a bit more, write a poem or add their own words to our growing collective poem…There will be beautiful poems to read and ridiculous limericks to laugh over; or maybe don’t say anything at all and simply enjoy pictures of bathchairs on Terrace Road and Ladybird Book displays in WH Smiths and a legacy of ice cream parlours and sweet shops on the Gardens


 

Saturday 18th: exhibition of stories and poems on display in Pump Room (lots of pieces from Buxton Community School) - still there for excitement, alarm and despair on the Sunday, 11am - 4pm


Sunday 19th

Drop in during the day, the event is free (you have to buy your own drinks!) 

Times: 11am – 3.00pm

Materials provided


The Pump Room: The Crescent, Buxton, SK17 6BQ


A Buxton Our Street event, hosted by the Buxton Crescent Heritage Trust and organised by Creeping Toad









 

Thursday 2 February 2023

Ruffled feathers




Ruffled Feathers

Contributions from the public to the
Words on the Street project


As part of the Word on the Street project with Buxton Our Street, we’re collecting contributions from local residents, visitors and passing pigeons (that will make sense I the following poet!). For more information, visit this post, or just the coordinator, Gordon, a line to creepingtoad@btinternet.com

 

Here are a few words to walk you along our streets


Just to keep us looking at Spring Gardens, and appreciating ridiculous moment,  here are a couple more limericks


Never before in our town,

Had we seen a tall man in a gown.

We were so impressed,

That we got him undressed,

Until all he had on was his frown.

 


Spring Gardens is known for its shops,

With hats: bowlers, caps or tops.

What nobody knows,

And where nobody goes,

Is the lost world of rivers and rocks.


Of course Buxton’s fame grew with access to our wells and visitors would come to take the waters….





In Pursuit of a Cure

A fashionable lady in Buxton, 1820

By Dr Sarah Raybould

 

Ay, the pain it breeds

and rheumatism plagues these limbs – 

fayre Buxton lies my fate

to take her waters.

 

Tepid, from thermal spring

a thousand feet above the sea,

from holy well,

a draft to soothe a lady’s malady.

 

Two glasses, each a third in size

before we feast,

two more at tea -

and this, they say, will see me fit. 

 

Bathe and exercise with genteel folk

who languish in this town

and seek diversion and amusement

from leisurely excursions to the Crescent.

 

Her streets adorned with coffee houses,

rich aromas, windows stocked with

trinkets, gloves and muffs –

fine prospect for a lady’s pleasure.

 

Behold a poultice held in place

with strips of cloth,

and oyntment – vile the smell –

from yon apothecary’s room

 

where ladies gather, fashionably sick,

to breathe the vapours,

examine tinctures, bottles of broth

that boast a purgative effect.

 

But lo! This day beguiles

and feigning sick will take to bed.

This nyte is bleake and I am done for – 

opium my bedside drink.


once upon a time, the Cavendish Arcade was one of
those places to take the waters....


 

 Buxton may be a town of running water and cold stone but we are also high in the hills and the skies above us hold their own stories…when you walk along Spring Gardens, look up!


In the Town, Above the Town.

Jonathan Davey

 

  Winter grey washes across the wet stone,

   light mist driven away by dark wind

   blasting in across from Goyt.

  The damp, a gift from the west, comes pouring into the cup of Buxton

 

   From down the town

   laughter and the sound of empty beer cans.

   General daftness at the end of the week.

   A week spent chasing love or exam results or money.

 

   And at the end of that wet week,

   although there may be more snow to come,

   the curlew and golden plover travel in above the town

   Unknown, unseen, unheard.

 

   Above the grey stone buildings,

   the shouts, sirens and Friday night shenanigans,

   the winds, the mist, the wet, the snow,

   for how much longer will the silent wings travel over our town

 




And watch….remember this town is home to more than just human people



my flight home to Buxton

David Carlisle

 

I feel the fresh air of home lift me and my spirits – this is Derbyshire air.

  

My journey home has been long; it feels like years since I’ve been here, but has only been a few days.  I scan the green pasture beneath and spot the rolling hills in the near distance.  I have crossed many rivers and borders to be here, but now I feel the tug at my heart as I soar northwards along the Ashbourne Road.

 

Passing over old railway tracks, grassed over quarry lines and craggy rock faces: quarry, that steadfast employer and provider of bread and meat for generations of families.  Remnants of industrial heritage taint the air slightly with grit.  

 

Gloriously cut quarry stones smile up at me.  This beautiful rocky ruin holds close to its fractured core the odd mixture of dereliction, one part from abandoned chiselling and one from untouched landscape.  The scars that remain still run through the hearts of those workers left behind.  Their promised reward of lifelong work, worth everything.  

 

Mother earth is quick to repair, she soon soothes damage.  Still in these solid communities, hearing “quarrying’s no longer sustainable” will light the blue touch-paper of a verbal firework display.  Proud, rooted people close to nature, naturally close.  

 

Entering Buxton, I declare in whispered tone, “this is my home,” a place where my heart feels rested and I remember much of the past.  I like the buildings’ scars of Spring Gardens, they tell a story of exactly how it was.  No need to hide them, better to show and tell the story of how they came about – to use them to effectively teach others and point the right way to the future.

 

My journey is almost complete as I wheel around the Grove Hotel – grand old lady and street sentinel.   I’m tiring from the Derbyshire odyssey beneath me.  Little more than a stone plinth on a Corinthian column, but of course to a homing pigeon returning from overseas, this is my castle in the air. 



There will be more!

We have an event coming up on Sunday 19th February at the Pump Room in Buxton (details to follow very soon!) where anyone’s everyone, old friends new friends passing strangers might all drop in and put pen to paper - or just read quietly, read aloud, laugh or weep as the words call to them!

 


Thanks to Sarah, David and Jonathan for their poems and stories (limericks remain anonymous). if you would like to contribute, follow the link to this post for more information