Saturday 28 December 2013

Storytelling for a Greener World

In April 2014, a new book will hit the shelves and storehouses, on-line warehouses, library bookcases, bedside tables and occasionally grubby fingers....

Storytelling for a Greener World is a manual, handbook, inspiration and provocation for people hoping to use storytelling as one of the agents that just might provoke change in the communities around us. Recognising that storytelling is a potent way of reaching people’s hearts and minds, this book will address issues around the why, where, how and what of environmental storytelling

I won’t ramble on here but will quote from Hawthorn Press’s advance notice about the book below and add that I’m one of those ’21 cutting-edge professionals”

Sales points: The what, why and how of storytelling and storywork to promote environmental mindfulness and sustainable behaviour in adults and children. Written by 21 cutting-edge professionals in story-based learning and pro-environmental change.
Shows how to apply this practice, indoors and outdoors, in organisations, NGOs, schools, colleges and communities. A treasury of over 40 stories, many creative activities and detailed descriptions of inspiring practice for both new and seasoned practitioners. Clearly explains how this practice works, why it is effective and how to adapt the ideas to the reader’s situation.
Powerfully endorsed by leaders in sustainability, conservation, organisation development, drama and performance, play-work, health, child development, community outreach and education.
The contributors will be actively involved in promoting the book at festivals, conferences and related events. The editors are world authorities in their fields.
Description: This unique resource offers new ideas, stories, creative activities and methods for people working in conservation, outdoor learning, environmental education, youthwork, business training, sustainability, health, social and economic change. It shows how to encourage pro-environmental behaviour in diverse participants: from organisation consultants and employees, to families, youth and schoolchildren. The stories and their exploration engage people with nature in profound ways. The book describes how this engagement enhances participants’ emotional literacy and resilience, builds community, raises awareness of inter-species communication and helps people to create a sustainable future together. Its innovative techniques establish connections between place and sustainability. Facilitators can adapt all of this to their own situation.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
Title: STORYTELLING FOR A GREENER WORLD
Sub-title: Environment, Community and Story-Based Learning
Editors: Alida Gersie, Anthony Nanson and Edward Schieffelin, with Charlene Collison and Jon Cree
Release date: April 2014 
ISBN: 978-1-907359-35-4 
256 pages, paperback
£20.00


Saturday 21 December 2013

The Hills Are Waiting


The Hills Are Waiting



This poem from Old stone and ancient bones is featured in an exhibition at Buxton Museum and Art Gallery from December 14th through to February 22nd

Celebrating the inspiration that the dark gritstones and softer limestone landscapes have offered  artists over the centuries, the  “White Peak, Dark Peak”   exhibition features prints, paintings, finds and poems from the Museum collection. It includes several new pieces added to the collection during the Enlightenment! initiative. Take a look at the Collections in the Landscape blog

Stone and Water’s Ancient Landscape also puts in its own imitable weedy, reefy, trilobite-y appearance as another artwork inspired by the landscapes of the Peak

Old stone and ancient bones: poems from the hollow hills
is my small book of new poems...

From the cold silence of chambered tombs to the beauty and blessing of the Ring of Brodgar and the strange, dangerous excitement of faerie hills and the Kelpie's streams, Old stones and ancient bones presents a collection of poems that invite you to enter a vibrant world of memory, dream and enchantment….

Getting a copy: it seems strange to say it but you are probably better (quicker response and I actually make more money!) if you buy direct from LuLu: http://www.lulu.com/shop/ 
I do have copies to sell, coming in at £8.50 inc P&P
Cheques: to Creeping Toad address: 51-d West Rd, Buxton, Sk17 6HQ, UK 
Paypal possible: get in touch
ISBN: 978-1-291-46593-8

Amazon: Old stones should be available through Amazon soon as well....


Thursday 31 October 2013

The end of autumn

The Story of the Trees,
last leaves falling
The Happy Toadstools welcomed visitors

On Thursday 24th October,  about 120 children and teachers met the waking trees of Lord Ancrum's Wood for the last time before winter called the forest to sleep

There had been much preparation. Toadstools had given themselves to fungicians (mushroom beauticians). Check out the Song of the Grumpy Toadstools



Giants had allowed themselves to be spruced (and larches and popled) up for the event…



And here, we won't recount activities or the exactitude of details, but will simply slip in some more of the Stories of the Trees
bright flags marked the enchanted woodland

Monster of the Highways
Her head looks like a pine cone
You’d never know she was there
Until her brown conker eyes
Look at you.
She runs long the road
Wobbling on legs of different lengths
Sniffing with her big nose at anything she finds

Grumpy Toadstools glowered

Redbeard the Giant
The great woodland giant Redbeard is a huge but friendly person. As tall as a tree and as loud as thunder when he laughs, Redbeard is friendly and clumsy. He is so clumsy he falls over his own feet and once even slipped into the river and caused a small tsunami! But he is as bouncy as a bunny and always gets up and keeps going, whatever goes wrong!

One day, however, when he was asleep in the grass, a gardener mistook him for a small hill and mowed Redbeard’s beard with his lawnmower.

At first Redbeard didn’t mind, knowing his beard would grow again, but when the stubbles started to show, it was brown! “Oh, no!” cried Redbeard, “where is my beautiful red beard! I must have a red beard or I’ll have to change my name!”

His friends came to help and they are out hunting through the woods, looking for something that might dye Redbeard’s beard red again!

The Butterfly Giant

The Butterfly Giant lives in a castle made of tree trunks and there he lives a happy, friendly life. Or he is friendly as long as he isn’t hungry. When he gets hungry he gets very grumpy and then he will eat a whole deer or chew a tree-trunk to splinters. For a snack, he always carries a bag of woodlice sweeties: as sweet and crunchy as Crunchies themselves and they stick to his teeth in just the same way

Not very long ago, he was in a battle with some unfriendly giants when even his Guard-spider, throwing webs at anyone who came too close, could not stop Butterfly Boy getting a few cuts. If you see him just now, you’ll see the butterflies sitting like plasters on his face, holding his cuts shut with their legs


STRANGE WOODLAND PEOPLE, 7
Brown conker eyes
And a wooden mouth with wooden teeth
And a leafy tongue,
Feathery arms flap and lift
Her leafy body through the trees
Like a lumpy bird with a white stone nose

STRANGE WOODLAND PEOPLE, 8
With a seashell mouth and a seashell nose
A shell chin and pine cone ears
She watches the world through acorn eyes
Peering out from under horrible hair

And a wooden hat
the adventurers depart
peace returns with a golden tree

Poisoned Arrows

30 year old tourism posters
had a new lease of life!
A quick bit of feedback and pictures after a lovely weekend at the Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh
Lake Malawi
Poisoned Arrows was a walking storytelling event where visitors were taken on a journey through the tropical glasshouses, meeting actors and storytellers among the foliage. Working with letters and journals form Victorian Edinburgh explorers who went out to Malawi (not that it was Malawi then) 150 years ago (follow the Poisoned Arrows link to a short film about the show! )


The story moved back and forth between white explorers and local people reflecting the different views, values and consequences of the expeditions

I was there to intercept people as they stumbled back into the damp cool of an Edinburgh autumn, inviting them to share thoughts arising from the stories they had heard, to pause and reflect or to make their own snippets of Malawian landscape to take home....

There was "a touch of Malawi" to look at or handle


 there were model animals to incent your own "wildlife of Malawi" quiz
 and those animals could give visitors subjects to draw for their own landscapes


A life time ago, I worked in Malawi for 3 years. The experience set an enduring love of southern Africa in motion that has taken my back to Africa, if not to Malawi itself again (yet!), whenever I can...
I wonder what has become of my students from 'way back then

adventures!


the road north from lilongwe to Kasungu

Thursday 24 October 2013

Night-time


NIGHT-TIME
Once upon a time, there was a dark night-time giant. A fierce and dangerous creature, he would prowl through the woods in the darkness looking for people or small animals to catch and crunch

One day he set out in day-light, thinking it might be easier to catch people in the sunshine. But as soon as he walked across a field, a whole cloud of purple butterflies came whirling over to him attracted by the stars and shadows on his face and landed on his skin. The giant had never met anything like this before. He hated these insects with their beautiful colours and fluttering wings.

“GET OFF ME!” he roared. But butterflies are deaf and didn’t hear what he said!

Night-time grabbed up a stick and swung it, trying to hit the butterflies. But all he hit was his own nose!

Then he jumped into the stream that runs through the wood and sunk right down to the bottom. He had forgotten he couldn’t swim and even though the water killed the butterflies, it killed him too. Night-time’s body floated on the pond covered with the remains of drowned butterflies

The other Giants collected the body of their friend and buried it deep in the woods. The next summer strange flowers grew there and on one magical morning they opened beautiful purple flowers and all the butterflies of the woods came to visit the Giant who had been scared of them

Night-time’s Grave is the most secret, most special place in all the Wood and very few people ever find it

from "The Story of the Trees", Pupils from Hawthornden Primary School, Lord Ancrum's Wood, Dalkeith, 2013

The Story of the Trees


The sun rose cold and bright on an autumn morning as the woodland woke and got ready for visitors. Toadstools sprouted, vivid and fateful, through the leafmould. Small faeries gathered, squabbling over the best vantage points to watch The Humans process through the woods. Colourful, cheerful and excited they crowded the rootholes and beech twigs. Winged faeries fluttered overhad, the vampire faeries hung themselves in grisly style over the path. Families of very small people tucked themselves under logs.

But deeper in the woods, the Tree Giants woke and lumbered into position. Grumbling, muttering, losing their leaders (again), they were relying on swarms of children to sort out who should be Monarchs of the Woods - because not everyone wanted Coombe to be King

And then the children came. There was noise
Giving presents to the woods and the river
so they would let us in to discover their stories 
a first story by an old Ice House

STRANGE WOODLAND PEOPLE, 1
Shell horns grow, 
Through beech-leaf hair,
And seed-pod eyebrows lift
Over conker-case eyelids
Guarding deep brown chestnut eyes,
A long, prickly pine-cone nose
Wavers above twig lips
With small-cone teeth
Smiling through an oak-leaf beard


Grumpy Toadstools ( see their own blog entry for their song)
everywhere, there were stories
waiting to be told
STRANGE WOODLAND PEOPLE, 2
Fatso-craig, the boulder boy,
Only three feet high, he is as wide as he is tall.
A boulder of a boy with a horn nose and a mouth as round as a cowrie shell.
Leaves grow as hair on his round stone head
And his gravel stubble needs shaving twice a day to stop it avalanching down his face






STRANGE WOODLAND PEOPLE, 5
A curving seed nose
In a green leafy face
With wooden lips and acorn eyes
She runs through the wood 
With her twiggy arms
Tickling trees
Her clam shoes leave
Strange footprints in the mud

NIGHT-TIME
COOMBE
Night-giants are fierce,
Night-giants are dangerous.
Night-giants are the wind that whistles through the woods in the dark
Night-giants are the creak and crack of trees in the night
Night-giants are the touch of a twig on your neck

And, worse of them all, is Coombe their king.
He lives apart from other giants,
In the darkest corners of the deepest wood. 
No light comes here.
No sunlight disturbs him
Even in the brightest summer day.
He lives apart, alone but for his animal friends, bats and owls,
Fierce and ferocious, he haunts the night-time woods
Hating sunlight, loving shadows
The Giant Sentinel. With only one eye,
she still sees everything that goes on in the woods

GREEN AND LEAFY
He lives deep in the forest
With a squirrel in his beard and birds in his hair
Tall as a tree, he would make friends with anyone
But as soon as people come through the woods in groups
He hides, shy as a deer.
So, walk through his woods, quietly
Carefully,Pause in the green shade and listen,
Listen for his breath in the wind in the leaves
Listen for his footsteps in the leaves on the ground.
Green-and-leafy might come to meet you!
Children read stories to each other

we found a new Leaf-King for the woodland
storytellers collecting acorns as they leave
With thanks to the Forestry Commission who organised it all, and to the delightful pupils and staff of Newtongrange and Hawthornden Primary Schools, Midlothian and  to the members of 12th Midlothian Scouts and Danderhall Brownies for goblins, faeries and some Strange Woodland People

and peace returns to the woodland



Friday 11 October 2013

The Song of the Grumpy Toadstools


Lord Ancrum's Wood: excitement gathers under the leaf canopy as our first At Home approaches

Small People are sorting their party clothes and testing mixes of make-up, decoration and the best ways of firing hazel-nuts at visitors

Giants are gathering. Green And Leafy, Redbeard, Night-time, and Coombe have all sent themselves off for polishing.
a table-top of giants

Toadstools are sprouting enthusiastically, possibly emerging a bit early and we hope they won't have got so excited they've collapsed by Saturday (meet Newbattle College, Dalkeith, 2 pm Saturday 12th for this first storywalk through the Waking Wood).

But there is dissension.


THE SONG OF THE GRUMPY TOADSTOOL
I don't like this.
And I don't like that.
And I don't like much at all!
Conkers!
Acorns!
Crunching leaves,
Changing colour,
Falling leaves,
Collecting on top of me!
Spikey conkers,
Lumpy acorns,
Juicy apples,
Squirrels collecting nuts.
I don't like that!
And I don't like this!
And I don't like much at all!
I hate it all!
So I will sit here poisonous,
Sprouting in the leaf mould
And sulk




Other Toadstools are more optimistic but tinged with a sense of doom and the transience of flesh. These are Toadstool Songs and if you/we cannot find the rhythm and metre of them then that is more about our clumsy human sense not appreciating the subtlety of fungal song-writing. they are, after all, among the very few organisms who can effectively rhyme orange with porridge ( English-speaking humans can sometime manage it if they've got a bad cold)
necessary adjustments can be undignified

THE SONG OF THE HAPPY TOADSTOOL
I like playing in the woods,
I like collecting leaves;
(On my head)
I like conkers,
I like pumpkins,
I like juicy apples
And tasty brambles.
I like the sound of leaves under a rabbit's feet,
And watching the wild cats,
And skulls,
And Toads,
And deer sitting down in the dark,
And foxes in their burrows.
I like autumn,
Because of Hallowe'en
And watching the sky for the triangle lines of geese
I like autumn because winter is near

I would love to walk,
To go for a walk,
For a long walk
Through the tall forest.
I would love to
Jump in leaves
And swim through leaves,
Crunchy leaves, dry leaves
Beautiful leaves,
Changing colour
On cold frosty mornings.
I would be so good at trick-or-treating
I would love to do those things
If only I could.

Tuesday 8 October 2013

The Story of the Trees, 3: the sad story of Night-time

Redbeard the Giant

The Trees project continues here in Lord Ancrum's Wood. This is a Forestry Commission project in these beautiful woods which they manage in partnership with Newbattle College, in Dalkeith, just south of Edinburgh

Working with schools, college students, community groups and the public, we are shaping new stories from the woods, gathering stories and images towards public storywalks on SATURDAY 12TH OCTOBER, meeting at 2pm  outside the college (follow link for directions)

Today we met some more giants (Hawthornden Primary School) and have prepared a set of vivid autumn banners (Newtongrange Primary School) that will fall into their full spectacle tomorrow
a giant receives some cosmetic attention


THE BUTTERFLY GIANT
The Butterfly Giant lives in a castle made of tree trunks and there he lives a happy, friendly life. Or he is friendly as long as he isn’t hungry. When he gets hungry he gets very grumpy and then he will eat a whole deer or chew a tree-trunk to splinters. For a snack, he always carries a bag of woodlice sweeties: as sweet and crunchy as Crunchies themselves and they stick to his teeth in just the same way

Not very long ago, he was in a battle with some unfriendly giants when even his Guard-spider, throwing webs at anyone who came too close, could not stop Butterfly Boy getting a few cuts. If you see him just now, you’ll see the butterflies sitting like plasters on his face, holding his cuts shut with their legs


Redbeard the Giant and friends
outlines ready, paint going on
an autumn flag with paint being applied
Night-time's story? it is so unspeakably sad we couldn't possibly publish it, yet. You'll just have to come and join us on Saturday!

Monday 7 October 2013

The Story of the Trees, 2: Giants and Toadstools

Story of the Trees
Newtongrange Primary School
Woodland Giants and Grumpy Toadstools

... the strange woods and friendly classrooms of The Ancient Newton Grange, offer an insight into a wild and wonderful world....

Giants grow on tables, sprouting leaves and root-beards and pet bats
a giant taking shape

COOMBE
Night-giants are fierce,
Night-giants are dangerous.
Night-giants are the wind that 
whistles through the woods in the dark
Night-giants are the creak and crack of trees in the night
Night-giants are the touch of a twig on your neck


And, worse of them all, Coombe is their king.
He lives apart from other giants,
In the darkest corners of the deepest wood. 
No light comes here.
No sunlight disturbs him
Even in the brightest summer day.
He lives apart, alone but for his animal friends, bats and owls,
Fierce and ferocious, he haunts the night-time woods
Hating sunlight, loving shadows


Toadstools push out of foam, slowly gathering eyes and features and voices, quiet voices, just whISpers for now, almost too faint to be heard yet
I have no eyes to see with,
no mouth to speak with

I like the colours of autumn leaves
I like their crunching under my feet
I like the smell of the wind 
And the taste of juicy brambles

But one day, one day soon,
I will be able to watch you!

I hate these autumn days
And colours and crunching
And conkers and kicking
And everything....