May

'Threshold'. Illustration by Hannah Foley. All rights reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)I’ve been delving into my seasonal reading again this month. Steve Roud’s chapter on May in his book The English Year, is a riot of flower strewn celebrations. Roud says that traditionally May would have rivalled Christmas in the scale of the partying. He points out how hard it is for us, with all our modern conveniences, to grasp just how delighted our forebears would have been at the light and warmth of the changing season after the cold dark days of winter. From hobby horses through to cheese-rolling and maypoles, May is full of joyful exuberance. I particularly like the tradition of ‘Ducking’ on May Day, where you’re entitled to douse anyone not wearing a flower or bit of greenery with a bucket of water. That’ll teach any scrooges a good lesson!

In contrast, Stephen Moss’ chapter on May in Wild Hares and Hummingbirds has a sombre note to it. While he acknowledges the growth and fertility of May he also laments the decline or disappearance of some significant players, namely the cuckoo, the nightingale and the elm tree. Nightingales sing for only a few weeks each year, which is why they sing though the night, to make the most of the short time they have to attract a mate and reproduce. I had no idea nightingales live “south and east of a line from the Severn to the Humber” so I am unlikely to hear one here in Devon.

One thing Moss does rejoice in is the hedgerow and it’s something I’m very glad to have back in my life with our move south. There’s nothing like wandering down a deep Devon lane thick with wild flowers and dense with the smell of growth to make you feel spring is here. The lanes around us are full of cow parsley, ragged robin, buttercups, stitchwort, and jack-by-the-hedge. A regular visitor to our garden at the moment is a friendly blackbird. He sits high in the branches of an ash tree and proclaims to all the world the delight of being alive.

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Forest of the Imagination

Image from Forest of Imagination (http://www.forestofimagination.org.uk)Just a quick heads up about an arts event happening in Bath this weekend. If you happen to be in the area a dear friend of ours has been involved in organising the Forest of Imagination, a pop-up multi-disciplinary arts event for all the family. It looks and sounds really fantastic!

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Monkey!

Screen shot of PuppetCraft's Monkey!This weekend Little Owl and I had a fantastic treat. We drove out to a nearby village and crammed into the pretty hall to see a puppet show version of the Chinese folk tale Monkey. This was an adaptation of the tale written by the wonderful children’s author and previous Children’s Laureate, Michael Rosen. For those of you who don’t know, Monkey is a cheeky and mischievous character who journeys to seek enlightenment. He gets into all sorts of scrapes and makes quite a name for himself. In the end he becomes so cheeky and boastful (wanting to take the place of the Jade Emperor no less!) that Buddha traps him in a mountain for 500 years.

The show was absolutely fantastic and Little Owl was spellbound throughout. Monkey is such a naughty character, even weeing on the front row at one point. This delighted all the kids especially as we’re pretty sure it was only water really. The puppets were so expressive and the set design simple but brilliantly effective. Little Owl could hardly contain herself during Monkey’s battle with a fire-breathing dragon! The show was put on by puppet troupe PuppetCraft, with support from Villages in Action. Villages in Action are a brilliant charity, working throughout Devon to bring high quality professional shows to community venues to improve access to the arts amongst rural communities. PuppetCraft are performing Monkey at venues across the country over the next few months so if you have opportunity do go along and see it. In the mean time we’ll be singing Monkey’s theme tune for days to come…

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Slowly, slowly

Sketch of Stan's garden by Hannah Foley. All right reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)

You’ll be pleased to know I’ve stopped flapping. Slowly, slowly my heart has caught up with my body. Little by little the jarring exhaustion of constant newness has given way to gentle wonder.

Our new house was built in 1932. Before it became a rental property it was owned by a couple called Stan and Peggy. Stan was an incredible gardener. The garden here is long and thin (as you can see from my sketch), with a path down the middle. In his heyday Stan grew fruit down one side and veg down the other. Every year he planted his runner beans where there is now a patch of thin grass and we have set up our bird feeder. One day Stan came out to dig his potatoes. He’d not been feeling well for a while. The job done, he put down his spade and went and sat in his chair in the lean-to. Stan never got up again and that was the end of his wonderful garden. The greenhouse was dismantled and the fruit trees grubbed up.

I only found this out after we’d got to work. We suspect some rotting wood chip that had been put down on the ground nearest the house, and smelt like a cat’s litter tray, gave Little Owl a vomiting bug so that came up and we built two raised beds there instead. A greenhouse base frame had been left sharp edges exposed, so we turned it upside down and made a third raised bed. In these we’ve planted raspberries, strawberries, rhubarb, gooseberries, blackcurrants, peas, beetroot, spinach, tomatoes, kale, and pumpkins. It’s great to be growing our own again, or at least attempting to. I hope Stan and Peggy would be pleased too.

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Conflict and the Brain

'Conflict and the Brain' Poster by Hannah Foley for the Scottish Centre for Conflict Resolution (SCCR). All rights reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk).In my last post I told you about illustrations I’d done for a web game for the Scottish Centre for Conflict Resolution (SCCR) and a second part of the commission was to produce a poster that explained the biology behind the impact of conflict on the brain, particularly in a person’s early life. It took me absolutely ages to get my head round all the science so I’m immensely proud of the final piece. One of the things we wanted to convey was that, just because a person may have had an unloving start in life doesn’t mean they can’t learn to love and be loved. Hopefully we’ve managed that. You can download a pdf version here.

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Monkey vs Lizard

Monkey vs Lizard Game screen shot.This is a screen shot from a commission I completed recently for the Scottish Centre for Conflict Resolution (SCCR). It was part of a project that aimed to help people understand the impact of conflict on brain development. The SCCR team put together a fantastic event as part of the Edinburgh International Science Festival at which Medical Advisor, Dr Sara Watkin, talked about the physical and emotional impact of conflict and how it relates to the brain. My illustrations were used for an online game where users could answer questions to find out if their responses to conflict were more mammalian or more reptilian, hence the Monkey Vs Lizard title. It’s a bit of fun with a serious point behind it, aiming to educate people about their responses to everyday scenarios.

The idea came from current thinking about brain biology. Scientists think that the central part of our brain evolved first and so they call it the Reptilian Brain. It’s where our Flight/Fight reaction and a lot of our emotions come from. The rest of our brain is called the Mammalian Brain and evolved later. The Mammalian brain is the rational part of our brain and we need to engage it to modify our Reptilian reactions. By answering the questions in the game you can find out whether your responses are more lizard or monkey and I came up with various funny monkey/lizard hybrids to illustration the possible outcomes from the quiz. I don’t think I’ve explained it very well so you’d better go and take to quiz to find out what one earth I’m talking about! Anyway, it was a lot of fun to do and I loved working with the SCCR team and the fabulous guys at the Primate Web Agency again.

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Skipping lessons

Sketch of Sweet peas by Hannah Foley. All rights reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)Did you ever play skipping games as a child? I did. I especially loved the long rope games where two children would turn the rope for the others. Even better was when we had two long ropes turned between each other. We’d skip in pairs and triplets, calling each other in and out of the ropes. We had complicated routines full of tricks and twists. The ropes would spin faster and faster until at last we’d miss a step and the game would stop amidst breathless laughter.

Being good at skipping is all about timing. Just right now I feel a bit like a child learning to skip and getting my timing all wrong. We left a Scottish spring full of dark bare branches, tiny tips of green buds, and a smattering of snow. My gardening books tell me to allow for a four week difference in the start of spring between where we were in Scotland and our new home in Devon. With the warm weather recently it feels longer. On one day there was a ten degree difference between the two locations. All around me nature is at its busiest. Birds are frantically about their nest-building duties, the skies full of their song. Butterflies and bees flutter and tumble on the breeze. The tulips are already over. It feels like we are late and unprepared for the show. These last two weeks I have been paralysed by nature’s double pincer of potential and urgency. It’s affected me deeply and I’ve flapped around the rooms of our new home washing down a skirting board here, hanging half a net curtain there, wanting to get on but not finishing anything either.

I remember thinking I would never get skipping, especially jumping in on a long rope. Then suddenly you do and you’re away! That distinctive whisk, tap, whisk, tap, becomes second nature. Then you get a bit more confident and you add in a trick and a twist of your own. It’ll be the same here. It’ll just take a bit of practice and a good ear.

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A sunny start

Photograph of blue sky by Hannah Foley. All right reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)Hello! I’ve managed to find my computer under piles of paper and boxes, and we now have internet. This morning’s job is to turn all theses boxes and piles into some semblance of order so I can get back to work. This is the sky outside my window this morning, cheering me on!

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Moving House

New house illustration by Hannah Foley. All rights reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk).

 

We are currently in the process of moving house. I’ll be back here blogging as soon as we have internet connected.

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Flitting

Brain pattern by Hannah Foley. All rights reserved (www.owlingabout.co.uk)Although it has been snowing here this week there are small green buds everywhere I look and it is April at last. For the beginning of April I pick up my seasonal reading again and head off to Somerset with Stephen Moss in his book Wild Hares and Hummingbirds*. In Moss’ home parish of Mark, spring is in full swing. He writes of great tits, chiffchaffs, rabbits, wood pigeons, field voles, kestrels, blackbirds, robins, blue tits, whimbrels, wood sandpipers, comma and orange-tip butterflies. The world is alive and racing to reproduce.

Moss is pleased to report his first sighting of a swallow only to find that someone else in the village has beaten him to it. He marvels at the way swallows not only travel to Africa and back but manage “to navigate to the very place where they were born.” Did you know that no one knows where house martins go when they migrate away from our shores? Moss says, “…upwards of 100 million birds in all – more or less disappear, with only small numbers being seen at scattered locations around the continent…how can a bird so familiar that we name it after our homes…vanish so effectively for half its lifespan?” Part of me is delighted that in spite of all our science and technology nature can still stump us with such simple mysteries.

From my other seasonal companion, Steve Roud (The English Year) I learnt that 6th April is traditionally known as Flitting Day. Farm and domestic workers were often employed by the year and that year either began and ended with Michaelmas (29th September) or Lady Day (25th March). If it was Lady Day, 6th April was the date for moving out of your tied accommodation and hence was called Flitting Day. I suddenly feel all in tune with the seasons (which was the aim!), not only will we be returning to the place I grew up this month (just like the swallows) but we’re also moving on Flitting Day!

Here’s a brainy pattern I’ve been working on for a commission.

 

*In case you’re new here and wondering what I’m talking about I’m reading these two books in the corresponding month the authors write about, to get back a bit of seasonality in my life.

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