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Creeping Toad

Gordon MacLellan


Last Updated: 11/18/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 50
Sign: Libra

City: Buxton
State: Northwest
Country: UK
Signup Date: 7/22/2008

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Sunday, December 20, 2009 

Current mood:watching falling snow
Category: Writing and Poetry

WINTER....

 ....

Now, we are in the cold,

Now, we are in the hunting time,

Watching the wild geese fly,

Threading trails across the sky,

Whickering (like?) hounds on the hunt.

 ....

And here, in the woods, below, and waiting

For the hoof-beat drums on the frozen earth

For racing hearts and the taste of blood,

The bitter sting of the Hunter’s blade.

Following the trail on the snow,

Red dripping on white,

All the way home.

 ....

The day fades quickly,

And the moon burns bright in a cold sky,

And here we are, waiting,

Outside in the darkness,

Peering in through windows

 ....

Into those little worlds you make within the world,

Shutting out the winter,

Shutting out the wild,

Shutting out the winds that blow across the hills

And fill our souls with light.

 ....

But you, behind your walls and your doors

You take those hearts the wind cannot reach

And flood them with firelight and warmth

 ....

Shadows on the snow,

Here we are, watching,

Scenting meat and laughter,

Lingering,

Wondering,

Waiting for the candle in the window that will call us home

 ....

For now we are in the cold,

Now we are in the Hunting Time

 ....

 ....

December 2008


 

Wednesday, November 18, 2009 

Current mood:reflective
Category: Writing and Poetry
don't you just delight in the imaginations of 4 year olds!

Working today with a Reception class, we sidetracked into "how many ways could an umbrella save you on an adventure?' and then.....
keep you dry in the rain
carry you away on a windy day!
become a boat in a flood
you could row the boat with your shoes
you could row the boat faster with extra umbrellas
it could be a gun
it could be a sword for fighting pirates
you could hook the handle round the branches of trees to help you climb
you could open the umbrella in the mouth of a monster
or just stick it in a monster's tongue!
if you were chased by a crocodile you could hit the animal with the umbrella

or if you were chased by a crocodile while in your umbrella-boat, you could hook the handles of two spare umbrellas round the front legs of 2 crocodiles and they could pull you even faster through the water

or if you only had one spare umbrella you could hold it above your brolly-boat and use it like a sail

The poor Teddy Bear who was acting it out looked quite exhausted by the end of it all
Wednesday, October 21, 2009 

These have been several long weeks, good weeks but tiring, of stories and storymaking all over the country. From Achiltibuie and Ardross west and north of Inverness to Longnor just down the road from home, performance and workshop with all sorts of people.

 ....

Highlights included telling tales in the Yorkshire Sculpture Park, with Baba Yaga stories under yew trees beside a wonderful tree house. Then there were stories built in Beauly where “In the boring, grey town of Beauly where no-one ever smiled, once there was a girl who laughed too much….” and as an opening line, what more could you ask for? Also from Beauly, we encountered the mice with tartan fur (who are very good at hiding as they have been hunted so much – have you ever seen one? Even the people of Beauly haven’t – just shows how skilled those mice are!)

 ....

This week, I’m with old friends in Burnley, having an adventurous time in Whitefield Infant school where we are building ideas of how special the local area is by making adventure maps: planning, plotting, making and mapping on big sheets of paper. We are shaping up maps that children can take home to share, encouraging their families to follow the maps to find places where they could go to have picnics, play games, check for monsters, feed the ducks, watch Pendle Hill disappear in the cloud - or watch Pendle Hill be stolen by witches depending upon which map-story we are following at the time. 

Wednesday, September 09, 2009 

Category: Jobs, Work, Careers
a quick call out to let people know there are still places on the Communicating Biodiversity Creatively" training course at Losehill Hall in Derbyshire

Formal details below but I'd add my comments:

despite the cumbersome title (we've never found an easier one), I find this a very enjoyable course to lead. We talk, challenge, share experiences and share creativity. There is time to talk and time to experiment and time to bounce ideas around. I plan workshops with fairly open timetables so we can grow and change directions as ideas develop and this is one of the nicest I do regularly for that freedom. It is also delightfully messy as people get carried away with lanterns and flags. This year, I am hoping we'll do some evening illumination work in and around the trees of the grounds at Losehill

Communicating biodiversity creatively - engaging young people and communities in biodiversity....

-21st and 22nd September 2009 ....

-exploring issues, experimenting with activities, sharing ideas. finding inspiration, gathering momentum, preparing for action…a workshop for anyone looking at ways of bringing a spark to biodiversity education....

....

-Dates: Venue and organiser: Losehill Hall, Peak District National Park....

-Workshop Leader: Gordon MacLellan from Creeping Toad....

Tuition fee: Book before 21/8/09 £305....

Standard fee £360....

Dinner and B&B One night £55....

 ....

Contact: 01433 622472, training.losehill@peakdistrict.gov.uk or www.peakdistrict.gov.uk/training....

Wednesday, September 09, 2009 
I'm telling stories...old tales, new adventures, tales of laughter and happiness, silliness, sadness and maybe a few twists of nastiness.....2 days of stories at YSP in, around, under (but not on top of) sculptures....... 26th and 27th September part of the "Rare Earth in Autumn" programme, sessions running between 11 and 12.30, 1 and 3.30 I think they are free Their website: www.ysp.co.uk
Wednesday, July 22, 2009 

Current mood:  relaxed
Category: Art and Photography

Buxton in Festival time has an air of excitement. If it wasn’t for the rain, there would be a real sense of perpetual picnic. As it is, the rain drives people indoors, curling like snails back into shells.

 ....

It still does not compare with South Africa’s National Arts Festival in Grahamstown which is my favourite of all such festivals. The programme is thrilling and the whole town buzzes with exhibitions, spontaneous cafes and impromptu performances. Sometimes there seems to be a fringe of the fringe there…..one evening at just after midnight, heading homewards from a show, we encountered a whole group of young drummers, some dancers and some fire jugglers in an open space. A moment of magic in a beautiful African night

 ....

Having said all that, this evening’s “The Primitive Methodist Guide to AQrtcic Survival” by Helen Keen was a delightful exercise in frivolity

Sunday, July 19, 2009 

THE LIMEYARDS....

A writing project at National Trust’s Calke Abbey in south Derbyshire….we are preparing a book of collected stories from different participants but for now, here are some of my pieces from the project…photos added as well….

 ....

 

BLACKWATER....

Water lilies uncurl in the cold depths,....

Rising handkerchiefs unfolding.....

A small fish, jumping, breaks the mirror, ....

And a mandarin drake and his gaudy reflection....

Ripple a clockwork course across the pool.....

A coot shouts in a sudden, brief, alarm.....

Then Blackwater, like me, settles back into silence, drawing reflections....

Of the sailing clouds into stillness,....

A mirror pool waiting to....

Receive the Moon, ....

Waiting for the nights when ....

The trees come down to drink....

 ....

Snippets....

Bells and enchantment both wither in the glass....

But under the trees, 

the blue-scent is as strong as smoke....

                                                                                                            ....

 ....

 ....

Crow moves, opening eyes,....

Deer moves, a shadow shifting, ....

I move, the world erupts into flight,....

I breathe myself into stillness and peace returns....


The Satyr’s stories:....

For me, the Limeyards felt full of presence and they felt to be a place where the woodlands would wake and dance. The heart of that sense of movement lay in a Satyr, hooves, horn and shadow slipping through the trees, a secret watcher…......

 ....

Beginning 

“I was born out of the need of old stone and tree roots for a voice.....

 ....

I began as an idea, shaped by water running through stone in deep caves, gathering a body for myself out of long lost bones, out of stranded horns and hooves and left-over memories. My flesh is earth, my skin grass and bark, my blood the mineral rich, crystal-growing streams of limestone darkness....

 ....

Now I am here, playing the music of the wind, listening to bluebells ring, and the slow singing of carp in the cold pools. I am the watcher in the woods, the touch of the breeze, the rustle in the undergrowth. I am the shadow that slips away.....

Always here. Never seen.”....

Gordon MacLellan                  ....

 ....

The Calling Song....

With the fire of foxes, come....

With the endurance of limestone, come....

With the persistence of tree roots, come....

With the passion of orchids, come....

With the excitement of children, come....

 ....

And where the cliff....

Crumbles into the grass;....

Past Gilbert’s stone....

And Sir Henry’s Yards;....

Past Engine and Portobello and....

Sad Molly Wootton’s Hole;....

Beyond Perch Pit and....

Over the Limeyards Flats....

 ....

By the cold, carp depths ....

Of Blackwater....

We’ll watch the moon rise over Margaret’s Close....

and gather the woodland on the dancing lawns at ....

Ridings Nook....

 ....

Gordon MacLellan....

 ....

 ....


 ....

Sunday, July 19, 2009 

Category: Writing and Poetry

Reaching the end of term and the end of too many projects. Individually delicious but overall a bit of a stampede…….

.

I’ll put a couple of entries and examples from individual projects separately but in summary this term has seen…..

 ....

            Kingsmead PRU, Derby: Haunted Cemetery: a literacy project

 ....

            Annesley Primary School: adventures in piracy: literacy revolving around illustration and creation to support children’s writing

 ....

            Cherry Fold Community School, Burnley: more pirates! (Reception and Year 1) and creating places to go adventuring too (Nursery and Reception children) – giving us a blue planet, assorted aliens, a desert island and a frozen classroom corner with large polar bears, penguins and mammoths. And there was a trip to ancient Egypt as well with a Years 3 and 4 class, seeing us produce large friezes, a model temple, masks, a pyramid with a small door for everyone in the class (behind which you could find mummies, treasure or simply cheerful people waving out of windows)

 ....

And fleeting visits elsewhere had me making books in Monyash, inventing stories in Emmanuel School Sheffield, telling tales in a Peace Garden in Leicester  and lively times were spent with Whitefield Infant School and the Open Door Youth Theatre in Ashbourne

 ....

And now it is Buxton Festival and I might even manage to get out to see/hear/experience something!

 ....

Monday, June 22, 2009 

Category: School, College, Greek
summer workshops in full flood now....with teenage groups we are designing a haunted cemetery along the theme of "and what sort of ghost would you be?". Students have been writing epitaphs, designing tombstones, printing shrouds and will shortly be recording reports of people who have encountered these new ghosts.....

and with some younger pupils, we have been pirates off adventuring with pirate puppets, pirate models, treasure chests, maps, big ships, small ships, tiny ships and are currently making dramatic sea creature hats so that we can have dancing sea of animals to sail a big lantern ship across
Monday, June 01, 2009 

Current mood:weary with hayfever
Lots of story-building workshops recently have been generating some wonderfully crazy ideas. There is the boy who came to the Yorkshire sculpture Park and was fed stolen sandwiches by a friendly magpie while he was hiding behind a log watching for the monkeys who live in the trees there….or there were the girls who bribed a dwarf with mushrooms and chocolate to let them through his gate and into the magical world on the Ticknall Limeyards
 
The Limeyards are a beautiful area of old limestone workings, rapidly reclaimed by the wild to become a hidden world of cliffs and orchid meadows, still waters and deep pools and stray remains of buildings. An enchanted place, we have been working there with different groups to generate poems and stories for the National Trust
 
My series of poems and writings almost all come from a Satyr who was “born as an idea in water dripping over stone and gathering a body out of abandoned bones and old memories”. There is an air of beauty and threat in the place: cliffs might crumble and collapse, the pools are often very cold and very deep, and the whole place was born out of acts of violence upon the earth. Satyrs, for me, hold that ambivalence of wildness, excitement and threat in a dangerous balance, so he becomes the voice of the Limeyards in my words
 
Limeyards photos are going into the photo-pages now. The first poems will follow shortly