Do you know where the Bigge Fountain is located in Chelston? Where the home of Chelston’s first fire station was? Or who built Cockington primary school in 1892?
Taleblazers have been busy with our Chelston Heritage Map project, for which we received funding for from the Torbay Small Grants Lottery Fund and the Localgiving – Magic Little Grants. We had been researching places in Chelston to feature on our map and engaged the community to have their say on which historical places of Chelston to include. We started to draw multiple versions of the map and write up the text to go with it and we are pleased to say that we are nearly there. However, with the Covid-19 pandemic we had to delay the launch and we hope to have our launch day in the late summer or early autumn. The Chelston Heritage Map day would be a chance for the community to walk around Chelston on a free guided tour where we will share the history and story about the selected places. If you are interested in this guided walk, please email us at;rich@taleblazers.org.uk
Once we have a launch day, we will share this information with you all and in order for us to keep the numbers suitable you will be able to book onto the free event via Eventbrite. We aim to run 3 guided walks on the launch day for up to 12 individuals per walk. An additional of 3 free walks will be added on Eventbrite in the autumn in case you missed the walks on our launch day.
The pictures below are from some of the places we have picked for the Chelston Heritage Map, can you spot where they are in Chelston?
Chelston, Torquay
Finally, we hope you are enjoying the last bit of summer sunshine and that you will come along to our launch day!
In a previous blog post, we introduced you to our National Plant Monitoring Scheme square at Cornwood, near Ivybridge. Last month, we returned to our square and completed our first survey of the year.
Rich introduces us to the survey plot
On our previous visit, we had identified the plots we were going to use, so now it was a case of finding them again, laying out a survey square and recording what plant species were there. Our first square was high up in the NE corner of the square, along the edge of a earthwork dug into the ground. The square was heavily grazed, and we only found four species there: gorse, wavy hair-grass, tormentil, and heath bedstraw. All of these species are indicators for heathland, but key species such as bilberry and heathers were completely absent, presumably munched away by the local sheep. This was the case across the site, and we found hardly any heather even when walking between our plots.
The second plot was more fun. This was a wet area (or ‘flush’) that we had identified on our recce, an area of wet ground high on the hill that fed a small stream cutting across the site. The area was dominated by more wavy hair-grass, soft rush and sphagnum, but the real find was a plant I knew to be carnivorous but couldn’t recall the name of. Fortunately Kev had an app that stepped in and took the word sundew off the tip of my tongue:
Plot 2Kev reading a poem called The Sundew, by Victorian poet Algernon Charles Swinburne
After this excitement, we had two more plot to visit and recorded more species that were positive indicators for both acid grassland and dry heath: heath bedstraw, tormentil, wavy hair-grass and a bit of bilberry on the higher plot. We recorded both as acid grassland, because the hair-grass dominated and there was no heather at all, and the presence of a couple of sorrel species confirmed this classification:
A look at one of our last two acid grassland plots
One of our favourite finds emerged right at the end though, when our eyes were drawn to a small succulent plant with beautiful pinkish-white star-shaped flowers. This was English stonecrop sedum anglicum, and we found a tiny little patch of it growing among the moss in the crevice of a boulder. It was once of those plants that once you had spotted it your eye was in, and we found a lovely patch of it on a bare sunny rock on the walk back to the car. It looked like a starry map of constellations laid out on the ground, a stunning and beautiful sight that we’d have probably walked past if it weren’t for the NPMS.
Stonecrop on our plot (left) and several plants laid out on a sunny lump of granite (right)
It was a really good day out and, even though we only found a dozen or so species, we learnt quite a lot just through having to look closely and identify plants. We signed up for the NPMS with a little bit of trepidation because we’re both interested amateurs who have never really studied botany, but we had quite a lot of fun and it felt great to be contributing to this important national monitoring project. We’re really pleased to be involved and can’t wait to go back to our site later in the year.
If you want to know more about the NPMS, visit the National Plant Monitoring Scheme website where you can learn about survey methods and even sign up for your own square!
What a beautiful weekend it has been and we were celebrating Trails Day which took place on Saturday the 5th.
What is Trails Day you may wonder? Well, in 1968 American president Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Trails Act into law which established a network of trails for people to use. Trails Day celebrates the explored and the unexplored by getting out into nature to discover and to rediscover. This could be by walking, hiking, cycling or on a horse back. For example, we have the South West Coast Path which one could follow to discover hidden gems and beautiful views.
Taleblazers is a CIC which focus children and young people as well as the communities of Dartmoor and south Devon, we are passionate about storytelling and the outdoors. In April, we were awarded our first grant from the Torbay Small Grants Lottery Fund for our project the Chelston Heritage Map. Our own trail which you could walk. We have been researching places in Chelston to feature on the map, we have drawn multiple versions and we have engaged the community of Chelston to have their say on which historical places of Chelston to include. We are soon to launch this project so stay tuned!
Last week, I attended a really good Mountain Training seminar with Sarah from the National Plant Monitoring Scheme (NPMS). The NPMS is a national volunteer plant monitoring scheme designed and developed by four partner organisations: Plantlife, BSSI, UKCEH and JNCC. It is a habitat-based scientific survey that collects data about plant populations all over the country and relies on volunteers to go out twice a year to collect data. A randomised set of 1km squares of land are assigned to volunteers who go out twice a year and report back on what they find. It is the best wild plant database we have and it is something that we are very keen to contribute to.
So we signed up, chose a square and were sent through a whole load of information: wildflower ID guides, species lists and guidance about what to do and how. We have chosen square SX6061, which is on the edge of Dartmoor a few kilometres north of Cornwood.
Our plot is divided into 25 plots as above, and our first task was to identify which plots would be most representative of the habitats in the square. At least three of our five plots should be plots from the grid above, and we could also do two plots along linear features and/or a wet area if there is one in our square. Ideally we should try to include one of each habitat type, too. So this morning we visited the site to have a good look around and decide on a surveying plan.
We quickly ruled out all of the southernmost plots marked as ‘other habitat’, as these were all on farmland, in fields used for livestock. It also became apparent that the wooded areas, though photogenic, were not suitable either. They were surrounded by a high wall topped with a fence, and even had access looked likely it appeared that inside was overgrown and recently replanted. So it looked like we were focussing on the lowland grassland and heath!
The OS map marked a watercourse passing through plot 19 that looked like a good target for a linear plot, so we decided to check out that area first. However, the watercourse was dry. This is not uncommon on OS maps, especially if the watercourse is seasonal. However, it was drier than expected, and the reason became apparent as we followed it up the hill. Some time ago, a bank had been built across the top to divert the water to the south-west via a rough leat and we arrived at the top to find quite a nice ‘flush’ where water comes to the surface to form a wet area. This was a really good find so became our first plot, and we decided that further down the leat we would plan our linear plot.
Kev standing just downstream of the flush.
Now it was just a case of walking the rest of the site and deciding which three plots would be most representative. The eastern side is more grassy and the more you go to the north and west the rockier and more heathy it gets. We haven’t decided for definite yet, but we will probably do plot 24 to capture the grassland and 16 for the heath. We didn’t visit the locality of plot 6 but the satellite imagery seems to suggest that it is in an area that is being colonised by trees, so this will most likely be the third.
Heath and grassland plots, and the views from the top of Penn Beacon.
With our plans in the bag, we headed for the top of nearby Penn Beacon where there are some ancient cairns, a trig point and amazing views down to the china clay works and Plymouth beyond.
We’ll be back to the site in a few weeks time to start our surveys – we’ll post another update then!
We are absolutely delighted to announce that we have been given some funding from the Torbay Small Grants Lottery Fund to allow us to start work on our planned Chelston Heritage Map!
Sherwell (Pretty) Park in Chelston
There have been people living in Chelston for a very long time – stone axes, flint scrapers and spear heads have all been found in the area which suggests may have been people passing through here up to six thousand years ago. In the Medieval period it was part of the manor of Cockington and the name Chilestone first appeared in the 13th century. The Cary family owned Chelston up until 1654, when it passed to the Mallocks. Amazingly, the Chelston Manor Hotel was originally a dower house for Cockington manor and it may even have been lived in by some of the Carys. Nearby Chelston Cottage is also very old and parts of it date from the 16th century.
Chelston, though, broadly remained a quiet, rural area. It was in the Victorian period, mainly in a burst of activity around 1880-1900, that most of the Chelston we know was built. Some large villas had already been built and all the things a young community needs were added – houses, churches, schools, shops, hotels, parks. The grandest of these landmarks are now listed buildings and the parks have avoided development. Chelston remains a green, friendly and pleasant place to live today.
Our heritage map will celebrate this by picking out some of the key locations from Chelston’s history and joining them together into a walking route. This will be hand-drawn by the Taleblazers team in a heritage style and will have details about each landmark on the reverse. We will then distribute our map free of charge to local schools, shops, pubs and cafes for residents to take themselves on a historic walk of the area in their own time. We hope to have a launch event on Trails Day, Saturday 5th June, when we will be offering guided walks and we will also reach out to local residents who may need support in getting around the route. We hope the walking route will encourage people to get outside and reconnect with one another post-covid, increase a positive connection between residents and their urban landscape and provide opportunities to reduce isolation and improve mental health.
We are broadly basing the geographical area of Chelston on the Torbay Council Ward Map of Cockington and Chelston, taking Chelston’s western boundary as the ridge following Seaway Lane and its continuation. To the east our map will go as far as the physical boundary of Avenue Road. To the north we will, for practical reasons, not go further north than the Haywain pub. Locations we have already identified are:
Chelston Manor and Chelston Cottage
St Matthews and St Cuthbert Mayne Churches
Chelston Cross
Chelston Drinking Fountain
Torquay Railway Station
Cockington Primary School
Grand Hotel
Location of the Old Mill
Pretty Park
Rosery Road houses
We don’t want to miss anywhere, so if there is anywhere that you think we should include please let us know!
Though this is a non-commercial activity, we are still looking for support from local businesses to help with production and printing costs and to support the outreach elements of the project. If you think you might be able to help, please get in touch!
Sunday was International Forests Day and we had a lot of fun on Instagram posting some photos and memories of some of our favourite forests. We thought we’d pick some of the best and put them on our blog. Enjoy!
First here are a few photos of Wistmans Wood, one of the very few remaining fragments of virgin Dartmoor forest.This beautiful photo is taken near Hound Tor, this is Becka Brook in Becky Falls Ancient Woodland Park.
This is a personal favourite [Rich], the Forêt de Brocéliande around Paimpont in Brittany. Many of the Arthurian legends are set here and one of these shots shows a site called Merlin’s Tomb – there is a fountain of eternal youth nearby! There are a number of ancient and remarkable trees in the forest but the saddest is perhaps the Arbre d’Or, a golden tree ‘planted’ in memory of the devastating fire that swept through the forest in 1990.
Dewerstone
Dewerstone
Most people who live in Devon will know the wonderful woods at Dewerstone, managed by the National Trust. A really beautiful place.
These photos are from England’s only private woodland, Savernake Forest near Marlborough in Wiltshire. Some of the trees here are really old and you can sense the immense height of the canopy when you walk around. Many of the oldest trees are landmarks in their own right and their names are often marked on signposts. There is an amazing campsite there too which is the perfect place to explore the forest from.
These photos are from the woods around North Teign River, Gidleigh Park, and Fingle Woods. Love the different shades of green in the photos.
We’re back to Brittany in France now at the amazing Forest of Huelgoat. The village of Huelgoat is on a beautiful lake backed with ice cream shops and creperies. At the end of the lake you clamber over some boulders and find yourself in this stunning forest full of stories and legends. We enjoyed the 100 ton ‘Roche Tremblante’ which gently rocks and trembles as you push on it. It’s one of the few areas of ancient forest that once covered Brittany.
Did you know that forests cover 31 percent of the global land area, the tallest tree in the world is called Hyperion or that spending time in a forest is good for our physical and mental wellbeing as it boosts our immune system, lowers blood pressure and promotes relaxation?
What was your favourite experience in a forest? Maybe you have seen an elk bathing in a lake in the middle of a forest, gone forest bathing during a summer day, heard a woodpecker or built a hut out of branches?
We will be posting some images of our favourite forests on our Instagram account through the day so if you haven’t found us already please take a look and follow us there!
Poetry can inspire, encourage, educate and it can also change the perspective of how we see the world. However, as we become more digital, we are to some extent losing touch with the art of poetry. Therefore, we would like to acknowledge the World Poetry Day. One of the most famous poems is begins “Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?”, which is the first sentence in William Shakespeare’s “Sonnet 18”.
Which is your favourite poem? Which poem can you recite word for word? Maybe you are good at writing a haiku? Let us know in the comments below.
The fantastic image above was created by Karen Cropper and used under a Creative Commons license. Yes, we know it says 2014 but we still love it! The original is here. Thanks Karen for allowing us to use this image.
Long, long ago, when I was 8 or 9 years old, I was walking home from school with my mother. As we trotted past the imposing Edwardian terraced houses of Wellswood Park we noticed that outside one of those buildings was a skip.
My mother could never resist a good rummage in a skip and indeed, this one had treasure within: books, hundreds of books, a lifetime’s worth of books. They had been dumped unceremoniously into this skip and were now waiting their inevitable destruction.
We saved as many as we could.
It soon became clear that the books must have belonged to a man who would probably have been in the Royal Air Force or at the very least had a great love for aeronautics, engineering and military history. Tucked in amongst the musty technical manuals, military histories and pulp war novels was a paperback book of erotic verse compiled by Erica Jong.
It had a nude woman on the front. A nude woman with absolutely no clothes on. I did what many prepubescent boys would have done in my stead and I hid the book away for later examination.
The book contained pages of poems and sonnets, ditties and odes; all containing evocative imagery and language far too advanced for my 9-year-old brain. I was about to resign the book back to a pile destined for charity shop when I turned the page and there in between the far more laudable works of Shelley and Shakespeare was a dirty, disrespectful ribald ballad called The Ballad of Deadeye Dick and Eskimo Nell.
9-year-old me loved it. It was rude and vulgar and its rhyme and rhythm lent itself to memorisation. I quickly committed the whole thing to memory and performed it at the next social gathering of my mother’s drinking companions.
It got a lot of laughs. I went on to learn many more humorous poems by rote, particularly enjoying the works of Spike Milligan, C.S. Lewis, Roald Dahl and Kipling. Yet it wasn’t until my mid teens that I started to write my own raucous adventures. Poetry became a great outlet for me; a way to complement those closest to me, to vent my anger and frustration over the things in life that I could not change and to comment on the sociopolitical and cultural landscape in a light-hearted fashion.
The Ballad of the Thirsty White Dragon Inn was one of my earliest efforts and there is no doubt that it is heavily flawed. It is perhaps culturally insensitive, most definitely historically inaccurate and arguably purile. Yet it is still great fun to perform.
It was dedicated to two awesome girls that used to hang out with us in school.
The Ballad of the Thirsty White Dragon Inn – audio clip
In rural Japan the men tell a tale,
One set to a backdrop of lightning and hail,
A story as gory as gory can get,
With bile by the bucket and rivers of sweat,
With murder and killing, and two kung-fu women, a villain named Big Willy Chin,
Swords by the score and bad guys in hordes, and this is the way we begin.
A group of old men drinking beer from wood flagons,
Sat in a bar called the Thirsty White Dragon,
It was raining and windy with little going on,
‘Cept smokin’ and drinkin’ and playing Mah Jong,
When into the pub, swung five surly fellows,
They strode up to the bar and one of them bellowed;
“Give us some drinks or I’ll cut off your head! ”
The barman complied; he believed what was said,
For the huge ugly bruiser was Big Willy Chin,
A disreputable rogue who revelled in sin,
And was wanted for murder in twelve feudal lands,
Many had died at his coarse hairy hands,
For an easier life the inn-keep poured drinks for the men,
One drink became four drinks, four drinks became ten,
Until all of the bandits were uproariously pissed,
Chin rose to his feet and slammed down his fist,
“For a year and a half I’ve pillaged Japan,
With my trusty Katanas and this nefarious band,
They’re cutthroats, they’re robbers,
They’re men with no honour,
They obey me ‘Cos I’m in command”
A band of thugs they were indeed, shocking to behold,
They’d end your life, abuse your wife and steal away your gold,
Two were brothers, Ninja trained, dark and lithe and deadly,
They had no names and neither spoke, not men you’d mix with readily,
One was massive, built from bricks, as dumb and hard as rocks
His name was Tele; he was fat and smelly,
‘Cos he never washed his socks,
Apart from Chin that just left Wang, a tall and handsome cur,
A letch and a looter with a prominent hooter and a cape of finest fur,
When Willy Chin introduced his crew,
The bar did fill with dread,
From this point on,
Each man knew,
Willy Chin would leave them dead.
Then all of a sudden their fear was no more,
For two women of legend had walked through the door,
Armed to the teeth with rain in their hair,
‘Twas Samurai Sarah and Kickboxing Clare.
Now these two hard-core lasses were known through the land,
They were the Shoguns’ assassins, his vengeful right hand,
And for a month and a day they’d tracked Willy Chins’ mob,
Prepared to repay those He’d murdered and robbed,
The gang stood stock still, not one of them blinked,
The brothers flexed muscles whilst Tele just stinked,
Wang grinned like a rictus impressed by the sight,
Of Sarah and Clare in their armour so tight,
But not one of them moved, they waited their cue,
From their leader Big Willy He’d know what to do,
“Banzai!” screamed Willy and drew forth his blades,
The murderous marauders advanced on the maids.
The brothers spun and cart-wheeled,
A dizzy dance of death,
Clare just checked her fingernails,
Far from being impressed,
When it came down to raw Kung-Fu,
She knew she was the best,
And she knocked them aside’
And bruised more than their pride,
With a swing of her steel shod chest
“Hello dear Sarah!” Oozed Wang,
Drooling, he stared at her thighs,
Past her bottom and hips her neck and her lips,
But he stopped as he met with her eyes,
His ardour then dampened and his legs turned to jelly,
For her stare promised death, but it didn’t faze Tele,
Who charged at young Sarah, rabid froth on his lips,
Sarah’s’ hands shot with speed to the swords at her hips.
One brother was dead but the other quite hale,
Clare’s’ lightening fast feet made him seem like a snail,
She delivered an axe kick with deadly intent,
His shoulder-bone shattered, through the floorboards he went.
Wang (dressed in sable) jumped onto a table,
Drew daggers from the folds of his coat,
As shocked and surprised the fat Tele died,
From a back-handed slash to his throat,
Wang leapt from the table (ready, willing and able),
Determined to go for the kill,
Sarah threw Sai right threw the mans eye,
Then he fell to the floor and was still.
Willy Chin roared as he saw his men fall,
And charged into battle not thinking at all,
Sarah flashed steel; Clare led with her head,
Chin was nutted then gutted,
Then fell down quite dead.
The whole place went silent in the absence of violence,
After such a display of raw skill,
Then many men cheered and called for more beer,
Whilst others were noisily ill
“That was” said the inn-keep ”one hell of a fight!”,
And he turned to give thanks to the pair,
But into the darkness and then out of sight,
Went those heroines so courageous and fair.
And all through Japan they remember that day,
When two fighting women made Willy Chin pay,
For all of the evil that he bought to bear,
Girls called Samurai Sarah and Kickboxing Clare.
So here we are at last, then. Taleblazers. An idea and name that Kev and I first discussed about 15 years ago but never really had time to do much with. We always planned to come back and do something with it at some point, so here we are at last.
Taleblazers is our new CIC/social enterprise. Our core goal is to find, research and retell the folk stories of south Devon and Dartmoor and bring them to new audiences, and to engage young people in the art of oral storytelling. We’re also offering workshops for schools, expedition support for outdoor education programmes (eg Duke of Edinburgh) and support for students with special educational needs.
Kev and I have done a lot of stuff together. We met at Cubs at the age of seven, went to school together, played D&D together, went to gigs together, worked together, started a cricket club together. We both love walking, being in the outdoors, folklore and storytelling, so maybe it was inevitable that eventually we’d start this business together too.
He’s an amazing guy. He has a rare and natural ability to tell stories, to create an intimacy with his audience, to bring them in to the performance of his tales. Every audience I’ve seen him work his art on is captivated. More than that, his tales and ballads are meticulously researched, blending the art of the telling with a solid grounding in historical origins. He is so talented and I can’t wait until we start to bring his ballads to a wider audience.
The third member of our team is my friend Victoria who will be working on the project management side. Like us, she has a passion for the outdoors and for working on collaborative projects with the local community. She is also the queen of the Swedish fika (institutionalised coffee and cake) and is one of the most organised people I know, so she’s going to be a real asset to our team.
We have about a million ideas at the moment so our website shows just the main focus of our initial work, and we’ll expand it in time as our plans start to come to fruition. There are a lot of things in the pipeline so please sign up to our mailing list and give us a like and follow on your favoured social media. If you have any ideas or suggestions or would like to work with us, please give us a shout via the contact form.