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Archive for the Q.3 Do you have a good imagination? Category

Mystery of ‘The Painted Lady’

Last night on the BBC’s AutumnWatch the presenters, Kate Humble, Chris Packham and Simon King discussed the millions of Painted Lady butterflies that invaded Britain in the Spring.  Painted Ladies are a regular summer visitor to Britain and conservationalists believe the number of Painted Lady butterflies this year was the largest seen here since the 1960s.   

painted-lady.jpg

Kate, Chris and Simon were curious as to what happened to them all - they seemed to have just disappeared - they’ve asked for viewers to give their views or offer clues and help solve the mystery.  Chris suggested the butterflies might be flying back to Africa at higher altitude, but he liked the fact that we don’t know for it shows we have lots to learn about Nature.

One solution might be that the butterflies arrived in such numbers to guide us to take note of another painted lady - Lucy Ebbs in the Haymakers painting by George Stubbs.  Our story reveals that she is Mother Nature personified. The butterflies mysterious departure maybe another hint that we risk letting everything precious in our natural world fade away! Malachi seems to alert us too - on page 35 he says, “the flame of a butterfly before it settles”.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c7W44Ljn5FA

Whatever, the arrival of the Painted Ladies are a spectacular phenomenon. Here’s a link of interest…

http://www.butterfly-conservation.org/

Copenhagen Climate Change Conference - Inspiring Change

In celebration of the Autumn Equinox - an event significant in our project - we’ve put together a promotional video, which is featured below.  

 pink-cloud-over-mayfair.jpg

Sky TV and You Tube are running competitions for video entries to inspire and engage the world on the issues.  We could use the video as an entry but it may be judged a commercial activity (which it isn’t as we make no money from the project) or the mention of our website could disallow it.   These are fundamental parts of our project - we’re tempted to ‘break the rules’ but will have to tinker! Oh these things are so difficult sometimes!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_xbcG5bphlk

Codex Regius

In our novel (page 177) Malachi quotes from a collection of old Nordic poems preserved in the Icelandic medieval manuscript Codex Regius, (Latin for King’s Book). He says, ”They stretched out strings of Gold and fastened them under the Hall of the Moon”. 

Malachi said this after mention of how an invisible magical force holds everything together. Let’s look at this more closely. We believe in Nordic mythology Vidofnir sits glistening like Gold in the tree tops and its around his staff that Icelandics weave their string or thread. It is this thread that is tied to the hall of the moon -its crescent.  It explains how the Earth and the Moon are tied together in orbit - by [unseen] strings of Gold. 

So, with this in mind we’re fascinated that scientists believe they’ve discovered the oldest example of humans making cords. In a cave in Georgia, when looking for pollen they were surprised to accidentally stumble upon microscopic fibres more than 30,000 years old.  A researcher from Harvard University said they are weaven in a way that suggestes a very old princple of making rope or cord, preserved in mud that accumulated over thousands of years. Some of the fibres were coloured using natural plant pigments - were they Gold perhaps?

strings-of-gold.jpg

Maybe Malachi’s quote also suggests we are risking upsetting the natural balance of things! That things are hanging by a thread - in the Antarctic.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_k2Vbhza9o

King George’s Albatrosses

Researchers writing in ‘Polar Biology’ report a small group of light-mantled sooty albatrosses have chosen to nest on King George’s Island, one of the South Shetland Islands in Antarctica. The colony is the southern-most breeding location ever recorded for any albatross species (by 1,500km); previously it was only thought to nest as far south as sub-Antarctic islands. 

sooty-albatross.jpg

The birds were first sighted on the island on Christmas Day.  The researchers - Simeon Lisovski and Hans-Ulrich Peter of the Friedrich Schiller University of Jena, in Germany and colleagues Karel Weidinger and Vaclav Pavel of Palacky University in Olomouc, Czech Republic - are unclear why the birds chose to nest so far south, speculating that climate change may be the cause. 

Well, perhaps there’s another more mystical reason - our novel and Charles Lamb’s journal puts new light on the significance of the albatross in Samuel Coleridge’s ‘Rime of the Ancient Mariner’ and also includes several mentions of King George III - who governed at the time the poem was scribed!  Its worth noting that the island was named after King George III!

 king-george-island.jpg

Curious then that the birds should make the link real. What do they call it - life immitating art? 

A Fishy Tale: Dogfish falls from the Heavens

On Sunday afternoon drinkers at the Castle Hotel, Neath in South Wales, had the surprise of their lives when a 16in Dogfish fell from the sky and landed on a canopy above them.  Andrea Lewis, Assistant Manager, said ’something hit the canvas really hard, startling the guests and started flapping around.’

dogfish.jpg

Its far from a fishy tale and where it came from remains a mystery. The favoured suggestion is one of a pair of rare Osprey’s in the area may have dropped its catch.  Whatever the reason we’re interested because of Bill Richmond’s claim recorded in Charles Lamb’s journal and in our free Journal extract that, “I’ve seen fishes fall from the sky” to help illustrate the miraculous is all around us.  Strange that the fish to fall should be a Dogfish given the role of Malachi our Samoyed dog as Mother Nature’s Messenger!

Happy Snap Squirrel- Internet Sensation

Crasher the Squirrel has become an internet sensation recently after he popped up in a photo taken by Melissa Brandt and her husband at a National Park in Canada. Since then the curious fellow has gone global with his image superimposed in many famous pictures around the world. 

Here’s the original….

 crasher-the-squirrel-original.jpg

And here’s some of the follow ups…

crasher-the-squirrel-sgt-pepper.jpg  crasher-the-squirrel-moon-landing.jpg  crasher-the-squirrel-jaws.gif

It’s another delightful story involving grey squirrels whose antics have intrigued us given their role in our novel as a partner to Yggdrasil - the mythical ‘Tree of Life’. The squirrels are present to demonstrate that the time for talking on action to preserve the environment is over, so its fascinating that Crasher popped up in a National Park - a reserve of land declared or owned to protect it from human development and pollution. 

According to the World Conservation Union there are now over 6,500 such parks worldwide. The National Parks of England and Wales are relatively undeveloped and scenic landscapes. There are currently 12 in England and Wales - the same number as the mystical stones revealed in our story. The national parks include the Lake District, which William Wordsworth described in 1810 as a ’sort of national property in which every man has a right and interest who has an eye to perceive and a heart to enjoy.

The Ghost of Michael Jackson at Neverland?

We’ve previously commented on the sad death of Michael Jackson, the ‘King of Pop’ and how the star linked with our story.  Well given the reference Sara made to Neverland and the ghost seen by Ben and recorded in Charles Lamb’s journal, we were curious about the mounting speculation about a ghostly shadowed figure seen during a CNN tour of the popstar’s former residence. 

 neverland.jpg

There may well be a logical explanation but it makes for fascinating viewing….

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Am67-Sew7k&feature=related

Sir Paul’s Squirrel

high-in-the-clouds.jpg

Our readers will know that Charles Lamb’s journal begins with a vision from high in the clouds, that The Beatles provide much of the creative influence for the story and that playful squirrels get up to all kinds of mischief on the Tree of Life to tell us that the time for talking is over.  How fascinating then that Sir Paul McCartney’s childrens book ‘High in the Clouds’ about the adventures of a squirrel is to be made into a film. 

The book is about Wirral the squirrel’s search for an animal sanctuary, which is what we’re very much about - seeking a haven for the endangered creatures on this planet.  It will be Sir Paul’s biggest involvement in a major animation since The Beatles’ Yellow Submarine in 1968.

Novel Flu

The European Commission has announced that it will rename the deadly Swine Flu virus to Novel Flu in order to minimise damage to the farm industry.  The Commission say the virus involves human-human transmission rather than anmial- human so its a human rather than an animal disease and its important to protect the pig industry during the economic crisis.  The WHO are continuing to describe the disease as Swine Flu. As Malachi explains in our story, “What’s in a name, a rose by any other would smell as sweet.”

novel-flu.jpg

A review of our posting yesterday suggests the EC has unwittingly provided further vindication to the power of ‘The Haymakers Survey’ to alert the world to the potential implications of ongoing disrespect for our planet.  

Songs of Innocence and Experience

One of the main inspirations for our project was the artist William Blake.  How coincidental then that Tate Britain are recreating the William Blake 1809 Exhibition in celebration of the 200th anniversary of the first solo exhibition of his work which took place in a small room above a shop in Soho.  This is an artist who was obscure and impoverished at the time yet is now regarded as ‘the greatest most individual genuis of Britsh Art’.  A most worthy acolade for the visionary poet and painter in our view - creating mystical works of otherworldliness and depth. Ironic then that when he first exhibited Blake was derided by the critics and was a commercial failure.  Only by a twist of fate did his work resurface after his death. 

William, of course, has a cameo yet insightful role in our story being the guiding light that led us to monitor world events. Could it be that he had some insight on all of this - the array of coincidences reported here  - as our novel suggests? Who can say?

songs-of-innocence-and-experience.jpg

Let’s celebrate by reciting the extract from his ‘Songs of Innocence and Experience’ which acts as an introduction to our tale, designed to give our planet a voice:

Earth’s Answer

‘Earth raised up her head, From the darkness dread and drear. Her light fled, stony dread! And her locks covered with grey despair’.

The exhibition runs until October 2009. We encourage you to pay it a visit.

http://www.culture24.org.uk/art/painting+%2526+drawing/art67779