This idea developed by Banu Schmid from ArtsCafe, is to create more engaging atmosphere for the visitors to enjoy the wildlife Manor Park offers.
Currently, it is waiting for support to develop and get fundraising. If you are interested in please come and talk to ArtsCafe. Below, information of the basis of this project and ideas to be revised when/if it gets support....
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19 February 2017 @10am-11am
Present: Lucy Hayes (Environment Scientist), Tamara Froud (Ceramicist), Banu Schmid (ArtsCafe), Lawrence Collins(Thames21~Ravensbourne Catchment Improvement (RCIG)
http://www.thames21.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/ravensbourne_vision_final_2014.pdf
Supporting Imagery
Our first meeting: 12 February 2017 @10:30am-12:30 Present: Pamela Zollicoffer (QWAG), David Larkin (QWAG), Tamara Froud (Ceramicist) , Chris Murphy ( Fundraiser/Musician), Banu Schmid (ArtsCafe)
Leaflet to be designed and printed for families for the 18th March ~ explaining what we wish to do and if they can contribute to pledge towards fundraising... Finding out how we want the final look of the information board design.. Biodeversity..
Second Meeting is due on 19 February @10am-12:00 POEM by Quaggy Poet Patrick Lee Recorded on 9/February/2017 by Banu Schmid (ArtsCafe) Rivers and Philosophy
Water is omnipresent, yielding and ever-transforming. It embraces all living things and is forever seeking balance and harmony...Dao “No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it’s not the same river and he’s not the same man.”Heraclitus “Sullen, untamed and intractable” was how T.S. Eliot imagined this “strong brown god”. There’s wisdom in considering rivers divine. The Quaggy ~ Vol 1
https://youtu.be/zhCtQuiIyDw Published on Sep 28, 2011Internal Networkz is the first in a series of video documentaries exploring the capitols connecting wild corridors, such as its rivers and train lines. In this first volume, the viewer comes with us on a journey as we explore the path of the river Quaggy. We pick up the route at its end, where it flows into the River Ravensbourne at Lewisham Train Station. We follow it where it passes underground at the police station and on, through suburban parks and the backs of houses through south east london...... Quaggy Film 2 https://youtu.be/2o109LSyq5E Published on Mar 10, 2014 with Matthew Blumler Quaggy Film 3 https://youtu.be/DHyCRlILoQI Published on Jan 4, 2014 In 2012 the Quaggy Waterways Action Group (QWAG) made four in-stream films along the river Quaggy featuring former chair Matthew Blumler. This third wade takes us through the culvert at Sutcliffe Park up to the Hadlow College site. Includes comment from Dr Geraldine Wharton of Queen Mary's University of London and shows footage of the trash screen, and narrow culverting, possibly responsible for the December 2013 floodings along this stretch of the Ravensbourne catchment. Filmed by Lawrence Beale Collins (QWAG) Quaggy Film 4 https://youtu.be/8s0Wu3eIAek Published on Mar 12, 2014 Fourth in the series, with Matthew Blumler
https://youtu.be/NCyDuzLGeO8
Uploaded on Nov 13, 2011
Geography Flooding case study by Amy Symons The river itself would be more interesting and of much greater wildlife value. Combined with the establishment of river plants along its banks, the Quaggy would become a very beautiful, attractive and memorable feature for everyone
restoring rivers offers environmental, educational, and amenity benefits We want to reveal the river as a breathing pulsating organism The river and its tidal changes remind us that our lives play out, not in the urgent context of minutes or hours but in the slower deeper context of thousands of centuries Quaggy>quagmire > to express the same general idea of shaky, wet, unsteady ground that cannot support the weight of a man or large animal and is therefore dangerous to enter and difficult to leave Documentary LOST RIVERS Documentary LOST RIVERS https://vimeo.com/ondemand/lostrivers/50839044 Once flowing through nearly every developed city in the world, rivers provided the infrastructure upon which modern metropolises were built. In this adventurous and revelatory look into the disappearance and recent resurfacing of these historic waterways, Lost Rivers leads us down the drain into vast underground museums of urban development. Guiding us through the hidden river networks of London, Brescia (Italy), Montreal and Toronto, intrepid groups of subterranean explorers known as “drainers” reveal the buried waterways that house the secrets of each city’s past. Exploring recent initiatives to resurface and revitalize these forgotten waterways in Yonkers and Seoul, the fascinating Lost Rivers brings to life an aspect of urban ecology that has long been kept secret. Significance of rivers in regions and traditions, listen to Radio 4’s Rivers of Faith www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b07nrlqz Sacred Canals canalriverwf.wpengine.com/community/exclusive-new-podcast-sacred-canals/ Listen to our beautiful new podcast, created especially for Friends of the Canal & River Trust, to hear why people feel such a strong connection to the waterways There is a
good balance between feeling that there are likely to be people walking through – making it feel less isolated – and still feeling as though you can hide away in a secluded corner. Many studies have shown that children benefit from access to natural environments (Lester and Maudsley, 2006). We want to reveal the river as a breathing pulsating organism The river and its tidal changes remind us that our lives play out, not in the urgent context of minutes or hours but in the slower deeper context of thousands of centuries |
Quaggy Project by
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