
At Kilve we explored some Tall Tales and looked out for Beautiful Beasts. During a grey-skies walk to the beach we mapped out creature sightings and suspicious settings. The leafless bushes were frazzly, like a giant birdbeast’s nest, and The Lake of Dragon Tears at the end of a quiet lane seemed very melancholy. Some fabulous stories were created from ideas discovered along the way, including one by Heather. Here’s an extract from her work:
‘Slowly Fireball creaked the door open, Fireball trembled with fear, his legs were shaking and he was biting his lip.
“Who goes there?” boomed a familiar voice.
“Are you the person that tricked me?” Fireball asked politely.
“Ah, that’s where you are wrong,” said the voice.
Out of the darkest corner of the room, a figure who looked like Ben Franklin came out. Suddenly he shape shifted into Madonna, then Fireball himself, and finally John Terry.’
This story extract shows the tension and excitement which can make a story really fun to read to yourself, but especially fun to storytell, something we all had a chance to try out over the weekend. It’s great to tell stories to your family and friends as well as just writing them, but don’t forget to do some warm up voice exercises first!
At Leeson House it was the first run for a new course - Smuggling Stories. We had four students ready for the challenges of smuggling a poem beneath our very noses, casting their minds into the past for some atmospheric stories, and making a book to smuggle them home in. Phew!
Saturday was a piercingly sunny day and we trudged through the mud to Dancing Ledge to see things from the perspective of an 18th century smuggler, learning bits of helpful information on the way. At Dancing Ledge the pockmarked slope slid into the sea, with a shock of white spray jumping up at the edge, and we imagined how difficult it would have been to land there years ago with a boat loaded with contraband.
On Sunday we woke up to a layer of frost making the world look magical. But it didn’t distract us long from writing stories filled with drama and suspense and making books to record smuggling facts. Students went home smuggling their stories in a hidden compartment, only to be revealed to a trusted few!

We hope you all had a lovely Christmas and New Year. Our New Year has started with a flurry of activity as we are developing the website, creating a newsletter for you, and taking bookings for the months that lie ahead.
The first Creative Creatures course for 2009 is this coming weekend, where we’ll be finding some Funtastic Fairies at Leeson House (Jan 16th-18th). Next we delve into Grisly Grimm and Freaky Fairytales at Kilve Court (Jan 30th-Feb1st) and then we are back at Kilve the very next weekend (Feb 6th-8th) when we will be Creating Creatures. See the upcoming courses page for contact details and for courses later in the year.
That’s all for now, hope to see you on one of our courses soon!
Jennifer.
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