Well we've finally got a bit of sunshine and some fresh air drifting in today, making us feel that spring is at last on its way! I just hope the brighter weather lasts, for a few days at least!
We've had a couple of courses at Kilve Court: Smuggling Stories and Creating Creatures. Both were great fun - if a bit cold on the excursions!
On Smuggling Stories we investigated local tales of 18th Century rebellion - when ordinary people started defying the law by bringing brandy, lace, tea and dried fruits into the country without paying tax on them! There was a chance to dress up in clothes from the time, and we saw the site of an old lime kiln and port that would definitely have been used to sneak things in under the noses of the Revenue Men. These tales and settings helped to inspire the students to write their own adventurous stories, which they then hid in secret-compartment books they created. Historical facts of smuggling goods and punishments were copied into the 'aged' pages that hid the secret part of the book:
The books were disguised as useless or boring tomes on the outside so that people would be discouraged to open them! I particularly liked 'Trees of the North Pole' by Oliver.
I think everyone enjoyed thinking about the past and inventing characters to write about!
The weekend of Creating Creatures was cloudy and wet, but we still discovered lots of amazing fantastical creatures and saw evidence of habitats and food sources for them on our walk into the Quantock hills. Here are some students risking the wrath of the Puddlemunch Monster:
We also played games in the classroom and moulded models of creatures to help give substance to imagined animals or people. Here's a sculpture of a Gunicorn - a creature that's a cross between a goat and a unicorn:
The creatures were then slipped into stories of quests and discoveries. Some students wrote in a diary style of a 'cryptzoologist' - an investigator of unexplained or unknown creatures, we liked the way Katie's story had the explorer asking the choco-angel a series of questions, which revealed that without chocolate the world would have no happiness!
On Saturday night some of us watched the film 'A Neverending Story' about a boy called Bastian who reads a book that seems strangely alive... if you haven't seen it try and rent it! Good films like this one help keep ur imaginations stretched.
Everyone went home with a model, some creature facts and an exciting story - and hopefully lots of ideas for more stories to write in the future!
Now me and Rosie are preparing for Smuggling Stories at Leeson House this weekend, if you're booked on we look forward to seeing you there!
Jennifer (and Rosie)
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