Amanda Tuke - workshop co-leader and Great North Wood nature-writer-in-residence in partnership with London Wildlife Trust. Once covering a large area of south London, today the Great North Wood consists of a series of small green spaces – all of which provide a home for nature within a modern urban landscape. The workshop was made possible thanks to public funding from the National Lottery through Arts Council England.
The workshop was very much in the spirit of poet Miranda Cichy’s quote “"A lot of nature writers seem to believe that you have to go out alone and on foot in order to write about it". The lovely pieces in this anthology demonstrate that the natural world can in fact be experienced and enjoyed through a window.
Enjoy!
My gaze homes in on raucous crows
- wheeling guardians - air traffic
wardens - jobsworth birds controlling
flightpaths - watchful of the ways
of humans.
I can almost eat the sleek road,
the slosh of last rain
pooling in puddles -
dirt streaking across roads to
spit a goodbye into the eye of cars.
Elizabeth Uter’s nature poems often put a human face to the enigmatic character/behaviour of birds, stones, plants, the inanimate.
Surviving back-to-back storms the trees stand proudly. Unsettling winter is nearly over. Mottled grey sky yearns for powder blue, sun tries to push through cloud. My body fills with fresh breath as I watch territorial timeshares on garden fences. Witness the importance of flow, understand persistence, learn resilience.
Nina Lewis is a poet from Worcestershire who enjoys writing about nature and place @Neens07.
Winter’s End
Strands of clematis straggle across the bare-ribbed gazebo. A breeze
leaks through the hedgerow in a droning wheeze. Ribes reaches out
gnarled fingers, pink knuckles breaking into bud. Narcissi lift
pheasant eyes to the sun. Under the blue ache of the sky, the old
garden begins to stir.
Angi Holden has been writing most of her life, most recently at a desk so covered in leaves and feathers collected by her grandchildren that it resembles a nature table. @josephsyard
Above the tiled rooftops
Scudding clouds pass pale blue sky,
floating, calming.
Rumble of wind through bare trees,
waving, shivering.
Two birds flop their wings,
gulls chase each other,
red kites soar,
together swooping, mewing.
Then an ack, ack of the jackdaws,
as they pass above the tiled rooftops.
Pam Milner loves to write about her life and wildlife experiences in West Wales
How do the air particles feel brushing up against my warm and flustered hand as I write? How does the magpie perceive my presence as they peer through the window into my messy room. The chaos. Do they relate to me? How do I relate to them?
Amy Bullard draws upon her personal experiences, healing processes and social justice work to write about her connections with nature.
The between marker of my land and yours teems with life. Smokey gray whisps
curl round the silent sentries. American red roses stand proud. Bumblebee tinted
jasmine blooms against parakeet green leaves. A dog barks a warning. Semi-trucks
rumble in the distance. Rust color mounds – feet beware ants are marching.
Bonnie L. Boucek has a deep love for poetry and writing. She writes to conjure strong images and connections within the reader. You can connect with her @BonnieLBoucek on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn.
The view invites the artist:
—Distant woods of heathery-grey, a winter sky of lemon/white rising to cerulean…
—The mid-ground: contours of snow-covered earth defined by blue-grey shadows and rows of sepia corn-stubble…
—And here? Abstraction: snow-bright shadows of ultramarine echoing burnt umber tree-tangles, back-lit with gold...
Nature, framed.
Tessa Grasswitz grew up in England, but currently lives in the USA, working as an entomologist and celebrating nature through art, prose, and poetry.
Evening Window
I can smell the dusk
fresh, cold, clear.
Shapes are highlighted by shadow
and fading light.
Snatches of song play out-
bold robin, hesitant thrush,
alarming blackbird.
A crow lands in the sycamore,
both winter stark-
one dark, one pale.
The only illumination
glowing catkin chandeliers.
Born and brought up in Croydon, Nicola Hunt has always loved wildlife and enjoys walking and looking for wildlife in her local open spaces.
Aerodynamics
Not quite hermetic, still
sealed behind glass, we watch
the crows plough through blue
field skies, their blackness bolder
than a child’s paper cutting,
scything the void, plummeting,
gear noses down, leg struts
extended, hitting grass, adjusting
coifs, cawing to fallen comrades.
One tap, then rising back to air.
Sarah Hill Wheeler. Erstwhile lawyer, aspiring writer, frazzled mother. Sometime Londoner, returned to my rural roots. Now often found outside, with a double espresso, talking to hens. Twitter: @hill_wheeler
Water in the birdbath shape-changes. It shivers into diamonded facets when the wind rises; with gusts, it races in waves along the ceramic sea-wall; the wind drops, the water settles, still and transparent. It’s unscented – fresh-fallen rain from yesterday - but it carries the wet, earthy smell of the garden.
Lindsay Walter lives in York and writes about the world outside her window, seen through her mind's-eye.
Field Oaks
The dining room window frames them:
Sentry-like, they wave tracery ‘gainst
cool-blue sky, dark arms outstretched,
beckoning tawnied eyes and wings
to secret hollows, refuge from
whispering winds, spy-holes
for scampering voles. They
shelter mothers, answering
plaintive bleats from hungry lambs.
Keep standing, so framed!
Jenny Wood, from Devon, loves writing nature-themed poetry and short stories
Chirpy
Eye to eye with that robin.
The cocky one on my garden fence.
His piercing black bead captures me whole.
‘You’d fit inside the palm of my hand’, I offer
from behind my living room window,
home of bravery.
‘I had you at hello’, he tweets.
Proper outdoor gigolo.
Britta Benson is a happiness & poetry blogging, circus skills instructing & common butterfly following German, a writer, performer & linguist thriving in Scotland, her chosen habitat since the year 2000. oddsends707138946.wordpress.com
Window
Nature splattered her paint palette in a carefree joyous moment
Soft romantic greens frolicking with jester reds and yellows
Scent induced hedonism
Sun brushes long thoughtful shadows, catching the mood
Breathe and taste the colours rolling around my palate
Nature looks deep into the window of my soul
Gloria Maloney writes creative prose and poems about the Essex countryside she enjoys walking in.
Tears of birdshit rain on window panes. Discarded plastic bags cling to the clematis like jellyfish stranded on a shore. Reminders of household chores I haven’t done. But the crisp air kisses my cheeks, and the hairs on my arms stand to attention. A blackbird chuckers, “Get outside instead!”.
Vanessa Wright hails from South London, calls Hertfordshire her home, and has her heart in the Hebrides; she loves to write about nature in all of these places. Twitter & Instagram: @elgeeko1506
A window of willow
Beyond glass,
My eyes lit,
By nature’s chandelier,
Willow strands,
Twitching, feathery twigs,
In a cascade of sunlit threads,
Etching patterns,
On this porcelain blue tile,
Brushed by puffed clouds,
I spot -
A wood pigeon within,
Settled, smooth grey,
Framed by fronds,
Delicately dancing,
In the outdoor breath…
Berenice Tregenna enjoys writing about common insects and plants in a blog called Berie Tree to encourage others to appreciate the nature which surrounds them @berietree
Nature, Framed
A postcard
I will send to you,
Is a scene from my window view.
The wind folds its words, squeezes them,
To tell a secret to trees.
The green jumps everywhere.
Like the pen stroke, dot, dot,
Every corner in my eyes.
Bit, a bit,
Silent dance,
Shush, …
Kai-Ting's writing is inspired by nature and based in London currently.
wagtails (from the passenger seat of the car)
they duck dive weave
tip and dip, and pip
to each other
dart through wind
bob, blur, swoop
in the sea breeze
flitter like litter
picked up in a gust
thrown up into crisp blue sky
Helen Jones - workshop co-leader, disabled nature writer
Laid up with a virus, I test out birdwatching on the recline. Diagonal binoculars take some getting used to. A sparrowhawk slashes through fresh canopy & flies fast-slanted for that appointment it’s remembered. 1. 2. 3. Shrieking, parakeet drama queens shoot up, down, sideways. Just funsies. [Mum, don’t write funsies, please.]
Amanda Tuke - workshop co-leader, nature writer.