Urban Forest Time II

A moment

The sloping forest of Gateshead Riverside Park with bare trees and a leaf-littered forest floor. The Tyne River is visible through the trees. On orange tarp, creative materials are set out. Two small groups of people on either side write stories.

the tree feels lucky to survive

and on their road to recovery

they wear their scars with pride

and continue to get stronger day to day

 

here, now, I somehow feel like lichens tell me

you are still alive

we have lived much longer than you, ha ha

 

I feel     very   slow  accessing my emotions

I feel connected to the tree

and thinking about my own scars

I am lucky that I am invited to come here

 

the campfire has seen the River change

and people change with them

my colours are always changing

 

I feel like we are on the edge of nature

the River separating us

from modernity and nature

 

time feels less mechanical, more real

off the edge, on the border

slower and faster at the same time

there is no such thing as Time

 

the Forest remembers

me coming to this Forest this morning

and humans, and non-humans, coming here

since long ago

 

the day that lightning struck

sometimes, bad things just happen

I almost lost my life to a silly mistake

 

lichens have survived by relying on branches and logs

where they feel comfortable

 

I hope to feel lucky again

    I don’t want to see the coat and the tent

I hope everything remains

    and the Forest flourishes in the meantime

 

I hope to see more people

    and learn of their past, of their future

I want to be recycled and used

    I am always returning



Authors

A collaborative place-based story from Gateshead Riverside Park, crafted in place on Friday 8 December 2023, between 10:00 and 12:00 GMT, by Marcus Beeby, Ruth Brickland, Lotte Dijkstra, Kazusa Hayashi, Mehmet Sebih Oruç, Paul Trickett and the more-than-human beings and vibrant matterings present.

HERE, NOW

TIME FEELS DIFFERENT HERE

THE FOREST REMEMBERS

WHEN WE RETURN

• HERE, NOW • TIME FEELS DIFFERENT HERE • THE FOREST REMEMBERS • WHEN WE RETURN

For a moment, we allow ourselves to experience urban forest time. We investigate the more-than-human connections in and with Gateshead Riverside Park, using our bodies, personal stories, and collaborative place-based explorations. During and after each prompt, we record our responses. There are the stories we uncovered.


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Urban Forest Time III

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Urban Forest Time I