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Local roads in Birmingham are found to be in pain with irregular heartbeat

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Robson on… Restorative strolling

In two previous pieces I wrote about walking alone and in company. It feels remiss to write about walking at the moment and not properly acknowledge the current situation and how walking can help. 

Our current choice of walking companions or lack there of, is somewhat imposed upon us but walking can still provide nourishment. As you are probably aware, with all the current extra anxiety and uncertainty in the world it is important to give our brains a chance to reset, recalibrate, relax. We will all be dealing with lockdown in our own ways but below is a short list of simple ‘walk-experiments’ that might help, particularly if you are struggling with isolation, anxiety or just good old fashioned boredom.

First up, go for a walk. You’ll feel better afterwards.  

Go for a walk and try counting your steps. Don’t use fitbit (other pedometers are available), or if you do, count yourself as well and compare the totals. Counting your steps involves you directly in the act of walking. By the end of lockdown know exactly how many steps each street around you home is, how many steps it is to the shops or the pub (this might prove useful when it reopens). These distances will be in your very own measurement, as it will be your paces and no one else’s.

Go for a walk and look for angles, curves, straight lines in the buildings or natural environment around you home. You will almost certainly find something you had never seen before. You might find patterns in the lintels on a particular street, there might be a particular curve to a section of river or path that catches your eye.

Go for a walk at the same time each day. If you are working from home, or do not currently have work to go to, this will help create a routine. If you limit your walk to one hour, as you should, you won’t get too cold or too wet at this time of year and you’ll always be quite close to your house should a spring storm provide too much of a soaking. Note what changes, the light, the flora, the fauna, the atmosphere, the pavement.

Go for walk at different times each day. Walk an hour at each hour of the day for 24 days. For example, day one, walk from 0700 to 0800, day two, walk from 0800 to 0900 and so on. The 0200 to 0300 walk on this one is a challenge but a reward too.

In Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction, a long poem on the making of poetry, Wallace Stevens considers the act of walking and the finding of a version of ‘truth’, he writes,

… Perhaps

The truth depends on a walk around a lake,

A composing as the body tires,

Your walks do not have to help you compose lines of poetry, or reveal a cosmic truth of the universe, but they might reveal an interesting truth about your neighbourhood, your street, your local park. They might reveal something about a part of your area that you have not been aware of before. Think of your own walk-experiments too (if you have children, once they come round to the idea, they are good thinking of new walking ideas). 

So, try to give yourself some time to consider the outside and, most importantly of all, go for a walk.

@robson72ep

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Wayfaring with Kruse

Susan Kruse is one of the first people we thought of when making a list of “people we know who make art using walking in the Midlands”. Her work is multifaceted and always fascinating and I’m delighted to see she’s revamped her blog, titling it Wayfaring: On walking, magic and the landscape of Britain.

Two new posts appeared recently:

All Shall Be Well

I was at the beginning of a long walk, an adventure that had no fixed time to it. I only knew that I wanted to stay ‘out,’ in the world and away from my usual life for several weeks. It felt right to take some time to contemplate my journey in the home of a woman who had chosen to go the other way; inward rather than outward.

The Midnight Emperors

People get confused between ravens and crows, but once you have seen (and heard) ravens, they are unmistakable. Crows are smaller, with a flapping flight that looks as if it takes some effort; head on, their wing tips curve up in a distinctive arc. Ravens however, are Emperors; lifting off and away with a graceful, soaring flight, they soar more than they flap and are masters of the air. Ravens will fold their wings and fall through the air, flipping onto their backs and rolling before snapping out those great wings and lifting up again, an action that seems to be executed for the sheer joy of it.

Definitely one to add to your “walking blogs” feeds.

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Footnotes – a YouTube channel

I’ve just launched a YouTube channel called Footnotes as an outlet for my walking related videos. Having spent several years working on a ridiculously massive film project about the Central Library (coming soon), it will be nice to get back to shorter, more regular output. The first video is an account of the Cross City Walks project Pete and I did five years ago – have a look and if you like, please subscribe for more!

The plan is to re-upload my old videos at a rate of one every couple of weeks to trick the algorithm into thinking I’m a reliable uploader and by the time I’ve got my back-catalogue up hopefully I’ll have something new to share.

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Hockley Flyover project

The Hockley Flyover Project is a community photography project run by Tracy Thorne of Ghost Streets. She’s done a number of similar projects in Birmingham including Stirchley High Street Stories, where as locals we naturally got involved.

The Hockley Flyover  is an overpass which is part of the A41 in Birmingham that crosses over the top of a unique and fascinating public space called Hockley Circus built during the 1960s. 

We will be running a participatory photography project with local people to document this space, as well as exploring people’s experiences and to share stories from the flyover in the new year.

The project is open to people who live and work around the flyover, of course, and they can get involved by contacting Tracy or via the Insta.

[Disclaimer – Tracy is hiring me to run three street photography workshops as part of the project.]

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Video: Cross City Walks

Five years ago Andy and Pete did a series of walks across Birmingham in straight lines, a project they called Cross City Walks. To mark this half-decade anniversary they put their thoughts into a short documentary.