Mark your calendar for the last weekend of June and the first weekend of July!
As part of the Peterborough Artists’ Open Studios event 4 artists from Great Gidding will be joining artists in Luddington to exhibit their latest works.
7 artists on display
Visit Carry Akroyd and Gordon Monk at their studios at No 4 Luddington in the Brook where there will also be afternoon teas served in their beautiful garden. After that you’ll be able to wander over to Saint Margaret’s Church to see the first joint exhibition by the Gidding Group which includes Great Gidding artists Paul-Joseph Crank, Krystyna Wojcik, Sue Jarvis and Geoff Goddard alongside leatherwork by Thurning craftsman Justin Capp.
Garden teas
Enjoy home-made cakes and afternoon teas in Carry and Gordon’s beautiful garden to help raise funds for St Margaret’s Church.
Venue and opening times:
Dates: 29–30 June and 6–7 July
The Gidding Group, Luddington Church, 11.00am – 4.00pm
Carry Akroyd and Gordon Monk, 4 Luddington in the Brook 11.00am – 5.00pm
Six local artists are opening their studios this weekend (Saturday 24th and Sunday 25th June) as part of Peterborough Open Studios.
Locations
The Open Studios events are held in private homes, studios and public spaces. Each venue displays a red Open Studios banner, and the Peterborough Open Studios brochure map shows all the venues so that you can plan your visits.
It’s worth checking the individual artists’ pages on this Peterborough Open Studios website. Here you will also find information on whether for example the garden will be open, refreshments offered or if there are demonstrations to enjoy.
Visitors are welcome simply to have a look round, to talk to the artists, and to learn about the techniques and materials involved in their work.
Free entry
Entry to each venue is FREE All the artists will have original work for sale and many will have cards and prints available. Many will also take commissions. There is, of course, absolutely no obligation to buy anything.
Please note that the exhibitors do not generally accept card payments so come prepared with cash or a cheque book.
Links to the POS artists pages and their individual websites
Luddington in the Brook ladies will be serving home-made cakes and teas in the garden at number 4, where Carry Akroyd and Gordon Monk have Open Studios on the last two weekends in September.
Gordon makes unusual chairs and Carry is a printmaker.
Open 11-5 Saturday and Sundays 17/18th and 24/25th.
Our neighbours in Luddington have been playing host to thousands of starlings who deliver a rare treat each evening with their magnificent display of murmurations before dropping rapidly in to their chosen hedge to roost for the night. Here are photos and video taken on February 1st.
Luddington resident Carry Akroyd, a regular contributor to The Oldie magazine, has written a charming article for The Oldie blog (which we have permission to share). Read the article below.
Photos by Paul Crank
Video by Krystyna and Paul
The pure joy of a starling murmuration – Carry Akroyd
Lockdown Three has been trying to the spirit, but a wonderful consolation in our east Northamptonshire village is the unexpected arrival of a starling murmuration; to my knowledge, in 30 years we have not seen the like.
Here is not typical of where one would expect to see them; just a few houses, hedges and paddocks in the middle of vast, intensive-arable fields.
The starlings may have abandoned their usual reedbed roost down in the flooded valley, and arbitrarily decided my neighbour’s hedge to be a drier alternative.
Shortly after sundown, groups of starlings arrive from various directions, and gradually form one or two large masses. Numbers have been building up over the last month and now there are hundreds – maybe thousands – impossible to count. They sweep in wide arcs over the village and the mouth must not be gaping at the wonder overhead, but kept firmly closed. One neighbour watches from her greenhouse, another was leaning out of the bedroom window to watch the entertainment and her cup of tea received a bonus.
Most of the remaining hedges around here are butchered by machines directly after harvest, even as early as August, removing the fruits that birds might feed on in winter. However, this chosen hedge is unusually semi-neglected, with thick brambles down one side offering protection from weather and predators. Hedgerow trees in the vicinity supply a waiting room for the early arrivals before they join the fly-pasts. When it snowed, all the birds sat in the trees, one by one dropping into the hedge to roost without preceding aerobatics.
Gradually, as the aerial display continues, the birds come slightly lower and closer together and form the impressive swirling shapes that make them the stars of nature programmes. Performances vary each evening depending on wind direction and weather, always hypnotic and mesmerising. On one night, they suddenly bunched into tight fast-moving formations, creating astonishing, evolving shapes for nearly 10 minutes.
An impressive thing is the complete silence as they pass – only the whoosh of their wings like a wave on the shore.
Just before dark, they drop into the hedge in batches, sometimes seeming as if sucked by an invisible vacuum cleaner, at speed all landing in a noisy disturbance.
The hedge becomes crammed and the squabbling racket enormous. For half an hour, the chatting and shifting continues and then all becomes completely silent.
UPDATE: As Covid rules have changed, the Bishop has decided there must not be any events in churches apart from services. So even tho we had social distancing etc all accounted for, it just can’t happen. So we hope to have it in the spring. I will store carefully any dragons already received But ask if you want your dragon back.
Aerial photos of the maze that has been created at St Margaret’s Church in Luddington.
The maze was designed and cut into the churchyard by Carry Akroyd and Gordon Monk several years ago to encourage the children of the village and surrounding area to enjoy and discover the local flora and fauna. The hope is to improve the diversity of the planting as the maze becomes more established.