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A Northumberland Winter Quest
The Frost of Forgetfulness Winter Quest
Woodhorn Museum
Until Friday 23rd December 2016
Woodhorn Museum |
Canaries hold the memories |
Unfolding Theatre and visual artist Bethan Maddocks
have created a winter trail in Northumberland’s Coal Mining Museum. As the
Northumberland schools start their Christmas holidays we try it out.
The Cutter is the main collection building |
Woodhorn Museum
does not charge admission for entry or participation in the winter quest but it
does charge £3.50 for parking per car. The Trail begins in the building
adjacent to the car park and takes at least an hour to do as it involves
exploring the whole site.
The bird cage is pre-cut ready for assembly |
You may need to add time to play in the play area,
which the trail guide encourages, to go skating (at extra charge) or visit the
café. The suggestion is that the last trail begins at 3pm though your might
want to leave more time before the closure at 4pm. You are advised to book in
advance if you also want to include a visit to Santa – see http://www.experiencewoodhorn.com/father-christmas-1-2-3-4/
You can customise and name your canary |
Upon arrival we were asked to build a cage and make
a canary as canaries are wheat are needed to capture memories that can be lost
in the frost. The cage design has been
pre-cut and needed appropriate folding and assembly with double sided sticky
tape. The canary starts with a basic
template which needs to be drawn and cut out. The bird can be easily
customised. As a child I used to watch Blue Peter
and so I was in my element supervising my son.
All complete for the trail |
Once our canary and cage were finished the drama
began. We are issued with a passport which has seven challenges dotted around
the museum to complete at our leisure. The passport is intended to capture our
memories and we can then use those to help a character at the end of the trail.
Starting point |
You can attempt the exercise in any order and we
headed off to the Jack Engine House for the first double challenge. This was
followed by a trip to the place that the miners used to board the lift below
ground. History, numeracy and literacy skills are tested in a fun way. There
are other buildings in the area which are not part of the trail but are still
worth visiting. They include the noisy ventilation fan room.
The site is lit up for the Winter Experience |
The children are encouraged to play in the play
area as part of their experience and to record it. Anything non-electronic
which encourages play is a positive in my book. This area, outside of the main
museum building, also contains the artificial ice rink which also seemed
popular.
M is for... |
We then headed into the building to finish the
tasks off. These continue to involve enjoying the collection and making a
response (a memory) to it. If you’ve not been to Woodhorn before then this
could take some time. There is Coaltown exhibition that looks at the life of
the miner, their family and the larger community. This includes the heavy work
underground, the hobbies and the brass bands.
Mine model is worth a donation |
This leads into a display of impressive miners
banners which act as an inspiration for the children to create another memory.
Funnily enough at this point we spotted a model mine that operates in return
for a donation. It was well worth it.
Pets galore in the Pitmen Paintings |
The final section is an exhibition of paintings by
the infamous pitman paintings. These are worth look in their own right. Theatre
fans will be aware of the Live Theatre production Pitmen Painters (which was
recently in the region NETG Review).
Time for tea |
At this point we paid a visit to the café for a cup
of tea and a chance to discuss what we’d been up to.
Memories captured |
We had been asked to return to the start for the
big finale and were met a character who was ‘so cold she had forgotten
everything’. The children then get quizzed about their memories before going
through the gold curtain to a room full of canaries and memories.
Trail finishes at 4pm - last entry 3pm |
As a free activity, this was a big cut above the
usual “write down the names of the fairies scattered around the garden” type
activities. The children are encouraged to play and be creative too. It is also an excuse to see a good museum that
celebrates a part of the region’s history and culture. Seeing the paths lit up
and the pit wheels illuminated is a nice touch too for the winter festivities.
Review
and photos by Stephen Oliver (Twitter:
@panic_c_button)
Read
the North East Theatre Guide preview: http://nomorepanicbutton.blogspot.co.uk/2016/11/preview-frost-of-forgetfulness-winter.html
Cast & Creatives:
Worth a visit |
Created
by Unfolding Theatre
Visual
Artist: Bethan Maddocks
Co-artistic
Directors: Annie Rigby and Ruth Johnson
Production
Manager: Jill Bennison
Sound
Designer: Nick John Williams
Community
Project Co-ordinator: Morag Iles
Textile
Artist: Kate Eccles
Frosrty
Team: Danielle Burn, Matthew Gundel, Kat Pierce, Karen Traynor and Verity Quinn
Tickets:
The Frost of Forgetfulness Winter Quest is open
Saturday 17 to Friday 23 December 2016 from 10am to last entry at 3pm.
Admission is free, no advanced booking required. Please allow an hour to
complete your quest.
The Winter Quest is part of a busy winter programme
at Woodhorn, including skating and Meet Father Christmas (weekends from 26
November and every day from 17-23 December, early booking recommended), and the
Winter Market (10 & 11 December). For more information or to book tickets for
skating or to meet Father Christmas, visit www.experiencewoodhorn.com.
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