Search
My feed

Sunrise Sound Walk, G2G Trail, Blyth

G2G Bonnie Sitter

Can you imagine listening near Lake Huron at dawn, or with the many species in a woodland trail? Our four Sunrise Sound Walks, led by Canadian environmental artist and composer Anne Bourne, will explore the Lake’s wave patterns, the complex resonance of its deep waters, tectonic currents, the shifting shoreline sands, and the many pulses found in a forest floor. If this sounds exceptional, it is. Each intimate group of walkers shares a unique experience by listening to voices in nature, adding their own voices to a tone chorus in an environmental dialogue, all under the guidance of a world-famous musician and environmentalist. 

This walk will be along the Goderich to Guelph Rail Trail. Meet at the Water Tower. The parking lot is just off of Hwy #4, just north of Westmoreland Street, south of the bridge in Blyth.

This event has happened

2022-06-11 07:00
2022-06-11 07:00
2022-06-11 07:00

Hosted by: Huron Waves Music Festival
Blyth Road, Blyth, ON N0M 1H0, Canada

lake

Collection · 9 items

Nature

1 sub-collections · 164 items

Sunrise Walks

Collection · 9 items

woodland

Collection · 13 items

Related

Walking piece

Squatting and Common Land in Hackney

What has encouraged the rise in squatting today – what are the political, economic and legislative currents that encouraged this, and what is the impact of squatting not just in its immediate locale, but also across our collective culture?  Who should care if it is on the increase? All this and much more was revelaed in Melissa Bliss’ Squatting and the Common Land walk co-produced by Andrew Stuck at the Museum of Walking.

Andrew Stuck
walkingevent

Sunrise Sound Walk, Bayfield

Can you imagine listening near Lake Huron at dawn, or with the many species in a woodland trail? Our four Sunrise Sound Walks, led by Canadian environmental artist and composer Anne Bourne, will explore the Lake’s wave patterns, the complex resonance of its deep waters, tectonic currents, the shifting shoreline sands, and the many pulses

Andrew Stuck
walkingevent

Sunrise Sound Walk, Port Blake

Can you imagine listening near Lake Huron at dawn, or with the many species in a woodland trail? Our four Sunrise Sound Walks, led by Canadian environmental artist and composer Anne Bourne, will explore the Lake’s wave patterns, the complex resonance of its deep waters, tectonic currents, the shifting shoreline sands, and the many pulses

Andrew Stuck
walkingevent

Sunrise Sound Walk, Port Albert

Can you imagine listening near Lake Huron at dawn, or with the many species in a woodland trail? Our four Sunrise Sound Walks, led by Canadian environmental artist and composer Anne Bourne, will explore the Lake’s wave patterns, the complex resonance of its deep waters, tectonic currents, the shifting shoreline sands, and the many pulses

Andrew Stuck
walkingevent

Journey Lines: Making or Breaking Places

Journey Lines is a discussion betwen Anthropologist Tim Ingold and artist Claudia Zeiske reflecting on her Slow Coast 500 walk along the entire 700 miles long North Sea coast of Scotland. It reflects on making or breaking of places through tourism.

Claudia Zeiske

lonning, lonnin

Cumbrian dialect term for ‘lane’ – but a quite specific lane. Lonnings are usually about half a mile long, low level and often with a farm at the end. Many have specific names known only to the local villagers. Hence, Bluebottle Lonning, Lovers Lonning, Fat Lonning, Thin Lonning, Squeezy Gut Lonning or Dynamite Lonning. In the north-east the spelling is lonnin and seems to refer more to an alley than a country lane. The Scottish equivalent is ‘loan’.

Added by Alan Cleaver
Problem?

Encountered a problem? Report it to let us know.

  • Include the page on which you encountered the problem.
  • Describe what happened.
  • Describe what you expected to happen.
Follow us