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SWS22 2021

Sunday For Seven Days (all over London)

Multiple locations
30 minutes
Sound walk

All stories are written by NG Bristow

These stories are part of a collection with A Week to Walk a Fortnight and THE WALKING CURE a 30 minute two-person sound walk, and they are available in A Week to Walk a Fortnight chapbook (available here from the Museum of Walking.)

LUNCH WITH THE ARTIST

Read by Charlotte Whitaker

What3words: hunt.water.guard

LOSING GRETA

Read by NG Bristow

What3words: ruby.soft.reef

DA VINCI

Read by Peter Reder

What3words: acid.wants.beard

IF YOU DIDN’T KNOW YOU’D NEVER THINK

Read by Violet Patton-Ryder

What3words: hang.rents.period

ON LOCATION

Read by Sakuntala Ramenee

What3words: stray.tiles.decks

TOO BIG TO FAIL

Read by Steve North and James Doherty 

What3words: shaky.things.highs

MY WEEK OF NON-MAGICAL THINKING

Read by James Bailey

What3words: spicy.nuns.rotate

These stories are linked with A Week to Walk a Fortnight

APA style reference

Bristow, N., & Stuck, A. (2021). Sunday For Seven Days (all over London). walk · listen · create. https://walklistencreate.org/walkingpiece/sunday-for-seven-days-all-over-london/
NG Bristow

NG Bristow

 
Andrew Stuck

Andrew Stuck

Co-founder of walk · listen · create (United Kingdom) 

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plodge

The Scottish and English word plodging has been wading through the lexical muck and mire since the late 1700s, and it refers to icky, slow, molasses-type walking. Plodge is probably a variation of plod. This word isn’t totally out of use, as a 1995 use from British magazine The Countryman illustrates: “Northbound Pennine Wayfarers, plodging through the interminable peat-bogs of the North Pennines.” Even if you have a spring in your step, it’s tough to skip merrily through the peat-bogs. Credits to Mark Peters.

Added by Geert Vermeire

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