The Sunday Post (Dundee)

From little acorns: Stars join drive to help young Scots see the woods... and new trees

Film encourages children to turn wastelands into woodlands

- By Paul English news@sundaypost.com

An all- star cast and 50,000 acorns are helping Scots youngsters get closer to nature.

Actress Katie Leung and singers Karine Polwart and Julie Fowlis are part of a line- up including human rights activists and campaigner­s contributi­ng to a new green project based on the story of a streetwise city youngster who finds redemption in the contents of a stolen handbag.

It sees schools being encouraged to access a new animation of bestsellin­g children’s book The Promise, by Nicola Davies, launched across the UK, with Fowlis and Polwart providing extra content for Scottish classrooms, in a bid to help pupils foster connection­s with the natural world.

The Promise follows the story of a tearaway teen, voiced by another Scot, Harry Potter star Katie Leung, who steals a bag from a passer- by, discoverin­g that instead of valuables, it’s full of acorns.

What follows is a transforma­tive tale of hope and possibilit­y. Folk singer Karine, from Patthead, Midlothian, said: “The environmen­t is something I’ve had a long standing interest in as an artist and as a parent. There’s never been a time more than this year when the questions around access to non- human life are an issue of social justice and equality as much as environmen­tal urgency. In order for folk to care about the environmen­t they have to have access to it.”

The resource is being made available for free to pupils in Scottish schools this week, accompanie­d by recorded recitals of stories about the country’s flora and fauna from nature writer Robert Macfarlane’s book The Lost Words.

Polwart, who delivers a spoken word recital of the poem Acorns as part of the project, said: “I wanted to add some support as a parent myself, more than as a job. Woods are places for kids to play in and there’s so much to be learned about what else is alive from just being child sized and playing.”

The project will also see Scottish environmen­tal group The Lost Woods work with kids on a project aimed at rewilding derelict sites throughout the country.

The group delivered 50,000 acorns to schoolkids across Glasgow b e f o re l o c k d own was announced in spring. Rather than scrapping the project, many children took their seedlings home to nurture during lockdown and the summer holidays. Now many are ready for planting across the country, ahead of next year’s COP26 environmen­tal conference in Glasgow.

Lost Woods coordinato­r Alexandra Mackenzie said: “The Promise is about rewilding city landscapes, and it’s a hopeful message.

“The Lost Woods was set up this year to fire up kids’ imaginatio­ns about the environmen­t and how that connection to nature benefits them. It also lets them see that no one is too small to make a difference.”

As well as rewilding derelict areas, the group hopes Glasgow kids will plant a “children’s forest” as part of the COP26 legacy.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The animation of the best selling children’s book The Promise is voiced by Harry Potter star Katie Leung, while singers Karine Polwart and Julie Fowlis have both become involved in the green project
The animation of the best selling children’s book The Promise is voiced by Harry Potter star Katie Leung, while singers Karine Polwart and Julie Fowlis have both become involved in the green project

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom