This Month’s Activities

June – take a look at what we are doing this month…

We are thinking a lot about Vikings, and you can too if you log onto this BBC Horrible Histories game, here: https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/z7nrydm/articles/zdmgbqt

We have been reading this fabulous children’s book by historian and author, Dr Janina Ramirez.

She describes it as “Scandi noir for kids”.

Busby says, ” I won’t lie. This has come as quite some relief to me. I like bones as much as any other dog, but I find Nordic noir contains far too many – and never in a good way.”

Officially, the book is for age 9 and up, although younger, confident readers might also enjoy it.

You can see what the author has to say about her book, here: https://www.janinaramirez.co.uk/riddle-of-the-runes . You can watch a film clip about the book, here: https://youtu.be/hzsWGIAcqWI

Much older readers might enjoy this episode of the podcast You’re Dead to Me – Old Norse Literature, featuring Dr Janina Ramirez and her vast Viking knowledge (and sense of humour).https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p099dyw3

We have been listening to a Scandinavian invasion of another kind.

How many songs can you spot and name?

We have been looking at Viking designs.

Did you know that there were several distinct styles that evolved during this time, and that versions of Scandinavian motifs developed in the British Isles?

You can have a go at colouring in some wonderful, authentic designs taken from Viking artefacts, here: https://www.jorvikvikingcentre.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Colouring-Sheet.pdf Spot the mandala!

Photo of Viking jewellery -KlugschnackerCC BY-SA 2.5, via Wikimedia Commons

Older readers can find out more about Viking designs, here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viking_art#:~:text=The%20Urnes%20Style%20is%20named,are%20interwoven%20into%20tight%20patterns.

We have been transported to the marshes of North Carolina…

Not literally, but through the art of Alice Ravenel Huger Smith whose name appears in the credits of Where the Crawdads Sing, a film we watched recently, that is set in North Carolina. You can discover the artist’s atmospheric watercolours of the region, here: https://aliceravenelhugersmith.com/ or on the website’s gallery, here: https://aliceravenelhugersmith.com/gallery/

For a different portrait of the region, you can click on the film’s soundtrack, here:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=egxyRSb_XtI

Landscape, c. 1928. Watercolor on paper, The Johnson Collection, Spartanburg, S.C

We have been listening to a very expressive thrush…

and noticing how its song really is a series of 2 – 6 repetitions of different sounds. Listen, here: https://youtu.be/kNxz-A9CUtk

So, when Busby was listening to our poetry audiobook recently, he was thrilled to spot the way the poet, Alfred, Lord Tennyson , evokes this in his poem, The Throstle. See what you think!

The Throstle*

‘Summer is coming, summer is coming.
I know it, I know it, I know it.
Light again, leaf again, life again, love again,’
Yes, my wild little Poet.

Sing the new year in under the blue.
Last year you sang it as gladly.
‘New, new, new, new’! Is it then so new
That you should carol so madly?

‘Love again, song again, nest again, young again,’
Never a prophet so crazy!
And hardly a daisy as yet, little friend,
See, there is hardly a daisy.

‘Here again, here, here, here, happy year’!
O warble unchidden, unbidden!
Summer is coming, is coming, my dear,
And all the winters are hidden.

*Old word for ‘thrush’

Finally, as promised last month…

We have been finding out about the Cornish miners who left Cornwall to find work across the world – wherever there was a mine. View the slideshow, or read the BBC article, below, to find out more about the Cornish diaspora and the origin of the term cousin Jack.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/legacies/immig_emig/england/cornwall/article_3.shtml and, if you missed our last blog post, you can listen to the song, here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wgyRWKLkxvE

Did you know …

there is an island off the coast of Virginia, USA, where a large community of Cornish fisherman settled and were so isolated that, over the years, they developed their own dialect. You can listen, here: https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20180206-the-tiny-us-island-with-a-british-accent

Image credit: Veena Rao

Thank you

everyone who has signed up to follow this blog. Every time we see a new name, I feel great and Busby feels (p)awesome.

If you’d like to subscribe (it is free), you can do so below the paw prints.

If you enjoyed this month’s post and want to read more, or revisit a post, you can find a post for every month of the year. Just click on Busby’s Year in the top menu of this website (Buzzypaws.com ) and choose your month.

If you’d like to visit our Quiet Paws Book Corner, for more book-based activities, go to the Join the Book Corner page. It is also free.

Subscribe here to find out what we are doing each month. Fill in your email address and make sure you click on confirm subscription in the email that’s sent to you, possibly in your junk mail. You will then be notified every time a blog post is published.

May – take a look at what we are doing this month…

We have been finding out what this green man has to do with British folklore and tradition and why he features on the beautifully designed Coronation invitations.

The Green Man, detail from the King Charles III coronation invitation. Photograph: Buckingham Palace/PA

You can find the answer and read about the many other symbols in the royal invitation (left), here: https://www .theguardian.com/artanddesign/2023/apr/05/the-coronation-invitation-review-charles-pagan-party-king

How many can you spot?

Photograph: Buckingham Palace/Reuters.

The artist, Andrew Stewart Jamieson, designs pieces inspired by medieval manuscripts and heraldry and has spent his whole career perfecting this art. We love the ‘strange Landscape’ section of his gallery, here: https://www.andrewstewartjamieson.co.uk/portfolio

We have been trying out a flower recognition App…

Do you recognise the flowers in the photo?

If not, you are in good company – the App also failed to recognise them!

So, I sent the photo to a very dear, real human, who succeeded where technology had failed. Thank you, Jay!

These are pennywort. And they are everywhere.

Busby has been enjoying a better view of the country lanes

He explains, “Generally, I am happy to trot along at ground level, however, occasionally, especially when it is wet under paw, I do prefer a bit of a carry. This allows me a better view and the time to think about poems such as the one below. This sonnet could have been written about a lane near me!”

On a Lane in Spring by John Clare

Pilewort is also known as lesser celandine and a pingle is an enclosed field.

Feeling inspired? Click here for a child-friendly short explanation about how to write a sonnet and for a downloadable template:https://poetry4kids.com/lessons/how-to-write-a-sonnet/

We have been listening to…

Anthracite Flowers: IV. by Julia Wolfe

This is part of a modern oratorio that pays tribute to the coal miners of Pennsylvania, USA. Like all miners in the 19th and early 20th centuries, their working conditions were harsh and their lives incredibly tough. And yet, they found ways to brighten their surroundings.

An article on Wikipedia explains how, “This movement was created and inspired by an interview conducted with Barbara Powell, the daughter and granddaughter of miners. In an interview, she stated, “We all had gardens” and began listing flower names.” You can read the article, here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthracite_Fields

The lyrics are here: https://genius.com/Julia-wolfe-anthracite-flowers-iv-flowers-lyrics

Why not have a go at illustrating these lyrics?!

You can read more about Pennsylvania’s coal miners and view photos, here: http://www.anthracitemuseum.org/

We are wondering how many of Pennsylvania’s coal miners, largely of European origin, came from Cornwall.

Listen to the song below to find out why!

Some estimates put the percentage of 15 – 24 year-olds leaving Cornwall in the second half of the 19th century at as high as 44%. More about this next month.

We have been testing our musical ear…

and so can you, using this website: https://www.themusiclab.org/quizzes/td

When you take the online test, you can find out whether you are tone deaf or have perfect pitch, all whilst helping researchers at Yale University.

You can take part in other games that help research, including this one for children about world music (parental input needed). https://www.themusiclab.org/quizzes/kfc

We have been waiting to take part in…

the Global Big Bird Watch – the 13th May. But then, we missed it!! Whoops.

If you missed it too, you can still submit results of your twitching. Thousands of dedicated people have submitted a result every day for a year. There’s a challenge!

You can take a free birdwatching course online, here: https://academy.allaboutbirds.org/product/ebird-essentials/?utm_source=Cornell+Lab+eNews&utm_campaign=2e186eb4d0-ebird+enews+may+2023&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_47588b5758-2e186eb4d0-353615385

We have been admiring this little bird though.

It has come all the way from Ukraine as part of a much appreciated gift. You can read more about Ukrainian embroidery in last September’s blog, here:https://buzzypaws.com/september-2022-with-busby/

We have been baking shortbread…

Mary Berry’s recipe, the result and my serving suggestion are on the slideshow below.

Here’s the recipe for our thousands of American readers, only joking. But if you’re out there, this is the recipe for you.https://www.washingtonpost.com/recipes/proper-british-shortbread/

And finally…

we have been enjoying using DALL-E to illustrate this page.

If you noticed the lack of credits for many of the pictures this month, that’s because they are DALL.E creations. Here are some runners up that DALL.E produced but that weren’t selected.

Thank you

everyone who has signed up to follow this blog. Every time we see a new name, I feel great and Busby feels (p)awesome.

If you’d like to subscribe (it is free), you can do so below the paw prints.

If you enjoyed this month’s post and want to read more, or revisit a post, you can find a post for every month of the year. Just click on Busby’s Year in the top menu of this website (Buzzypaws.com ) and choose your month.

If you’d like to visit our Quiet Paws Book Corner, for more book-based activities, go to the Join the Book Corner page. It is also free.

Subscribe here to find out what we are doing each month. Fill in your email address and make sure you click on confirm subscription in the email that’s sent to you, possibly in your junk mail. You will then be notified every time a blog post is published.

April – take a look at what we are doing this month…

З Великоднем! Happy Easter! to our all courageous and inspirational Ukrainian readers, wherever you are reading this.

Easter in the Orthodox Church this year is on the 16th April. You can read about some beautiful Ukrainian Easter traditions on this child-friendly website, here: https://bilingualkidsrock.com/ukrainian-easter-traditions/

You can download, or colour online, some beautiful designs, here: https://www.supercoloring.com/coloring-pages/pysanky-eggs

Ukrainian Easter Eggs “Pysanky”. Photo Credit to RTLibrary

We have been thinking about wild flowers and Easter folklore.

Busby says, “Being a dog, my special interest lies more in whatever has passed by the flowers. However, I have enjoyed seeing how many wild flowers we can spot that are mentioned in this fabulous article.”

Willow is an important part of Easter in Ukraine, so it interesting that it also features in traditional British folklore. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/4DMBrvtf4BC68BjG1ql3Y4H/12-british-wild-plants-that-tell-the-easter-story

Can you spot the orchid in the slideshow below? It is meant to be quite rare. We did manage to find many of the flowers mentioned.

We have been listening to this appropriately named piece of music.

It was recorded using a Disklavier, a computer-controlled piano. Avril 14th is a piano instrumental by the electronic musician Richard D. James, under his pseudonym Aphex Twin

We have been learning about…

how the illustrators of medieval bestiaries relied on word of mouth to create their drawings. Often, descriptions of animals seen in faraway countries were greatly exaggerated or altered in the telling. It was like an art game of Chinese Whispers.

So, it can be a challenge to work out which animal they represent. To make it more confusing, medieval bestiaries also make no distinction between real and mythological creatures.

Have a go at guessing which (real) animals these illustrations are meant to be!

All illustrations have been taken from this quiz for older readers, where you will find the answers : https://www.medievalists.net/2015/01/can-guess-animal/

Children can find out more about legendary creatures, here: https://kids.kiddle.co/Legendary_creature You can find out more about medieval bestiaries from the British Library, here: https://blogs.bl.uk/digitisedmanuscripts/2014/06/weird-and-wonderful-creatures-of-the-bestiary.html There is a wonderful, comprehensive list of creatures – real and mythological, here: https://bestiary.ca/beasts/beastalphashort.htm

Camel image:Koninklijke Bibliotheek, KB, 76 E 4 (Der Naturen Bloeme)

We have been imagining how medieval artists would have portrayed Busby…

– the dog with the speedy zooms, the big barks, anxious personality, food obsession and the ability to spring several times his height. So we asked DALL-E.

We have been wondering how migrating birds find their way home.

Above Image: Snow Flight Linocut by Niki Bowers http://www.nikibowers.co.uk card by http://www.art-angels,co.uk

Experiments by a scientist, Stephen Emlen, Cornell emeritus professor of neurobiology and behaviour, indicate that “birds look for some sort of constellation to point their way north, once they’ve learned where it is from the motion of the stars.”

Long camera exposures, such as the photo on the left, reveal that all the stars in the sky in the Northern Hemisphere rotate around the North Star. You can spot it using the Night Sky App, recommended last month. It is amazing!

Photo by Getty Images

In the decades since these experiments, ornithologists have learned a lot more about how birds navigate. They don’t just use a star compass — they also have a magnetic compass, a sun compass, and even a smell compass. It’s incredibly complex. “All these things intermingle,” Emlen says, and scientists still aren’t sure precisely how these different navigational systems all work together.

Recent research indicates that homing pigeons might have magnetic material in their beaks that guides them towards the magnetic north. How incredible!

Older readers might be interested in the original article, here: https://www.vox.com/22538268/animal-navigation-starlight-emlen-planetarium-experiments

Older children might like this short article, from the Smithsonian Science Education Center, about pigeons’ beaks, https://ssec.si.edu/stemvisions-blog/how-do-birds-navigate

And children might like this animation about bird migration https://thekidshouldseethis.com/post/62332029273

Above Photo – Prediction of what would happen if Busby had a magnetic material in his nose.

The Road Home

We have been thinking about how people create things.

It’s not only drawings that evolve. Music can too. This is what happened when composer,Stephen Paulus was asked to write a short “folk” type choral work.

He says, ” I had discovered a tune in a folk song book called “The Lone Wild Bird.”  I fell in love with it, made a short recording and asked my good friend and colleague, Michael Dennis Browne to write new words for this tune. The tune is taken from The Southern Harmony Songbook of 1835.”

Card by Cambridge Imprint http://www.cambridgeimprint.co.uk

This is the original tune: https://youtu.be/rH-xfPx9qUk and this, in turn, maybe owes something to this famous tune: https://youtu.be/XpHj8yTUqH4

You can read more about the creative process here: https://stephenpaulus.com/blogs/news/17806884-work-story-the-road-home

We have been watching this moving film clip and feeling uplifted (!)

https://thekidshouldseethis.com/post/christian-moullec-flies-his-microlight-with-the-birds

Inspired by this, we have put World Migratory Bird Day on our calendar.

It is on the 13th May. You too can join in with a worldwide bird count using MERLIN, our favourite bird identification App.

You can find out how just ten minutes can contribute to a better understanding of global bird populations, here: https://ebird.org/news/global-big-day-2023

Observations are crucial in allowing researchers to compile fascinating information about bird populations and simulations of continental bird migration. You can view these, here: https://science.ebird.org/en/status-and-trends

And finally, rounding off the theme of home on a lighter note, we have been watching…

If you are unfamiliar with how these were created (using interviews with members of the public!) you can find out more about the process, here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creature_Comforts

Thank you

everyone who has signed up to follow this blog. Every time we see a new name, I feel great and Busby feels (p)awesome.

If you’d like to subscribe (it is free), you can do so below the paw prints.

If you enjoyed this month’s post and want to read more, or revisit a post, you can find a post for every month of the year. Just click on Busby’s Year in the top menu of this website (Buzzypaws.com ) and choose your month.

If you’d like to visit our Quiet Paws Book Corner, for more book-based activities, go to the Join the Book Corner page. It is also free.

Subscribe here to find out what we are doing each month. Fill in your email address and make sure you click on confirm subscription in the email that’s sent to you, possibly in your junk mail. You will then be notified every time a blog post is published.

March – take a look at what we are doing this month…

We have been thinking about the night sky…

February was an exceptionally dry month with clear night skies overhead, so we have been doing some stargazing. It’s a bit of a theme this month.

Cowdray Cosmos (above) by Richard Murray is the winning photo in the annual astrophotography competition run by the South Downs National Park as part of its Dark Skies Festival in February.

The South Downs is one of several UK international dark sky areas.

You can view other starry stunners, such as Celestial Estuary by Giles Smith, here: https://www.southdowns.gov.uk/dazzling-dark-sky-over-regal-ruins-wins-south-downs-national-parks-photo-contest/

You can find out more about the international dark skies movement, here: https://www.darksky.org/

And, if this interests you, you can watch a one minute film clip to see what you can do to help wildlife, that depend on dark skies, here: https://www.darksky.org/light-pollution/wildlife/.

We are trying out a new App to help identify stars in the night sky.

If you feel inspired to do some stargazing of your own, there are free Apps you can use where you point your phone at the night sky and it tells you what you are looking at. We are trying out this Sky View Lite and you can read a review by teachers, here: https://www.educationalappstore.com/app/skyview-free-explore-the-universe

I really hope it will be as helpful at the Merlin Bird App (see last month’s post).

The 20th March is the vernal equinox, so spring has officially sprung!

We have been listening to this poem about stars set to music a century after it was written…

This poem by American poet, Sara Teasdale was published in the 1920s. I like the contrast between the simple verses and the theme of nature and eternity. It’s been described as capturing that feeling of awe, when a sky full of stars takes us out of our own small worlds in contemplation of something so vast and beautiful. You can read a larger copy, here: https://img.poemhunter.com/i/poem_images/667/stars-5.jpg

Photo by Neale LaSalle on Pexels.com

Nearly a century later, this poem has been set to music, including the eerie otherworldly sound produced by fingers rubbing on the rims of glasses, that you might be able to hear. Watch this atmospheric performance, below, and see whether you think Eriks Esenvalds captures the tone of the poem. Maybe even listen outside on a clear star-filled night!

We have been celebrating the birthday of someone who doesn’t need a night sky in order to feel little within the universe…

We have been thinking about our five senses…

after taking this quick and easy quiz.

The quiz allows you to discover your most neglected sense and how to awaken your appreciation for it. You can find out more, here: https://gretchenrubin.com/quiz/the-five-senses-quiz/. Which is your most neglected sense?

Busby says, ” Well. Frankly, no surprises about my result, which (apologies , canine readers, for the spoiler, left) is Seeing. No harm in having it confirmed though, and the quiz was fun. Being a dog, I did not feel interested by the ways I could increase my appreciation of this sense, as I already ‘see’ so well with my nose”

Should you wish to, you can read more about Busby’s nose, here: https://buzzypaws.com/august-with-busby/

We have been trying out DALL-E…

and this is what it did with the instruction, Jack Russell terrier gazing at stars in a Van Gogh night sky.

Pretty clever, don’t you think? You can have a go yourself, here, but you need to be over 18, so children will need an adult to help them. https://openai.com/product/dall-e-2

On that theme…

Anyone for stargazey pie? This is a traditional Cornish recipe. Should any older readers fancy giving it a go, here is a recipe from someone who should know! https://www.rickstein.com/blog/rick-steins-cornwall-stargazy-pie-recipe/

Simpler, and possibly less off-putting, creative, star-themed activities can be found, below: Simple colouring: https://www.colorwithfuzzy.com/star-coloring-pages.html. Short of time for browsing? We liked this one best. https://www.colorwithfuzzy.com/support-files/star-coloring-page.pdf Medium level of challenge https://www.justcolor.net/relaxation/coloring-mandalas/nggallery/8/page/6/?image=mandalas__coloring-page-adult-star-mandala__1 Or watch how you can make some easy mini paper stars, here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFwmdi6YK9k

And now to a star of another kind…

What a great reminder not to let the perfect be the enemy of the good. Stick around for the slow motion replays at the end.

What a great example of ‘Done is better than perfect”!!

Finally, congratulations and a big gold star …

to Cathy for correctly identifying the location of these romantic dragons as being Varna in Bulgaria. You can discover more about this historic coastal city, here: https://visit.varna.bg/en/index.html

Did you know that a site near Varna dates back to 4600BC?! It has yielded what is believed to be the world’s oldest processed gold.

Thank you

everyone who has signed up to follow this blog. Every time we see a new name, I feel great and Busby feels (p)awesome.

If you’d like to subscribe (it is free), you can do so below the paw prints.

If you enjoyed this month’s post and want to read more, or revisit a post, you can find a post for every month of the year. Just click on Busby’s Year in the top menu of this website (Buzzypaws.com ) and choose your month.

If you’d like to visit our Quiet Paws Book Corner, for more book-based activities, go to the Join the Book Corner page. It is also free.

Subscribe here to find out what we are doing each month. Fill in your email address and make sure you click on confirm subscription in the email that’s sent to you, possibly in your junk mail. You will then be notified every time a blog post is published.

February – Take a look at what we are doing this month…

It’s the month of love, so these dragons caught our eye when googling a city that a friend in our book group visited this week. Do you know where they are?!

Photo by Pavel Georgiev on Pexels.co .(This name might be a clue! Answers to buzzypaws@hotmail.com – just for the glory of a first name mention!). The answer will be on next month’s blog page

Busby has been finding out why humans love pets.

He says, “Well, I have long known that when looking for love, I am the perfect match for my people. However, I was interested in this list that backs up my own experience.”

  1. No small talk necessary to bond
  2. No expectations beyond food, love and walks/ time outside.
  3. Non judgmental company
  4. A constant source of comfort
  5. A great conversation starter
  6. A great excuse to go home

So true, Busby, so true.

Older readers can read the full (non-scientific) article, here: https://introvertdear.com/news/introverts-pets-perfect/

Cartoon credit Shutterstock from: https://www.rd.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/excuse-me-excuse-me-what-s-that-you-are-eating.jpg?resize=768,649

Food and walks keep us all happy

We have been baking…

flapjacks that really work, using Mary Berry’s recipe. We also enjoyed a very lovely dark chocolate fruit cake, topped with marzipan and more chocolate (melt Galaxy with butter).

You can find Mary Berry’s quick and totally foolproof flapjack recipe here: https://thehappyfoodie.co.uk/recipes/fast-flapjacks/. The cake recipe is here: https://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/chocolate-fruitcake

We have been watching some animated films for older children – one of us from behind the blanket in his dog basket.

Spirited Away (PG) from Studio Ghibli and Pinocchio (PG) by Guillermo del Toro.

They are beautiful, but dark for children. Common Sense Media gives Spirited Away (left) a surprisingly low age rating (8+). You can watch the trailer, here, and make your own mind up: https://youtu.be/ByXuk9QqQkk

A gentler introduction to Anime would be The Secret World of Arrietty, for more sensitive children though. Also from Studio Ghibli, it is based on The Borrowers by Mary Norton.

You can watch the official trailer here

Busby says that since watching this version of Pinocchio, he has decided that he is now happy about his Fairy Tale Character Quiz result being the wolf.

He explains, “As much as I believe myself to be a ‘real boy’, I hadn’t actually thought about the reality of life with wooden nose. Where would the joy in that be?!”

You can have a go at drawing a Manga character face, here:

We have been thinking about the skill of song translators.

Imagine having to stay close to the text and managing to make things rhyme! Have a watch of Let it Go from Disney’s Frozen in German or French. Why not have a go at singing along?! It is good for your brain!

And, of course, Frozen is inspired by Hans Christian Andersen’s Snow Queen.

You can have a lot of fun with this. The best translations are found by putting the original title, the language you want and Disney in your search engine. Here’s one to make you smile https://youtu.be/A70xUvyPA_c

We are keeping up our outside for 23 in 23 challenge…

Recent cold, sunny weather has made it a lot easier though, and keeping our paws warm has helped a lot. This first picture is of the moon. It has been cold, but spring is on its way!

If you have a resolution that is not working, or that you have abandoned, don’t worry! The 28th February is Determination Day. Confused? Older readers can listen and find out more, here (at 5 minutes 45 seconds in): https://gretchenrubin.com/podcast/417-celebrate-determination-day-start-a-no-homework-book-club-and-go-outside-or-read-about-it/ Or you can read about it, here (ignore the different date – any time in February will do!): https://gretchenrubin.com/articles/slowing-down-on-your-resolutions-use-determination-day-to-re-evaluate/.

Missed January 1st, but want to start a new habit or resolution? Don’t despair -you can join in the fun at any time! Older readers can quickly get some actionable ideas from this podcast: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p09by3yy/episodes/downloads (also available from the Apple App store). You will see a whole list of great ideas, presented in a 15 minute podcast. Some can be adapted for younger readers.

Because, generally, we manage what we measure, think about tracking your progress – either use a paper chart like this one: https://busyb.co.uk/pdf/Year_Planner_2022_02.pdf or this one: https://gretchenrubin.com/resource/go-outside-23-in-2023/

You can also use an online habit tracker. Gretchen Rubin has one on her free App. Take a look, here: https://thehappierapp.com/ You can put any goal in. Adults can also help research by downloading Professor Tim Spector’s Zoe App and choosing a health goal: https://health-study.joinzoe.com/blog/zoe-health-study-habit-tracker

We have been taking part in the Cornell Great Backyard Bird Count.

If you are quick, you can too. Monday, 20th February is the last day. It is very easy to join in if you download their Merlin App. Find out more about the App here: https://merlin.allaboutbirds.org/And the bird count, here: https://www.birdcount.org/

This App has featured here before, because I love it. It really is like magic! You hold up your phone and it identifies the birds it can hear. It identified sixteen different type of bird this morning in the fifteen minutes Busby took to wander around the garden. They included linnet, bunting and partridge – amazing!

This is a male linnet and you can find out more about this bird and listen to its song, here: https://www.rspb.org.uk/birds-and-wildlife/wildlife-guides/bird-a-z/linnet/

Finally, last month’s picture of Busby’s dream -how was it produced?

It was produced using DALL.E by Open AI. We haven’t used it yet, but we are keen to try. Given the unpredictability of the results, it’s something adults should try first. Here’s the link: https://openai.com/blog/dall-e-now-available-without-waitlist/

Thanks to Levi for this great picture.

Thank you

everyone who has signed up to follow this blog. Every time we see a new name, I feel great and Busby feels (p)awesome.

If you’d like to subscribe (it is free), you can do so below the paw prints.

If you enjoyed this month’s post and want to read more, or revisit a post, you can find a post for every month of the year. Just click on Busby’s Year in the top menu of this website (Buzzypaws.com ) and choose your month.

If you’d like to visit our Quiet Paws Book Corner, for more book-based activities, go to the Join the Book Corner page. It is also free.

Subscribe here to find out what we are doing each month. Fill in your email address and make sure you click on confirm subscription in the email that’s sent to you, possibly in your junk mail. You will then be notified every time a blog post is published.

January 2023 – Take a look at what we have been doing this month…

Please follow the link to view this on the website, https://buzzypaws.com/blog/ Busby has added to yesterday’s post.

We have been admiring other people’s creative Christmas card designs.

We have been very busy making our blog posts into ‘easy to access’ pages…

Busy explains, “Did you know our blog is over a year old? That might be seven years for me – it rather feels like it!

We have certainly posted a lot of free activities, ideas, thoughts, music and links to all sorts of websites. Naturally, I’ve been keen to revisit some of them – especially in this winter weather.

Frankly, though, I have found scrolling through it all very tricky with my paws. The amount of material, too! It’s made me feel quite pawly.”

Poor Busby! He has got a point. So, one of us has been very busy making each blog post into a page.

In the future, once published, the content of our blog posts will be added to the webpage for that month.

Now, we hope that links to past months will be quicker to set up and easier to find. There will always be something to see for each month.

You will find the pages in the submenu of the new webpage, Busby’s Year.

Walt Disney, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Why the Pinocchio picture? Busby found it hard to accept his result in the quiz : “Which Fairy Tale Character Are You?”. Find out more and take the quiz, here: https://buzzypaws.com/november-with-busby/ . You can see his result, here: https://buzzypaws.com/december-with-busby/ (See what we did there?!)

We have been thinking about another quiz…

Busby remembered that we had not shared the results of the Adobe Creative Type Quiz. So here is his result: It was rather surprising – The Visionary. Although, upon reflection, maybe not so hard to believe. “Charismatic and expressive, you love sharing your ideas and visions with others […] You live in a world of infinite possibilities, preferring to see things not as they are but as they could be.” Hmm!

There’s another chance to find out your creative type, here. We suggest younger readers have some help from an adult. https://mycreativetype.com/

We are thinking about 2023 and…

our one word theme for the year. For the last two years, it was light and, the darker the days, the more powerful it has felt. Any light, at this time of year, is a welcome antidote to the darkness, so our fairy lights stay up all winter. It feels hard to replace light with a new word!

I’d like to gently encourage you to come up with your own word for 2023. Don’t worry if you need more time to think and choose – it’s import to get a word that feels right.

You can find out more about this on September’s page in Busby’s Year on the Buzzy Paws website. Look for the lighthouse picture. https://buzzypaws.com/september-with-busby/ (We did it again! We’ll stop now).

Light has been an uplifting one word theme. It has drawn attention to beautiful things that might have passed us by, for example, this track – Breathing Light:

This clip starts off black and very slowly. It’s a feature – not a glitch!

This moving clip of whales swimming under the Northern Lights seems a fitting way to say goodbye to our word for 2021 and 2022.

We have featured more stunning art and clips of the Northern Lights, here: https://buzzypaws.com/december-with-busby/ and, here: https://buzzypaws.com/april-with-busby/

We have been keeping our sense of humour…

Did you know that the third Monday in January (that’s the 16th this year) is called Blue Monday? Many people hit a low point once the dust settles after Christmas and the days are dark and grey. This cartoon by Arnie Levin is one of many featured on the Dogs of the New Yorker pages on this website: https://condenaststore.com/collections/dogs+of+the+new+yorker The dog cartoons appeared in the New Yorker, some will appeal to children, but the website is not aimed at children.

Cartoon by Charles Barsotti, again from Dogs of the New Yorker pages on this website: https://condenaststore.com/collections/dogs+of+the+new+yorker

We have been thinking about sleep…

It is one of the four things we are focusing on in January for the Happiness Project we are doing with a group of friends.This lullaby is not only very atmospheric, but the clip also manages to link last year’s one word theme with this year’s. Perhaps you can guess what it is…

Busby says, this lullaby is so beautiful that it makes my whiskers quiver and sends shivers down my canine spine.

Older readers might like to listen to this recent podcast about how composer, Eric Whitacre’s “remarkable experiences with outer space, multi-part harmonies, and a (literal) leap of faith teach him crucial lessons about embracing what lights him up to be his true self.” Adults and older readers might also find the podcast relaxing enough to help them sleep. https://meditativestory.com/eric-whitacre/

We will sign off with a picture of someone who has no trouble clocking up the zeds. Did you know that dogs spend half their life asleep?! Busby has vivid dreams and often wakes us up with the little noises he makes. Sadly, he has no memory of them so we can only guess what he is dreaming about…

We will be back next month with a feature on how to make pictures like the one on this slideshow. We will also take a sneak peek at Busby’s sleeping arrangements and find out his tips for a good night’s sleep.

Thank you

everyone who has signed up to follow this blog. Every time we see a new name, I feel great and Busby feels (p)awesome.

If you’d like to subscribe (it is free), you can do so below the paw prints.

If you enjoyed this month’s post and want to read more, or revisit a post, you can find a post for every month of the year. Just click on Busby’s Year in the top menu of this website (Buzzypaws.com ) and choose your month.

If you’d like to visit our Quiet Paw Book Corner, for more book-based activities, go to the Join the Book Corner page. It is also free.

Subscribe here to find out what we are doing each month. Fill in your email address and make sure you click on confirm subscription in the email that’s sent to you, possibly in your junk mail. You will then be notified every time a blog post is published.

September into October – take a look at what we have been doing this month…

We are glad to be back after a longer summer break than we’d anticipated.

We have been finding out about…

Vyshyvankas. Did you know that, traditionally, the symbols on these garments each have a meaning and that designs varied from region to region? They were sewn with great love and the symbols were chosen to protect their wearer from harm.

You can read more about this skilful folk art, here: https://ukrainian-recipes.com/mysterious-symbolism-of-ukrainian-embroidery.html

There is a saying in Ukrainian “Народився у вишиванці” which is translated as somebody was born wearing vyshyvanka. It is used to emphasize someone’s luck and ability to survive in any situation.

Wikipedia – Vyshyvanka

We have been finding out about this Ukrainian traditional embroidery after receiving some beautiful gifts from a generous and thoughtful friend.

The third Thursday in May is Vyshyvanka day!

Busby says, “Whilst I find dog clothing rather problematic, I do rather fancy myself in an embroidered collar.”

Older readers can read about Vyshyvanka Day and watch a longer film clip, here: https://www.europeanheritageawards.eu/winners/world-vyshyvanka-day/ .

We have been identifying birds…

by their song, using the magical Merlin App from Cornell University. Who knew we have a white wagtail in our garden? This amazing app listens and shows which birds are singing, more or less instantly – magic!

Find out more about it, here: https://merlin.allaboutbirds.org/

Thanks to the Merlin photo ID tool, we can now identify birds by their appearance. Merlin used this blurry photo to identify a large bird we saw wading in Sussex by the River Adur. It’s a grey heron, and it was there in October as they do not fly south for the winter.

Busby wondered how birds know when and where to migrate, and how they know when to come home. He’s still in awe of the Drovers’ corgis making their way home alone from London to Wales (see February into March).

We have been finding out…

that over a hundred years ago, American poet and children’s author, Rachel Field, was considering the same question in her poem: ‘Something Told the Wild Geese’.

Something told the wild geese
It was time to go,
Though the fields lay golden
Something whispered, “snow.”

Leaves were green and stirring,
Berries, luster-glossed,
But beneath warm feathers
Something cautioned, “frost.”

All the sagging orchards
Steamed with amber spice,
But each wild breast stiffened
At remembered ice.

Something told the wild geese
It was time to fly,
Summer sun was on their wings,
Winter in their cry.

This poem is in the public domain.

Rachel Field and her dog, Spriggen. Photo- Portland Library, USA.

Busby says, “I was interested to read about Rachel’s childhood. Apparently, she was nearly ten before she really could read well enough to enjoy it. So, at seven, I really am almost a prodigy.”

She was also the first female winner of the Newbery Medal. Ninety years later, one of our book corner authors, Kelly Barnhill also received this medal, whilst another, Lauren Wolk, is an ‘Newbery Honor’ winner. Head to our Book Corner to find out more about them.

You can access our Book Corner by signing up on the Join the Book Corner page. It’s automated, and it’s free.

We have been imagining…

what it must be like to hear sounds in colour(!). This is called synaesthesia (or, more specifically, chromesthesia). Dustin O’Halloran, the composer of the song below, has this gift. If you can, listen with your eyes closed and see what colours you can see with the music. Then watch the film, below, that shows one of endless possibilities.

There is a good explanation for all ages, here: https://theconversation.com/curious-kids-why-do-people-with-synaesthesia-link-senses-and-how-does-it-work-160565#:~:text=It’s%20a%20word%20that%20describes,mouth%20when%20they%20read%20words. Older readers can read more about this curious phenomenon, here: https://theconversation.com/every-song-has-a-color-and-an-emotion and see a clip of Beethoven’s music as imagined a musician with synaesthesia might see it:

We have suffered…

a mini Tour de France pile up with our novelty paperclips. Quelle mini catastrophe!

I have been decorating…

this virtual cottage. Again. Is it maybe something to do with autumn and the instinct to hibernate? If you want to find out – it’s free and here’s the link: https://www.jacquielawson.com/cottage?gclid=EAIaIQobChMI58qfxODn-gIVy7TtCh2QpQwoEAAYASAAEgLPEfD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds

Busby has been thinking about…

the value of traditional pastimes. He says, “Whilst I can appreciate the appeal of this app, I feel that dog owners must be very careful not to neglect other, more traditional activities that everyone can enjoy.”

We will leave you with his suggestion (left).

We have been listening to this piece of music.

Busby says, “Well done, Volker Bertelmann for capturing the happiness I feel on a good walk. You could make a living out of that!”

Thank you

everyone who has signed up to follow this blog – every time I see a new name, I feel great and Busby feels (p)awesome.

You can subscribe on the Home page. Make sure you click on confirm subscription in the email that’s sent to you!

IF you can’t wait until then, why not join our Quiet Paws Book Corner? If you like our blog page, you will almost certainly enjoy the information and activities on our book corner pages.