tinyjo: (Default)
I heard on Friday that school children are being given a free map of their local area by the Ordnance Survey with the intention of getting them out and about a bit more. I don't know if there's any evidence to support this tactic but it seems unlikely to me in this "paedophiles around every corner" culture amongst parents that children will suddenly be allowed to go tramping the woods (<sidetrack>I think this every time I see one of those articles saying "Children doing less sport" or "Children getting fatter". Of course they are because their parents have been convinced that if they step outside alone for even 2 minutes they'll be snatched and murdered. While this does happen very occasionally, it's hardly the norm.</sidetrack>).

Anyway, I mention this not in order to be cynical about it (although that's all I've done so far) but because it reminded me that my continuing love affair with maps started at about that time. My father is a very keen birdwatcher/walker and hence has very fine detail OS maps of all of Norfolk and most of the surrounding counties. At first, I just wanted to see where my house was, in that egocentric way of the young but then I started to let my gaze wander. I discovered that the footpath which started across the road from the house lead all the way to near my school and even tried it out once but mostly they were just a tool for the imagination - what did Greater Snoresbury really look like? Norfolk maps are particularly good for this :) The other main driver for this interest was the geological map of Britain hanging up in our toilet. This had different soils etc coloured in different colours which meant that you could pick out shapes and things - Wales was a boars head and Cornwall looked like the head of an anteater desperately trying to reach the ant of the islands (Scilly Isles?) just below and the little bit of France with Bologne on sticking up from the top looked like a chicken. Honestly. Soon I had graduated to making my own maps of imaginary places but I retained my love for real maps. I now have loads - old ones are particularly beautiful - I particularly love old world maps and far away countries. One of my favourite gifts from Alex is an engraved copy of the Blaeu world map (I think the original is from 1665). I also love my map of the British Empire which has a bit in the corner boasting about how many more people there are in it than in France or Russia or etc and my real-space map of the London Tube (available from the London Transport Museum).

The other thing that it reminded me is that one day, when I have my own house, I'm going to wallpaper one wall of a room with OS maps of my local area all fitted together to make one big map. If it's a mansion, I'll do the complete map of Britain on the ballroom floor :)

mapping nibs and firing curiosity

Date: March 18th, 2002 04:18 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] cleanskies.livejournal.com
ext_36163: (Default)
My first pen and ink work was done copying maps; my Dad was a surveyor, back in the days when part of the course was actually drawing out maps by hand. I still have some dried-up remnants of his mapping ink, I think. It boggled me to think that people like my Dad had gone out and looked at everything, and then come up with ways of putting that onto flat sheets of paper. The Ordnance Survey Landranger maps are real works of art, and I learnt the symbols for everything by copying then out. The curiosity provoked by maps (which took me to the local records office, as well as along many paths, and, yes, into woodlands) can work quite well on adults too; perhaps this'll provoke a lot of families to try walking to the bnext village's pub for Sunday lunch? And even if the result is that the family go out to Snodbury-on-the-marsh by car some weekend, hey that's a result too.

On a related topic, you really should check out the maps at the Oxfam bookshop. The prices aren't very high (?1.99-?5.99 unless it's something very valuable, like an old Baedecker) ... on the other hand, there's a serious danger of your collection spiralling out of control the moment you get a regular supplier [grin]!

Re: mapping nibs and firing curiosity

Date: March 18th, 2002 04:32 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] tinyjo.livejournal.com
Arggg! I haven't got room to show all my maps as it is! You evil temptress you.

Date: March 18th, 2002 06:20 am (UTC)From: [personal profile] jinty
jinty: (Default)
the Blaeu world map
very pretty -- I thought for a second that it was the map that we have a big jigsaw of at home, but actually it just looks similar (what with being of the same planet, and so forth).

It's good to make plans of what you will do with your home when you finally have a house of your own (especially if you have one with a ballroom --- like that idea!) but be aware that space gets used up at a ridiculous rate -- I was intending to have all sorts of piccies of Jinty stuff up (a mural, I rather thought) but what with cupboards and bookcases and music stuff I just can't fit it all in... maybe upstairs, when I get back, if I don't take another housemate...

Date: March 18th, 2002 06:45 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] tinyjo.livejournal.com
I guess the floor is just an idle dream but I really hope I can manage a wall somewhere. I know what you mean about space - I already don't have enough room to display the maps I have. I wondered whether if I covered it with a waterproof coating afterwards, I could do it in the bathroom - that would also have the advantage of not being too big and so not overpowering, I hope.

Date: March 18th, 2002 01:41 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] andypop.livejournal.com
I loved maps as a child, too. I had a pair of shoes which came with a pretend army manual - the interesting part being the symbols you could leave for other people who had the same shoes (signs made from twigs, very similar to the famous Blair Witch Project symbol), and the fake map. My brother used to draw fake ancient maps, inspired by Tolkein's, and I always liked the maps in the old Conan comics.

In the store recently we were looking at some Landranger maps and marvelling at the place names. My colleague Mike says he wants to live in Lower Upperton, in Cornwall. Near Bolton there's Dimple, Turton Bottom, Chew Moor, Mankinholes, Little Lever, and Doffcocker; and back in Cornwall we have Cripplesease, Gweek, the succinctly-named Bottoms, and my favourite, Goonhusband.

Date: March 26th, 2002 08:48 am (UTC)From: [identity profile] oxfordslacker.livejournal.com
It's hard for me to imagine what life must have been back when if you wanted to contact people with the same shoes as you, you would use twigs rather than specialist web-sites...

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tinyjo: (Default)
Emptied of expectation. Relax.

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