Started January 2010 [by Jack Thurgar]

This is a scrapbook dedicated to the study of London's weeds and the wild places where they grow. Wildcornerz also looks at the languages, cultures and mythologies that develop in these cracks.


What is a Wildcorner?

A Wildcorner is a term referring to a piece of land that has been left to grow wild in a man made landscape. To be a true Wildcorner, the land has to be restricted from public access. Many are hidden from public view altogether. A common type of wildcorner is referred to by govements and local authorities as a 'brownfield site'.

Wildcorners and corridors* are dotted all over the capital and vary in content, depending on their location and history. In this blog we focus particularly on the Wildcorners of south east London.

* Wildcorridors are networks of pathways that run through the city and facilitate the propagation and growth of weeds. Many are restricted from public access such as railway embankments and urban rivers. In the suburbs, footpaths such as the Green Chain connect public green areas by a network of alleyways and passages that skirt between houses and private land. It could be argued that these are also wild corridors.



Urban and Suburban Weeds

By the term 'weeds' we are of course referring to the cities wild plants and flowers. But their are also two other weeds that grow in the city.

'Graf' like its botanical relation, has many families and strains. Both of these weeds can often be found together, sharing many qualities including their adaptive nature and unregulated status. Both in many cases, originally entered and populated the city using the railway network.

Another 'weed' that historically flourishes in London is invisible and uses the tops of tower blocks to propagate. Pirate radio like its weed relatives, grows away from the public eye and is constantly adapting to exploit these same gaps across the cities FM radio spectrum, fighting and flourishing in-between the commercial stations.

© Copyright of Wildcornerz. All rights reserved. For enquiries please contact: wildcornerz1@yahoo.co.uk
Showing posts with label Urban Legend. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Urban Legend. Show all posts

Thursday, 10 November 2022

The Swamp [Vol 1] Extended Trailer - NEWNESS!

This is a trailer for my first video in a new series. 

The videos explore the infamous Swamp; a secluded piece of wild land in Lewisham and are made from footage I filmed there over the last 20 years.

In this first chapter I look at the mysterious pond and the unnamed stream.


Run time of full film: 24 mins


Friday, 20 April 2018

A Portrait of Mr Pink [The Pink House, Lewisham]

Some of you may have seen this already but had to document it here for the archive. If you haven't, this is the beautiful short 'A Portrait of Mr Pink' by Helena Appio. Like the house itself, The film had a mythical status to me, as I had been trying to see it for years. For Lewisham residents The Pink house has been a local landmark for decades and a source of wonder and childhood myths.
The film is beautifully shot and uses the Mr Pink's own crackly recordings for a perfect natural soundtrack.
Mr Brenton Samuel Pink sadly passed away last year. Its so good that the film was made and gives us a glimpse into Mr Pink's world. For me, it has only added to the legend of the Pink House and its eccentric creative inhabitent.
The house is still there at present, standing in darkness at the top of Lonepit Vale.

Sunday, 20 August 2017

New Lewisham Natureman Sighting 2017


Its been a few years since we at Wildcornerz have received any news of sightings of Lewisham's lone stag. He seemed to had vanished from the borough, along with the rapid decline of the wild places he inhabits. 

Until yesterday. As we drove back south from the Blackwall tunnel I spotted a fleeting dash of white against an old wall, in a small wildcorner
 just beyond the boroughs borders in Charlton.

It was him, the Wild Walker - deer spirit, aka the Lewisham Natureman, 
moving quickly and silent across the nettles and creeping buttercup's.
Catch him before he's gone again.








Thursday, 22 June 2017

Wildcornerz Merch is Here!



I have started my very own t-shirt label; Cornerz.
Heres is the first design printed up and available to buy. 

'Fantasy Chicken'
This design is inspired by the capitals various chicken shop signage. The majority of these are created by sign maker Morris Casanova aka 'Mr Chicken'.


Thursday, 5 March 2015

Catford Corner, Summer 2013

I finally managed to find my pictures of the 'Wild Walker' spirit taken in 2013. 
The corner was originally one entrance to Catford dog track. It is cut off at either side by the train lines of Catford Station on the West and Catford Bridge Station and also the river Ravensbourne on the East.
Earlier that summer it was briefly home to a group of travelers before they were evicted by the owners of the land, the GLA. They sold the land to Barratt Homes who have since built luxury style apartments on the site.
 The spirit of the Lewisham Natureman appears on an old container at the far end, standing tall, head back and howling. 
http://www.newsshopper.co.uk/news/10679388.Pictured__Traveller_caravans_leaving_Catford_near_former_Catford_Greyhound_stadium/






Friday, 13 February 2015

Lewisham's Wild Walker spotted again in Ladywell SE13

Spotted him early last week from the top deck of the 185 and managed to catch these pictures on my phone.
Lewisham's deer spirit appears at the back of a fresh gap of land, where Ladywell Leisure Centre used to be.
He stands between two Silver Birch trees in the wildest corner of this young wild corner, where the ground was spared from the bulldozer and vegetation grows. 
His head is turned towards us.




Wednesday, 13 November 2013

Some press and net cuttings on Lewisham's white deer




{The Telegraph}



{Curriculum Enrichment magazine}


(Lib Dem's magazine 'In focus')

Here are a collection of some newspaper cuttings and web articles on The Lewisham Natureman from earlier in the year. The press coverage was sparked from liberal democrat councillor Cllr Chris Maines campaign to save the mural on Cressingham road. This has been already painted on and can be seen in the press pictures. [Notice the black paint over the mouth of the deer and over some of the background.]
In all these articles The Lewisham Natureman is spoken of as the name of the artist and not of the stag spirit itself.  Some have also reported the deer, as different members of a heard rather than the same solo spectre.
Not much is known about the stag or who created it but we do know [by looking at the writing underneath the mural piece on Cressingham road] is that it is some kind of tribute to the Lewisham Natureman and not made by 'him'. 
This is a name already know to us at Wildcornerz through our research and documentation of South East Londons' derelict gaps. The Lewisham Natureman was the name attached to a small carved symbol of a crown [in the same style as the boroughs logo] with a dandy-lion growing through it, though some report it as a Thistle or a Daisy. 
This tiny symbol was found in various wastelands and wild spots around the borough of Lewisham from the late 1970s to the end of the century. Sometimes they would be accompanied by a date and would normally be hidden away.
Due to their mystery, they became the subject of many urban legends amongst local children who would play in these wild corners. The basis of the myth / legend links the symbols directly to the wild places they were found and suggest their maker is some kind of shamon or wild man who lives in or uses them. Other versions describe him more as a 'spirit of wild nature', a 'familiar' to the weeds who helps them to grow and protects the wild corner.
The myth was also know to some in other communities that use these spaces, such as the local graffiti crews, travellers, urban fishers, the homeless and street drinkers. Fences are jumped and bars are bent to access these cracks and corners of the city. These fringe communities of London can still be found using these 'wastelands' spaces no matter how temporary the stay. Some of these would have used what was know as Common land centuries ago and the many bomb sites and edgelands around London in the last century. Now even these gaps; 'commercial wastelands' / 'brownfield sites' are becoming increasingly more transitory, due to the London Assembly's current building strategy for the capital. The core idea being to build on land within the city, rather than expanding further out.   
The deers are not signed and maybe their maker is not what is important.
We at Wildcornerz like to believe the stag is the Lewisham Natureman, in animal form; an embodiment of this same spirit of wild places in Lewisham.   

Monday, 28 October 2013

Besson St. SE14, Wildcorner Exploration


Besson St. Wildcorner 1Besson St. Wildcorner 4Besson St. Wildcorner 3Besson St. Wildcorner 2Besson St. Wildcorner 5Besson St. Wildcorner 6
Besson St. Wildcorner 7Besson St. Wildcorner 8Besson St. Wildcorner 9Besson St. Wildcorner 11Besson St. Wildcorner 10Besson St. Wildcorner 21
Besson St. Wildcorner 13Besson St. Wildcorner 12Besson St. Wildcorner 14Besson St. Wildcorner 15Besson St. Wildcorner 15Besson St. Wildcorner 16
Besson St. Wildcorner 16Besson St. Wildcorner 17Besson St. Wildcorner 17Besson St. Wildcorner 18Besson St. Wildcorner 22Besson St. Wildcorner 20
These photographs are were taken from several explorations over the Summer, to the wild corner on Briant and Besson Street. A large corner where a former council estate once stood. Years ago the corner was viewable from the top deck of the 171 which used to pass by. Since the redirection of that bus the corner is not viewable from the street at all and is now only overlooked by a small number of flats.

 Specimen samples of flora and fourna from the site have been collected.

Notables things including an old known tag, Kist, 'Goodbye Charlie Bright', Broke, Badcat, Moral, Norf, Elmo, Eek, evidence of a traveller camp, a small temporary shelter with bedding inside, high hills of rubble covered with thick buddhlia bushes and a most special sighting of Lewisham's very own white deer.

Wednesday, 14 August 2013

Queens Road Wildcorner visit and sighting


Here are the photos from the visit to the large wildcorner on Queens Road Peckham where the Wooddene Estate once stood. 
A few weeks ago, I was passing the corner on the top deck of the 171. As we were pulling away, I looked back over the site and my eye caught a small flash of white which in that same moment disappeared from view.

It was a whole week later before I could return on foot to take a closer look. After a while wandering the perimeters of the high steel fence, I saw through the tangled weeds and piles of rubble what had caught my eye the previous week.. 

He was there, right at the back of the corner, walking amongst bushes of Buddleia and Rosebay-Willow Herb, appearing across a large TEAR dub.
The Wild Walker aka The Lewisham Natureman, familiar of the weeds and spirit of South London's wild places. He has wandered beyond the boroughs borders into neighbouring Southwark the 'black borough'.