|
|
The Field Hospital
| PLEASE NOTE:
the Field Hospital was a temporary feature for the summer
2003 'Go Wild' festival and has now been dismantled |
Great interest was created in the 2003 'Go Wild' Festival by an
evocative collector’s pavilion illustrating traditional medicinal
uses of UK native plants and their relevance to modern medicine.
In the pavilion visitors could discover the lost world of an Edwardian
herbalist. The Field Hospital illustrated the traditional medicinal
uses of native species and also showed why feverfew, sphagnum moss,
leeches and maggots are finding a new role today.
Inside, the hut had the atmosphere of an Edwardian collector’s
hut - everywhere there were Victorian cabinets and labelled jars
full of specimens, old prints and photographs, boxes, bottles and
collecting cases. Bunches of fragrant herbs were hanging in bunches
from the ceiling. Notebooks lay open on the desk. First glance suggested
this was an old, forgotten place, but closer inspection revealed
someone was still living and working there and some of the notes,
pictures and newspaper cuttings were definitely modern. Layers of
time had been built up here, but the past had not been forgotten,
instead it underpinned the present.
Visitors learned the scientific facts behind not only old remedies,
but also new discoveries about the medicinal properties of British
plants and other creatures. The Field Hospital also gave a ‘health
report’ on all the species highlighted, describing those under
threat, and those like the wart-biter cricket which have recently
been brought back from the verge of extinction.
Continue the tour
Back
up to: Western Zone
|