Four seasonal walks leaving from the SHED, Timber Pond Road, Rotherhithe, London SE16 6AX (behind Bacon's College)
Description of Fungi adapted from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fungus.
Description of Snowy waxcap adapted from en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuphophyllus_virgineus.
Photographs of fungi taken on site at Stave Hill Ecological Park by Clare Skeet.
Cyanotype on fabric from Plants Day, August 2016 by Ky Lewis and workshop participants.
John Cage, Silence, Marion Boyars, London, 1968.
Map of Stave Hill Ecological Park, drawing, ink on paper, c. 1980s, from the archive of Stave Hill Ecological Park / Trust for Urban Ecology, archive.org.
Text by Soundcamp, Rebeka Clark and Clare Street.
Designed by Sam Baraitser Smith.
Produced by Uniformbooks.
Website by Max Baraitser Smith.

Stave Hill Ecological Park was created in 1986 on land administered by the London Dockland Development Corporation. It is the successor to the William Curtis Ecological Park, the UK's first urban ecology park, set up in 1977 near Tower Bridge by the Trust for Urban Ecology. TRUE subsequently merged with BTCV, now the Trust for Conservation Volunteers (TCV), who now manage the site for Southwark Local Authority.

One of a series of booklets produced by soundCamp as part of the residency: '30 Years of Urban Ecology at Stave Hill in Docklands' supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund - stavehill.soundtent.org

Design and printing was made possible by a Community Engagement grant from the United St Saviour's Charity, which has existed in the North of Southwark since at least 1541. USTSC aims to improve the lives of local people and strengthen their communities by providing almshouses for older residents and through its grant-making program.