Centered on sphagnum moss, Translocations highlights the mutual aid and reciprocal exchange that exists between species in the restoration of a lowland peatbog in northern England.
Featuring the voice of Robin Wall Kimmerer, my film depicts volunteers working to restore Little Woolden Moss, a lowland raised bog in Chat Moss, which had previously been devastated by commercial peat extraction. In making the film, and also volunteering on the restoration project, I was inspired by the human and more-than-human life, energies and actions that are transforming an intensively damaged and drained land back into a flourishing wetland habitat. I first heard about the peatland restoration project through reports on the successful reintroduction of the Manchester Argus butterfly, which hadn’t been seen in the area for 150 years. On visiting the bog, I was struck by the abundant life now blooming across the vast terrain. Dragonflies darted through swathes of flowering cotton grass, cross-leaved heath and carnivorous sundews. Dense carpets of sphagnum moss glowed in luminous hummocks across the mirrored water. It was the start of a creative journey, making several films and artworks based on this vital part of the biosphere, as well as volunteering regularly with the Wildlife Trust team, helping to continue the bog’s restoration and enabling co-species to grow and thrive.
The documentary was filmed during volunteer work with Lancashire Wildlife Trust out on the peatbog, joining teams of dedicated people who have collectively transformed this formerly barren landscape over the last 10 years. For the voiceover, I’m deeply grateful to Robin Wall Kimmerer and the team at Krista Tippett’s ‘On Being’ podcast for the illuminating interview, and to Otis Jordan for the lyrical and tactile soundtrack score, and also to artist Tracy Hill for the underwater recordings.
I hope the film is a way to share and celebrate the wonders of mosses and peatlands, and presents a successful and inspiring story of nature’s recovery, and how these co-dependent species create a rich mosaic of life, as well as playing a key role in mitigating the impacts of climate breakdown. The film had its premiere at CineGlobe film festival at CERN, Geneva, which was an ideal place to connect themes of art and science. It has since been showcased around the world, and is now featured in the Virtual Peatlands Pavilion, a free, UN-led resource on peatland restoration work around the world.









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