Sutton Grapevine
Stories about Sutton-in-the-Isle, Cambridgeshire, UKArchive for podcast
Where We Went
October 18, 2009 at 9:29 pm · Filed under Activities, How we made this, Stories and tagged: how-to, podcast, Stories
When we began the project our initial research was based on visits to Sutton to make contact with people and to get an impression of life in the village and we were greatly supported by the Feast Committee. We investigated the different communities that live in the village as well as the history and landscape of the area and people’s relationship to it. For two reasons it was important to us to begin the project by getting to know Sutton and its inhabitants. Firstly an essential aspect to working in a community is to establish trust, and secondly we were concerned that the project we undertook should fit into current activities. We began by making a number of visits to Sutton to meet and talk to people there and to get an impression of life in the village. During our visits we spoke with many people who have a wide range of roles within the village. We found that Sutton has a strong identity for residents who make a clear distinction from other villages nearby. Residents we spoke to told us that the village had recently undergone an increase in its commuter population. A few times people mentioned the planned development of Sutton which would increase the population. We made connections with a range of people including the Triangle Club, a group of elderly residents, the Youth Club, the WI, the Feast Committee, the Parish Council, St Andrews Church, the Curry Clubs, local business people, farmers, commuters and other individuals, and over the year undertook many activities including:
Babylon Gallery Exhibit: We set up a map and postcards to collect visitors’ stories for Sutton Grapevine and promote the project. People were encouraged to write or draw their stories and pin them down on the map, or record them. Through this we connected with two villagers who then went on to record a series of wonderful stories for the project that can be hear on this site.
Sutton Seniors Youth Group: We worked with the group on a session using a large map of Sutton and to map – with the help of string, paper, storycubes and modeling clay – what is in Sutton now and what people might like to see in Sutton in the future and recorded the groups stories of what they had created. After this we all decided to work together on some low tech animation asking the question “What is Sutton like?”
Triangle Club: We met the Triangle Club for seniors on two afternoons, mapping their memories of Sutton, and recording and listening to stories of people, spaces and events that marked their lives.
Tea Dance: We set up a table with a map outside the Tea Dance at the Glebe and used the map to start conversations and record a series of memories and stories as people left the Tea Dance.
BBQ at Painters Lane: A villager and her family kindly offered their home and garden to be used to host a BBQ for residents of Painters Lane who had a wealth of stories about Sutton to share, how they came to be in Sutton, how the Lane has changed, life in the village as a commuter, what there is (or isn’t) for young people.
One-stop shop: We set up a table with a large map outside the one stop shop on a couple of occasions to entice the steady flow of people on a Saturday morning to stop and to record stories.
Election Day: An evening spent outside Sutton Polling Station gathering stories around a map during election day.
Curry Clubs: We were lucky enough join the Ladies Curry Club and visit the mens Curry Club to gather stories. As well as describing life in Sutton the recordings give an insight into the experiences that are Sutton Curry nights.
Allotments: We visited Sutton allotments and recorded stories from two holders. Many people grow their own food in Sutton and the issue of food and where to buy it often came up in conversation.
Feast Week 2009: We exhibited Sutton Grapevine at the annual Feast. There was be a display and audio in St Andrews Church and we joined various Feast Events. We also held a wee Tea and Cakes afternoon for some residents who had contributed.
School Fete: We set up a Sutton Grapevine station at the School Fete during the Feast, and invited children to cut out and make felt pictures of their stories of Sutton. We asked them to tell us what they had made and recorded their replies on Gabcast.
You can hear edited excerpts from all the above including from the many conversations we recorded with individuals on this site.
Technologies
October 18, 2009 at 9:05 pm · Filed under Activities, How we made this and tagged: podcast, Stories, technologies
Sutton Grapevine was not about access to technology but about using physical activities and online technologies to reveal the texture of life in the village. Where we’ve used technologies they’ve been those that people already use or could easily adopt:
suttongrapevine.org; is a free WordPress Blog. We use podbean a free podcasting service where we upload audio files to our account on podbean, and the most recent podcasts automatically appear on the this blog. Gabcast; is a low cost service that lets people record a story over the phone. The recordings were automatically uploaded to Gabcast and later linked to this blog. The strength of Gabcast is that no internet connection is required and the cost was low. But it is difficult to tell stories into a telephone so it seems to work best as part of organised activities. AudioBoo allows iPhone users to make short digital recordings with photographs which can be posted online. It was used by the team to make short recordings around the village from time to time. Twitter is a free social networking and micro-blogging service that enables people to post and read short notices that appeare immediately on the website as well as being were delivered to subscribers. Its immediacy makes it work well in ad hoc situations. As a result of twitter we gathered additional stories about the area.
Recordings were made on a variery of equipment spanning price ranges including £10 voice recorders; a Sony Minidisk Recorder and mic; an iPod, an iPhone and a Marantz digital audio recorder. Audio was later edited in Garageband. The Marantz is a professional recorder but looks a bit like an old fashioned tape recorder so people barley notice it which we found to be invaluable as people are often a put off by a microphone being pointed at them. The iPod Classic and iPhone are both easy to use but the battery life is short with the iPod and sound levels are not as high as with the Marantz. The minidisk and mic is good quality easy to use and economical choice though it is not digital. We also used some small digital audio recorders by Olympus which were very handy.
Gathering Stories
October 18, 2009 at 8:37 pm · Filed under Activities, How we made this and tagged: how-to, listen, podcast, Stories
Proboscis were commissioned in 2008 by ADeC (Arts Development in East Cambridgeshire) to “create a space where local residents have the room to explore place and identity through creative activity that is based in both the physical world and on-line. That has an existence in the real world and virtual spaces.” In response to this we created Sutton Grapevine.
In Sutton Grapevine the exploration of place and identity focused on stories; personal stories, stories of place, fictional and factual stories, stories told through words, through images, through sound.
Over the last year we have been gathering stories through about life in Sutton through interviews and chance encounters, running workshops and events, conducting interviews, attending clubs and groups, visiting events, working with the youth group, a BBQ, exploring the local area by bike, foot and car, staging an exhibit in the Babylon Gallery Ely and through this website.
We worked with both groups and individuals in different situations. With groups we joined existing community group sessions but we also set up specific activities with groups such as three sessions with the youth group or the barbeque. We also organised more ad hoc sessions to engage passers by such as being outside the shop, in the tithe sale and at the school fete. We met people in the day and into the evening. We also set up two exhibits as a catalyst for conversation, one early on at the Babylon Gallery and one during the Feast. We had conversations in the Glebe, the Church, the Community Room, and other community spaces, at the school fete, in the street, outside the shop, in the pub and with individuals in their homes, at work and outside.
In many cases we set up a table with a large map of the Sutton and asked people to write on post-it notes their memories and thoughts about the village, places they knew or events they remembered, we used this to begin conversations about life in Sutton. The post its became a catalyst for more conversations as other people stopped to read them. We also used triggers to start conversations such as postcards that we had made of the village and historical documents and images loaned by a villager. We have met with many groups and individuals and been grateful for the warm welcome we have been given. We have never ceased to be inspired by how hard people work for their community as volunteers. In many ways large and small we felt that the stories of Sutton seemed to be a microcosm of the stories of the UK.
Behind Closed Doors
June 19, 2009 at 2:02 pm · Filed under Activities, How we made this, Stories and tagged: Drainage, Hill, House prices, Ladies Curry Club, Moving to Sutton, podcast, Sack trolley, Stories, Sutton Tandoori

A closed-looking Sutton Tandoori, site of the LCC
When I was in Sutton recently I was lucky enough to go for dinner with the Ladies Curry Club. Obviously I can’t tell you all of what went on as the ladies need to preserve their mystery, but I can tell you that they were good enough to let me record their answers to some questions about Sutton. I’ve just uploaded three of these recordings to the podcast section of this website with many more to come. As well as describing how these ladies came to end up living in Sutton, I hope the recordings will give you a little insight into the fabulous experience that is Sutton Ladies Curry night..
How to Listen..
May 15, 2009 at 4:48 pm · Filed under How we made this and tagged: how-to, listen, podcast
Alice has suggested I write a post on how to set up your computer to listen to the Sutton Grapevine podcasts. It would be a shame if people were missing out on hearing the stories we’ve collected from Sutton folk because they aren’t familiar with the podcast process so here goes..
I’m going to describe how to listen using iTunes. iTunes is available for both Mac and PC. If you don’t have it you can download it for free here www.apple.com/itunes/download/. There are other podcast software available but I haven’t used any of them and I prefer not to recommend them to you without testing them out.
Here’s how to listen to Sutton Grapevine..
If you are using a PC:
- Click on the ‘Podcast’ link at the top of the ‘Listen’ column
- The Podbean website will open.
- On Podbean website click on ‘Add to Itunes’ under ‘Subscribe’ in the right-hand menu
- An alert box appears saying that an external application must be launched.
- Click on Launch Application
- Itunes opens (if you don’t have it installed download it here www.apple.com/itunes/download/)
- The podcast episodes will begin downloading automatically
- You will see the downloaded episodes under ‘Sutton Grapevine’ in Podcasts in the Itunes menu
If you are using a Mac:
- Click on the ‘Podcast’ link at the top of the ‘Listen’ column
- The Podbean website will open.
- On Podbean website click on ‘Add to Itunes’ under ‘Subscribe’ in the right-hand menu
- An alert box appears saying asking you to select an application.
- Select iTunes and click on ‘Choose’
- Itunes opens
- The podcast episodes will begin downloading automatically
- You will see the downloaded episodes under ‘Sutton Grapevine’ in Podcasts in the Itunes menu
And that’s it! It should only take a couple of minutes to set up and then you are ready to listen to the people of Sutton.









