Exploratory Woodlands

You are now entering the Exploratory Woodlands.

We like to keep this area quite wild and untamed. The fairies are so happy here and we want them to propagate for years to come.

You'll need to tap into your Sixth Sense whilst you are here. How many Fairy Doors are you able to find? 

Sight

A park scene with a large tree, a black trash bin, a wooden fence, a painted planter filled with colorful flowers, a wooden picnic table, and a dirt pathway, with green grass and bushes in the background.

Sight is one of the most complex senses. The eyes and brain work in tandem with nerves to process depth, light, colour and imagery. Sight is another way of taking in data to inform how we perceive the world to make decisions about our environment, our movement, and our social interactions.

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Sound

The sense of sound is possibly one of our more complex senses and operates largely on vibrations. Not the Om kind, but through our body’s ability to interpret sound waves through the ear and our nervous system operated by, you guessed it, our brains! There are very tiny bones in the middle of the ear that help not only to hear, but also to keep our equilibrium, our balance, and to help us maintain awareness of our environment as well as communicate.

A rectangular metal planter with ornamental grasses in the foreground, a picnic table with benches in the middle, and a fenced wooded area in the background.
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Taste

A rectangular outdoor planter box filled with a variety of colorful flowering plants and greenery, situated on gravel ground with a wooden fence and trees in the background.

The sense of taste is specific to the sensation detected by our taste buds of the five basic tastes of sweet, sour, salty, bitter and umami. Taste is important because it allows us to determine if food is safe to eat. Also, maybe less true in today’s world of fast and overly processed food, it has historically enabled us to distinguish whether something is nutritious and will provide our bodies with the sustenance it requires to thrive.

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Smell

A rectangular metal planter filled with various colorful blooming flowers and green plants, positioned outdoors with a wooden fence and tree in the background.

The sense of smell is powerful – some say the most powerful sense we have as it is strongly linked to our emotions and memory. It works by detecting odours that are picked up by tiny sensory cells in your mouth and nose. Your brain then interprets the incoming data and links it to hazards, memories, emotions, food and many other things.

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Touch

Metal outdoor planter with various plants and flowers, wooden fence in background, gravel ground.

Touch allows us to perceive the world through direct skin contact that delivers information to the brain such as pain, pressure and vibration. These notifications allow us to make choices about our emotions and safety. Touch enables us to interact with our environment and develop emotional bonds. Our nerves in the skin are connected to proprioceptors in our muscles and joints which enable us to maintain body awareness that allows for mobility and coordination. The earliest days of our human cognitive and emotional development are based on sensing the world through touch.

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