Daily Update – Sunday May 3rd 2026

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Sunday 3rd May 2026  ·  Today’s Update
Fairy houses on tree stumps in the Stewart Woodland Walk, Cowden
A fairy house built into a mossy tree stump in the forest Selfie at the fairy village on the Stewart Woodland Walk
Update of the Day

Thursday’s Visit: The Fairy Village of the Stewart Woodland Walk, Cowden

A1 – Beginner

On Thursday I went to a wood. There are small houses. The houses are in trees. They are for fairies! The houses are very beautiful. I like them. It is magic!

A2 – Elementary

On Thursday 30th April I visited the Stewart Woodland Walk at Cowden in Scotland. In the wood, there are many small fairy houses. The houses are made from old tree stumps. They have tiny doors and windows. A big storm destroyed the trees in 2021, but now the stumps are fairy houses. It is very clever and very beautiful!

B1 – Intermediate

Last Thursday I explored the Stewart Woodland Walk at Cowden in Clackmannanshire, where I discovered something truly special. In November 2021, Storm Arwen destroyed nearly 100 trees here in a single night. Rather than leaving the stumps behind, the team at Cowden transformed them into a magical miniature village — each one carved into a tiny fairy house with its own little door, windows, and roof. Walking through the woodland and spotting them one by one was a lovely experience, and knowing the story behind them made it even more special.

B2 – Upper Intermediate

On Thursday 30th April I visited the Stewart Woodland Walk at Cowden, and it turned out to be one of the most charming things I’ve seen in a long time. Back in November 2021, Storm Arwen tore through the woodland in a single night, bringing down close to 100 trees. It could have been the end of the walk — but instead, the Cowden team turned disaster into something wonderful, carving the remaining stumps into a miniature fairy village. Each house is different: some have thatched roofs, others bark tiles; some have tiny arched doors, others little shuttered windows. It’s a lovely example of finding something beautiful in something broken.

C1+ – Advanced

Last Thursday’s visit to the Stewart Woodland Walk at Cowden gave me one of those rare moments where a place exceeds all expectations. In November 2021, Storm Arwen felled almost 100 trees here overnight — a devastating loss for a well-loved woodland. But rather than clearing the stumps and moving on, the team at Cowden did something imaginative: they turned them into a fairy village, each stump individually carved into a miniature dwelling with its own character and detail. Walking the path and discovering them — some half-hidden by ferns, others grouped on a sunny hillside — feels like stumbling into a story. It’s a genuinely uplifting reminder that creativity and care can find beauty even in destruction.

Today’s Vocabulary

5 Words to Learn

EnglishChineseDutchFrench GaelicGermanHindi IndonesianJapaneseRussianSpanish
Fairy仙女 (Xiānnǚ)FeeFéeSìthiche Feeपरी (Parī)Peri妖精 (Yōsei)ФеяHada
Woodland林地 (Líndì)BosBoisCoille Waldlandवनभूमि (Vanabhūmi)Hutan林 (Hayashi)ЛесBosque
Magical神奇的 (Shénqí de)MagischMagiqueDraoidheil Magischजादुई (Jādūī)Ajaib魔法の (Mahō no)ВолшебныйMágico
Storm风暴 (Fēngbào)StormTempêteStoirm Sturmतूफ़ान (Tūfān)Badai嵐 (Arashi)БуряTormenta
Rebuild重建 (Chóngjiàn)HerbouwenReconstruireAth-thogail Wiederaufbauenपुनर्निर्माण (Punarnirmāṇ)Membangun kembali再建する (Saiken suru)ВосстановитьReconstruir
Grammar Focus

Adjective Order in English

The Rule
When you use more than one adjective before a noun, English has a fixed order:

Opinion → Size → Age → Shape → Colour → Origin → Material → Purpose + Noun

Remember: OSASCOMP
Example 1 — Opinion + Size + Material
“We stumbled across a wonderful little wooden fairy house, half-hidden beneath the roots of a fallen oak.”
✅ Opinion (wonderful) → Size (little) → Material (wooden). You wouldn’t say “wooden little wonderful”.
Example 2 — Size + Age + Colour
“Each stump was topped with a tiny old mossy green roof that looked like it had been there for centuries.”
✅ Size (tiny) → Age (old) → Colour (mossy green). The order feels natural in English — any other order sounds wrong.
Example 3 — Opinion + Size + Shape + Origin
“Around the corner we spotted a charming small round Scottish fairy door, carved straight into the bark.”
✅ Opinion (charming) → Size (small) → Shape (round) → Origin (Scottish). Native speakers follow this order without even thinking about it!
Grammar Focus

Reported Speech – “We were told that…”

Direct: “Storm Arwen destroyed almost 100 trees here in a single night in November 2021.”
Reported: We were told that Storm Arwen had destroyed almost 100 trees there in a single night in November 2021.
Direct: “The gardeners worked all winter to make the woodland safe again.”
Reported: We were informed that the gardeners had worked all winter to make the woodland safe again.
Direct: “The fairy village is made entirely from the stumps of the trees that fell in the storm.”
Reported: We were amazed to learn that the fairy village was made entirely from the stumps of the trees that had fallen in the storm.

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