David Domoney

Author: David Domoney

  • 2014 Commmunity and Sustainability winner – Footprints Women’s Centre

    2014 Commmunity and Sustainability winner – Footprints Women’s Centre

    Sustainability and community Cultivation Street 2014 winners footprints-womens-centre Footprints Women’s Centre has been helping women and children for 22 years. It is based in the Colin Neighbourhood of Northern Ireland, a disadvantaged area with a high proportion of single parents with children under five. Footprints operates as a social enterprise, and has developed a food growing project modelled on the Transition Towns movement. They transformed an overgrown, neglected space on the grounds into a kitchen garden. Cultivation Street 2014 Footprints womens centre winner of Community and sustainability category The fresh produce they grow supplies the centre’s catering service, as well as going to households in the local community. It is also used for cookery classes and taster sessions with members. Members have now developed the garden to add a companion wildflower garden, herb garden and orchard, as well as a composting area and treehouse for the children. They have also established an Eco Adventure Club to explore ecosystems and build a ‘Critters Corner’ for the children. Cultivation Street 2014 winners Community and Sustainbility Northern Ireland Footprints is committed to sustainable living and focusses on environmental action. They harvest rainwater, build insect hotels and ‘green up’ the space by situating plants throughout the building to improve air quality. They have also installed solar panels to generate their own electricity and hot water. This reduced their energy bills and cut down their carbon consumption by 18 tonnes per year. Following this success, they now provide energy advice and environmental workshops to the centre’s users. Cultivation Street 2014 winners sustainability and community Eileen Wilson, who runs the Kitchen Garden, says “The group is not only an opportunity to connect with nature and the environment, but is also great fun and helps to form friendships.” Footprints Women’s Centre won the Community and Sustainability category, winning £1000 worth of National Garden Gift Vouchers. 2014 Cultivation Street winners Community and Sustainability Judges were overwhelmed by the quality of entries to this category, and chose Footprints because their whole approach to sustainability was multi-faceted. They were also impressed by the range of people involved in the project, and the focus on including and educating children.

    Congratulations to everyone at Footprints Women’s Centre!

    See the 2014 Regional Winners and the Special Category Winners.

  • 2014 Inspiration Street winners – Woodlands Community Garden

    2014 Inspiration Street winners – Woodlands Community Garden

    Cultivation Street 2014 inspiration street winner woodlands-community-garden

    Woodlands Community Garden has been built by the community for the community. Over the last four years they have transformed a derelict site into a thriving outdoor community centre.

    Much of the space is dedicated to raised beds, where members can grow their own veg, herbs and fruit. They hold community events to bring people together and green up the local area. They also hold Skills Swap workshops, where people offer their time to help others with things like carpentry and DIY.

    Cultivation Street 2014 Inspiration street winners Woodlands community garden

    Stuart Platt submitted an entry on behalf of his brother Colin, who has been volunteering at the garden for 15 months. Colin is 43 years old and has autism, as well as speech and learning difficulties.

    His condition means that he needs routine to give him safety, and attending the community garden has been vital for structuring his week.

    Stuart told us that because of Colin’s speech difficulties, he has never fully engaged in conversation. But since his time at the garden, this has radically changed. Colin always returns excited and with stories to tell of his work there.

    Colin watering a bed at Woodlands Community garden in Cultivation Street 2014 campaign winner

    When friends and family ask about his day at the garden, he has a desire to respond with a fuller story, and he builds longer sentences. This has meant he is communicating far more freely about other aspects of his life too.

    Stuart says this change has been staggering, and that Colin has felt welcomed and accepted at the garden. The support and respect of the workers has had a huge impact on him, and his confidence and self-esteem have grown.

    “I would say, without exaggeration, that attending the garden has been transformative for Colin and his life,” says Stuart.

    “Given the opportunity, Colin would attend the garden every day!”

    Cultivation Street 2014 woodlands garden winner of Inspiration Street award

    Woodlands Community Garden won the Inspiration Street Award, winning £500 of National Garden Gift Vouchers.

    Judges were impressed by Colin’s inspiring story and his transformation. They hailed the garden as an example of how horticulture can lead to greater inclusion. Judges also praised the idea of Skills Swaps as a way to get people in the community helping each other out.

    Congratulations to everyone at Woodlands Community Garden!

    See the 2014 Regional Winners and the Special Category Winners.

     

  • 2014 Commemoration Street Winner – Harry’s Patch

    2014 Commemoration Street Winner – Harry’s Patch

    To celebrate the 100 year anniversary of the start of the war, on 4th August, we launched a new Commemoration Street campaign category for the best display of poppies.

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    Ray Wilson, a resident of Ivybridge in South Hams, Devon, decided he wanted to do something in his local community to mark the Centenary celebrations. He’s an active member of the Royal British Legion, so he settled on a poppy project.

    “I wanted to see what we as a town could do to commemorate all the people from the area who took part in the conflict. Forty-four of them never came back; others came back with the mental and physical scars of war,” he said.

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    The first task was to give every school child in the area a bag of poppy seeds to plant at home. That turned out to be easier said than done, especially when they found out how many schoolchildren there were in the area!

    The mammoth task involved getting 5000 bags and manually filling them with a mixture of sand and poppy seeds, to make sowing easy. They then made cards and flyers to send out, and distributed the packs to all the schools.

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    “It was four nights’ work for a lot of our members. But I loved meeting young people who said ‘I have planted my poppy seeds’ or ‘my poppies are growing’. More importantly, when asked why they were growing them, they knew,” said Ray.

    The next project was to create a ‘Flanders Field’ of poppies in the town. Residents decided to makeover an unused patch of land, which they described as an ‘eyesore’.

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    They decided to name it ‘Harry’s Patch’, a play on words of Harry Patch, who was the last surviving soldier to have fought in the trenches. He was known as the last fighting Tommy, and he died in 2009 at the age of 111 years, 1 month and 1 week.

    But the site was to prove difficult. First in was the ‘Weed and root removal party’, who painstakingly attempted to clear the land with picks and shovels. After several hours of effort for little reward, they decided to hire a rotavator!

    Once the ground was turned over, the local South Hams garden team treated the area to remove the weeds. Last October, Ray planted 800 daffodil bulbs and created a wooden sign.

    The group then added five river boulders, to represent the five years of conflict and the tombstones around the battlefields. They added benches and pathways, and the South Hams garden team sowed poppy seeds.

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    One of the finishing touches is a handmade poppy mosaic. It was designed by the local church group and made by visitors to a local community centre event. They plan to put it up in the garden as a winter project after the poppies have finished blooming.

    “We were blessed with a great team of volunteers, and we also had financial support and grants from our local district and county council,” said Ray.

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    Councillor Mrs Karen Pringle, Mayor of Ivybridge thanked Ray and the team for their hard work and said, “Not only has the land been hugely improved but by involving children, via the schools across the town it has engaged everyone. I believe that the project has acted as a catalyst across the town and is an outstanding demonstration of the gratitude that Ivybridge retains for those who served our country during WWI, not just between 2014 and 2018 but we hope for the future.”

    Harry’s Patch won Commemoration Street 2014. The group has won £500 of National Garden Gift Vouchers, plus a donation of £500 to their local Royal British Legion branch.

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    This category was judged by Graham Mentor-Morris, the founder of the Real Poppy campaign. He asked 512 members of his local British Legion branch to vote.

    They felt that the people of Ivybridge had made a truly fantastic effort, particularly with the commemorative signs and mosaic. The time people spent bagging up seeds shows a true dedication, and the judges were very impressed with everything they saw.

    It’s wonderful to see a community uniting over poppy flowers.

    Ray says “The feedback we have had from members of the public has been very moving and so far exceeds what we could have hoped for. It’s not just from Ivybridge but from people who have visited the town and former members of our armed services. That has been the win for all of us involved with the project – total pride in what we have achieved.”

    Congratulations to everyone in Ivybridge!

    See the 2014 Regional Winners and the Special Category Winners.