Tag Archives: Holton Lee

 
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R2R clients Sid, Michael and David are back at Holton Lee, bringing our allotment back to life after a period of quiet because of illness. The guys have been busy digging over the ground and preparing for seeding and planting. David wants to give back to Routes to Roots because we have been giving to him. Michael says he wants to get fitter and enjoys the digging. Sid has sown a donation of seeds from the Kew Grow Wild project as a border around the edge of the plot. When he did this last year, it proved a very good deterrent to pests.

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Following Routes to Roots’ successful involvement in the launch of Holton Lee’s Project Flourish, they have been asked to select clients to take up places that become available as the initial volunteers complete their commitment.

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In an exciting new move in the summer of 2013, Routes to Roots became an allotment holder at Holton Lee. The guys really benefit from the experience, finding it a time to relax (despite the hard work) and put aside the day-to-day greyness and sameness of their lives. Joining with other disadvantaged people in undertaking these activities helps our clients to build on their team working and social skills as well as developing land-craft and horticultural skills, all of which improves their CVs. In October 2013 Routes to Roots took on a second adjoining plot, in which the team intend to plant fruit bushes and flowers. Holton Lee allotments will be a long-term project, which will provide opportunities for engagement for many years to come.

In offering R2R this opportunity, Holton Lee’s Volunteer Co-ordinator Emma Browning said: “With the allotment plot you are essentially your own bosses; you can come and go whenever you want (when we’re open) and do whatever you want on it (with a few rules about sheds, trees etc). I hope this will give more scope for a greater sense of autonomy for the guys and the levels of achievement are bound to be greater as they will have to come up with every idea off their own back and make it work through their own hard work.”

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Three Project Flourish ‘graduates’, John Parsons (new R2R Executive Committee member), Sid and George, are the first to take part in the allotment scheme. They are already hard at work. At the end of September those at R2R’s drop-ins were able to sample the allotment’s first crop of lettuce.

You can follow John’s Holton Lee Allotment Diary on FaceBook:
http://www.facebook.com/RoutestoRootsHomeless

THE R2R ALLOTMENT DIARY
September 2013

WEEK 7
TUESDAY – WATERED ALLOTMENT AND DID GENERAL TIDY ROUND.
WEDNESDAY – FILLED FIRST OF COMPOST BINS WITH MANURE AND COMPOST.
THURSDAY – WATERED, TIDIED UP EDGING, CUT GRASS.
WEEK 8
TUESDAY – WATERED, LIAISED WITH HOLTON LEE TO GET WOOD TO MAKE A KNEELING BOARD WHICH THEN CUT AND NAILED.
WEDNESDAY – WEEDED OPEN AREA OF POTATO PATCH AND TIDIED BORDERS.
FRIDAY – WENT TO LIBRARY TO RESEARCH A TOOL BOX WHICH FOUND AT ROBERT DYAS.
WEEK 9
SUNDAY – WATERED AND TIDIED.
MONDAY – ASKED R2R CO-ORDINATOR TO BUY THE TOOL BOX FOR US.
TUESDAY – ASSEMBLED TOOL BOX AND SECURED WITH A PADLOCK BOUGHT FROM BOONES. MADE A SHORTER HANDLE FOR THE RAKE SO IT COULD FIT IN THE TOOL BOX ALONG WITH OTHER TOOLS. LEVELLED GROUND BESIDE THE COMPOST AREA.
WEDNESDAY – WEEDED AND WATERED.
WEEK 10
TUESDAY – WATERED AND TIDIED AROUND EDGE OF PLOT 1 AND STARTED ON PLOT 2 BY MARKING AND LINING ITS EDGE WITH STRING. WENT TO SYDENHAMS TO GET QUOTE FOR TIMBER FOR THE EDGING.
WEDNESDAY – WEEDED PLOT 2AND WATERED PLOT 1. GAVE QUOTE FOR EDGING TO R2R CO-ORDINATOR.
THURSDAY – HARVESTED LETTUCE AND TOOK TO SKINNER STREET DROP-IN.

 
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In June 2013, The Rotary Club of Poole Bay donated £150 towards Routes to Roots’ outdoor programme for the homeless and newly housed at Holton Lee.

Rotary donation to R2RDon Nutt (far right), Rotary Club of Poole Bay, presents a cheque and looks through photographs of the work being done at Holton Lee.

As a result of R2R’s initial work with Holton Lee in 2012, 6-8 of Routes to Roots’s clients have been included in Project Flourish, established in January 2013 by Holton Lee to engage with disadvantaged people. The guys start the day with a talk on wellbeing and discussion on what they will do during the day, which may include ground clearance, creating raised beds, craft woodworking, outdoor furniture building, designs and layouts for garden features. Each day ends with a feedback session where the participants discuss how they are getting on and how they feel about the work.

The actual work undertaken by R2R clients benefits other users of Holton Lee and is also a lasting testament to the effort they have put in.

“The guys really benefit from the experience, finding it a time to relax (despite the hard work) and put aside the day-to-day greyness and sameness of their lives”, says Gabi Sanger-Stevens, Management Services for Routes to Roots. “Joining with other disadvantaged people in undertaking these activities has helped our clients to build on their team working and social skills as well as developing land-craft and horticultural skills, all of which improves their CVs. Our Outreach and Support Coordinator has received training for the supervision of AQAs (accredited training modules) for clients and we are working to include AQAs as part of this activity to add to the guys’ paid employment prospects.”

Recognising that more activities which promote a positive use of time are extremely beneficial, particularly for those completing the Flourish project, Holton Lee has agreed to grant Routes to Roots a piece of land for its own use. Clients on the Routes to Roots plot will be able to create, plant, grow and harvest, with horticultural assistance from the Holton Lee staff as well as R2R volunteers. This will be a long-term project, which will provide opportunities for engagement for many years to come.

Don Nutt, Rotary Club of Poole Bay, comments: “I first came across Routes to Roots when facilitating the Poole Town Faith Trail with Churches Together, Dorset in 2011. Then earlier this year we got a call from another Rotarian to say there was a sore need for trousers and shoes for men and we provided some to the Salvation Army. In 2012 we did our own review of what we saw as the particular needs of people here in Poole in light of the difficult financial times and decided to provide more support locally than for some years to help evident needs. Routes to Roots is one charity project clearly helping people in practical ways and we particularly liked the fact that they are introducing people to work experiences through Holton Lee and felt we wanted to support that.”

 
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Connect 2013 is a four-day family teaching and worship event to be held over the May holiday weekend (May 24-27) – where hundreds of people of all ages from Dorset churches can meet and grow together in the Holy Spirit and love of the Father. Routes to Roots will be taking a stand in the event’s Market Place with a display on the work our guys have been doing at Holton Lee since summer 2012. The Market Place will be open on Friday, 4.00-7.00pm, Saturday/Sunday, 9.00-10.00am, 12.30-3.30pm, 5.30-7.00pm, and on Monday, 9.00-10.00am, 12.30-2.00pm.

For more information on the event and speakers, visit:
http://www.connectdorset.org.uk/

 
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Routes to Roots has worked with Dorset Wildlife Trust and other local organisations to plan motivational outdoor activities since 2009. They aim to provide one day a week of interesting and worthwhile work in the conservation area over a number of weeks. Our current project is at Holton Lee. Holton Lee covers an area of 350 acres of heathland, saltmarsh, reedbed and woodland, most of which is protected as a Site of Special Scientific Interest. Its purpose-built space and natural surroundings provide opportunities for disabled people to host events, participate in the arts, or simply relax and enjoy the environment.
The R2R project started in mid July 2012 and straightaway the guys who went along loved it and showed a real willingness and commitment to be involved.
As a group Routes to Roots was given ‘ownership’ of the Maze, which had been neglected for some time, and so their first task was to do some major tidying up before they could sit down together to think creatively about how to develop it. They were also given the cottage gardens to maintain. These had become massively overgrown and some hard work was needed to clear large areas covered in a thick forest of ferns and bracken.
In this lovely relaxed environment many deep and meaningful conversations have already taken place and trust and relationships are being built.
R2R is very grateful to Holton Lee for giving them this opportunity, and for the warm welcome they give to everyone, and for the generous way they share their facilities and make everyone feel very much at home, which for a homeless person is such a wonderful gift. R2R received Community Development Funding for this project.
Holton Lee has suggested further activities such as building a log shed, making an allotment and planting an orchard. As this project continues into 2013, R2R hopes to be able to offer AQAs, which will add to the guys’ paid employment prospects. Assessment and Qualifications Alliance is an Awarding Body, which offers vocational qualifications in a wide range of subjects.