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Gardening from Home Pilot Scheme PDF Print E-mail
Growing Opportunities - News
Tuesday, 19 January 2010 14:39

A new innovative ‘gardening from home’ pilot is being launched by Sandwell Primary Care Trust and its partners across the borough.

The scheme is for people who are at risk of falls and lack the confidence to garden independently. It is the result of work by Sandwell Primary Care Trust, Sandwell Council and Ideal for All. Referrals for the scheme are being taken now with the first people starting gardening from March 2010.

Veronica Barry, project lead from local charity Ideal for All, thinks the joint approach to this new scheme will work wonders for Sandwell people. She said: “Gardening from Home can really make a difference to older people who have lost their confidence because of falls or fear of falling.

“Gardening is a fantastic way to build confidence and improve mobility, independence, confidence and even fitness.

“It’s a pilot initially where twenty people over the next twelve months will hopefully reap the benefits of this pioneering programme.”

The pilot builds on the popular Walk from Home programme from Sandwell Primary Care Trust that is often used as part of older people’s rehabilitation programmes.

Andrew Wood, Walk from Home lead said: “Walk from Home has helped many older people walk further and for longer, and has made huge improvements in their quality of life.  Gardening from Home will expand on this and offer people the opportunity to develop a whole new set of skills through home intervention. Both programmes offer tailored, one to one help to older people in the perfect place for them to be able to accept such help – their own home.”

Referrals are via the Primary Care Rehabilitation Teams SAP1 forms can be faxed in confidence to Richard Billingsley on 0121 565 7973

Last Updated on Tuesday, 26 January 2010 15:11
 
Garden Workshop for People with a Visual Impairment PDF Print E-mail
Growing Opportunities - News
Tuesday, 19 January 2010 14:34

Wednesday 31 March 2010 11am – 3pm

Ideal for All’s Malthouse Garden
Smethwick, B66 1JE near Birmingham, Tel 0121 558 5555.

Are you interested in gardening?

Did you once enjoy gardening but have lost your sight and your confidence?

Do you have sight problems and are interested in learning some new gardening techniques?

Then why not come to the Thrive Garden Workshop at Ideal for All. There will be: practical workshops where you will learn new gardening techniques, tools and equipment to try, garden tours and a chance to meet other blind gardeners. You will have plants, gardening advice and fresh ideas to take home.

The day is funded by the Big Lottery Fund.

Tea, coffee and lunch will be provided.

For further information or to book a place on the day contact:
Wendy Chamberlain or Susan Twigg at Thrive on telephone 0118 988 5688, email This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or write to Thrive, The Geoffrey Udall Centre, Beech Hill, Reading RG7 2AT

Last Updated on Tuesday, 26 January 2010 15:12
 
Sandwell Kitchen Garden Contest PDF Print E-mail
Growing Opportunities - News
Tuesday, 19 January 2010 14:30

A new "kitchen garden" contest is to be launched in Sandwell in a bid to provide competition for the increasing range of people who grow a huge variety of plants from around the world to provide food for the table.

The idea is to recognise the range of ages and nationalities and the range of crops from around the world now being grown on plots - and to the efforts of people who grow just for the kitchen.

It is a move to give anyone the chance to get involved in competitive gardening which has become more popular in recent years. It will also give more chance to people who do not grow the big exhibition crops - leeks, onions and carrots - to the highest standards.

At the moment people entering the local councils and the Black Country Inter-Towns Allotments Competitions have to grow a list of specific crops to click up the points to get a big score.

This has lead to a hard core group of superb growers, which produce huge brilliantly-presented crops on an allotment which leaves little place for the "bread and butter gardener".

But now members of Sandwell Allotment Council and Barbara Carroll, the council's  allotments offcer, are aiming to organise a show anyone can enter, irrespective of age, fitness or nationality.

Councillor Linda Horton, cabinet member for culture and leisure said: "This is a great idea and we look forward to working with the Allotment Council to put on this special competition. "We are proud of the standards our gardeners achieve and this new competition fits in well with the increase in allotments activity in the borough."

It will mean that the many people from around the world who now grow more exotic plants on the plots can enter and score heavily on a much more open scoring system.

"Allotments are changing, the people who cultivate them are now a mix of old and young from all nationalities and the crops that they grow are diverse," said Barbara. "Those who enter the new competition would be given a blank score sheet thus opening it up to everyone whatever they grow, and remembering at the same time that marks would still be awarded for cleanliness and crop rotation," she said.

To launch the idea an evening with a qualified judge,  giving an illustrated talk entitled "Gardening for the Kitchen Table " will be held in the Spring when allotment gardeners in Sandwell will be invited. Detail to be arranged.

For More information, please contact Barbara Caroll on 0121 569 3438.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 19 January 2010 14:50
 
New Allotment Gardening Course PDF Print E-mail
Growing Opportunities - News
Monday, 18 January 2010 00:00

A new five week long course for budding allotment gardeners is starts Monday 15th March, and will run each week from 6-8pm. Based at the fully accessible Malthouse garden with visits to Salop Drive Market Garden and run by experienced gardener Richard Billingsley.

During the course you will find out everything you need to know about how to successfully grow your own delicious fresh vegetables. From crop rotation, composting, to controlling pests and planning your produce our fun, friendly, hands on informative sessions will help you to succeed.

To secure your place on any of the courses or to find out more contact:

Richard Billingsley, Helen Sneyd or Veronica Barry at Ideal for All on 0121 558 5555
Last Updated on Tuesday, 19 January 2010 14:46
 
Growing for Well-being PDF Print E-mail
Growing Opportunities - News
Monday, 07 December 2009 16:13

Growing for Well-being
Friday 11th December, 2009, 9.30-4.00

Ideal for All’s Independent Living Centre is a multi stranded approach to tackle the exclusion, ill health and poverty that needlessly accompany disability. Their vision is one of people growing their own solutions and a key part of this the availability of affordable local fresh food and its consumption.

This one day event in partnership with Ideal for All, will look at:

10am -12 noon: Integrated strategies for well-being with presentations by -

  • Laura Davis:  the history and development of the Community Supported Agriculture in Sandwell
  • Helen Sneyd: the Growing Opportunities programme and the links to health.
  • Rosie Edwards: on an anti-poverty agenda at the heart of local communities and a sustainable local economy
  • More details on speakers below

12 noon – 2.30pm: Lunch followed Garden Tours of
  • the Salop Road Market Garden
  • And Malthouse Garden – designed for accessibility

2.30pm -3.30pm: Financing a Personal Service
  • Maxine Small & Vicky Phipps: talk about Direct Payments and the, soon to be introduced, Personalisation Budgets which allow service users to define how their care is organised.

To book a place on this free event please contact the Community Composting Network on 0114 258 0483 or dowload the attached booking form.

ATTACHMENTS TITLE
DOWNLOAD THIS FILE (Growing for Wellbeing programme and booking form.doc)Growing for Well Booking Form
Last Updated on Tuesday, 08 December 2009 13:01
 
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