Front Cover Summer 2012.indd
Transcription
Front Cover Summer 2012.indd
RUN OF THE MILL Summer 2012 The Ruskin Mill Trust Magazine For: Ruskin Mill College, Glasshouse College, Freeman College, Brantwood Specialist School, Clervaux Trust and Plas Dwbl Farm College Improving lifelong opportunities for people with learning difficulties difficulties and disabilities Welcome to the Summer 2012 issue of Run of the Mill Magazine. Run of the Mill, founded in 1995, is published each term and distributed freely to all those connected with Ruskin Mill Trust. Run of the Mill offers students and staff an opportunity to express their creativity, work and experiences within our provision and to reflect the work and aims of Ruskin Mill Trust. The work draws inspiration from Rudolf Steiner, John Ruskin and William Morris. Ruskin Mill Trust operates three colleges for 16-25 year-olds, Brantwood Specialist School, Sheffield for 7-19 year-olds, Clervaux Trust, Darlington, for young people and adults post education (14+), Transform Residential, The Field Centre and Hiram Education and Research Department in collaboration with Crossfields Institute (For contact details see page 4). Innovative and Experiential Education In 1984, Aonghus Gordon, the founder of Ruskin Mill Trust, discovered that when young people with learning difficulties and disabilities, including autistic spectrum disorders and developmental delay, worked with craftspeople in natural environments on reallife, purposeful tasks, their personal, emotional and social skills, and health improved dramatically. Students follow an individualised programme of learning, both whilst at our daytime provision as well as a life skills curriculum during evenings and weekends in our residential provision. Each educational provision is located within commercial, craft and arts centres where the heritage of the area contributes to the thematic core of each curriculum. As well as being educational centres, each provision runs a cultural programme including exhibitions, galleries, artistic events and workshops open to the public, staff and students. For further information on the opening hours of our cafés, cultural programmes and commercial outlets at each of these centres, see our contact details on page 4. Or visit our website: www.rmt.org www.facebook.com/RuskinMill Editor of Run of the Mill: William Mercer : Tel: 01453 837620 Email: william.mercer@rmt.org @RuskinMill contents Front Cover: Celebrating the Olympics 34: Rag-Rugs and Nippers’ Slippers 4: Ruskin Mill Trust Provision 36: Precious Cargo: Cultural Olympiad 5: Master of Science 43: A Fish for All Seasons 6: Celebrating the Olympics 44: Never Throwing in the Towel 9: The 5th International Festival of Glass 10: It Literally Saved My Life 12: Stringing, Fusing & Slumping 14: Transforming Lives 16: Willow Works 46: Lantern Festival 47: May Day Festival & Composting 48: Student Council Joins NUS 49: George Meets Padraig &Twinning 50: Veterans Artisan Bakery 17: Soulful Experience 51: Clow Beck 18: Anti-Cyberbullying Week 53: Working 9-5 at Ruskin Glass Centre 20: Welding a Future 54: A Midsummer Night’s Dream 22: Kick Ash 24: Why Do We Fundraise? 25: A Life-Changing Experience 56: Citizenship Through a Lens 57: Copper Spinning a Water Feature 26: Plas Dwbl: Development & Diversity 58: Musical Talent 27: Making Sense of Water 59: Art 28: Tractors Wordsearch & Story 60: Activities Wordsearch & Credits 29: Poets’ Corner 61: Adieu 3O: Jessop’s Bear 62: United We Stand & Tea with Lord Mayor 31: Pewter Live Commendation 64: David Runs For Fun 32: Silver Acorn Award & Mounted Police 66: Ex-Files 33: Sports Relief 68: Back Cover: Charlie Avent 4 trust provision Ruskin Mill Trust Registered Ofce Website: www.rmt.org Old Bristol Road, Nailsworth, GL6 0LA Tel: 01453 837500 Fax: 01453 837531 Email: enquiries@rmt.org Ruskin Mill College The Fisheries, Horsley, Gloucestershire GL6 0PL Tel: 01453 837500 Fax: 01453 837506 Email: enquiries@rmc.rmt.org Age range of pupils: 16-25 Principal: Elisabeth Johnson Admissions: Jacky Taylor Tel: 01453 837502 Email: admissions@rmc.rmt.org Plas Dwbl Farm College a provision of Ruskin Mill College Mynachlog-ddu, Clynderwen, Pembrokeshire , SA66 7SE Tel: 01994 419420 Email: info@plasdwbl.rmt.org Age range of pupils: 16-25 Principal: Elisabeth Johnson Admissions: Jacky Taylor Tel: 01453 837502 Email: admissions@rmc.rmt.org Glasshouse College Wollaston Road, Amblecote, Stourbridge, West Midlands DY8 4HF Tel: 01384 399400 Fax: 01384 399401 Email: enquiries@ghc.rmt.org Age range of pupils: 16-25 Principal: Ollie Cheney Admissions: Pat Hart Tel: 01384 399434. Email: admissions@ghc.rmt.org Freeman College Sterling Works, 88 Arundel Street, Sheffield, South Yorkshire S1 2NG Tel: 0114 252 5940 Fax: 0114 252 5996 Email: enquiries@fmc.rmt.org Age range of pupils: 16-25 Principal: Bonny Etchell-Anderson Admissions: Nadia Barratt Tel: 0114 252 5953 Email: admissions@fmc.rmt.org Brantwood Specialist School 1 Kenwood Bank, Nether Edge Sheffield, South Yorkshire S7 1NU Tel: 0114 258 9062 Fax: 0114 259 0036 Email: admin@brantwood.rmt.org Age range of pupils: 7-19 Headteacher: Constantin Court Admissions: Karen Chester Tel: 0114 258 9062 Email: karenc@brantwood.rmt.org Transform Residential Residential Care and Respite services Address: As Trust Registered Office Email: enquiries@trl.rmt.org South West Area Manager: Richard Luck. Tel: 01453 837627 Mob: 07813 234617 Midlands and North West Manager: Hannah Ryan. Tel: 0114 252 5981 Mob: 07813 234607 The Field Centre An MSc in Practical Skills Therapeutic Education (Integrated Professional Development) Delivered by the Crossfields Institute, validated by the University of the West of England Contact Nick McCordall for further information: +44 (00) 1453 808 118 nick@crossfieldsinstitute.com www.crossfieldsinstitute.com Hiram Education and Research Department. The Trust’s centre for professional development and higher education, a department of Crossfields Institute. Head of Academic Administration: Jane Tyler Tel: 01453 837609. Email: jane.tyler@rmt.org. www.crossfieldsinstitute.com/hiram-erd/ Ruskin Mill Trust is a Rudolf Steiner Charitable Trust. Registered in England and Wales. Company Registraon Number: 7252866. Charity Number 1137167. 5 In collaboration with the University of the West of England we are delighted to announce the first – MSc in Practical Skills Therapeutic Education (Integrated Professional Development)* th Commencing August 28 2012 Based at The Field Centre, Horsley, Gloucestershire, www.thefieldcentre.org.uk This MSc is aimed at teachers, practitioners, researchers, leaders and managers from around the world. The programme aim is to develop expertise in integrative and holistic education, care and management for Special Needs Provisions. The unique delivery structure is based on 30% instructive learning and 70% practice based learning; offering 180 Credits at M level. “Universities will in the future not be separated from the land and community they serve. Their activities will resonate with their surroundings. The Field Centre at Ruskin Mill is to me a crystallised beginning of such a new university culture.” Dr. Aksel Hugo, Associate Professor in Science Education, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Rudolf Steiner University College, Oslo. “The Field Centre has the potential to become one of the centres of phenomenon based science in the western English speaking world. Therefore I support this project with my best thoughts and the warmth of my heart.” Johannes Kuehl, Director of the Natural Science Section at the Goetheanum. Core Themes include – • The principles and practice of Practical Skills Therapeutic Education • The method of Contemporary Apprenticeship Learning • Holistic Support and Care • Transformative Leadership and Management with Tourmaline Leadership Ltd. A Programme Designed Around the Learner – The MSc is available either as a full-time, or part-time programme. It offers the learner a number of flexible study routes whereby the programme can be tailored to fit around an individual’s needs and commitments. The minimum attendance for completion of the programme would be one day per week, combined with some weekends and Summer school studies. This is a professional work-based learning programme Validated by the University of the West of England. The Programme Directors are Dr Kenneth Gibson and Dr Lita Crociani-Windland. Contact - Nick McCordall: ++44 (0)1453 808118 nick@crossfieldsinstitute.com www.crossfieldsinstitute.com/education_and_training/msc-programme *subject to approval 6 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 OLYMPICS Lisa, George, Neil &Tom in the celebratory mood! In the build up to London 2012, students and staff at Glasshouse College have ignited a wildfire of excitement by creating a unique Olympic Torch and initiating their very own Olympic Games which will involve students from all of our colleges. Artwork by Oscar, fi first rst year student On Your Marks Students and tutors at Glasshouse College celebrated becoming one of the winners of the “Spirit of the Torch” competition run by Lloyds TSB in recognition of the college’s commitment to the Olympic and Paralympic values. The staff and students made a torch to symbolise the values of the Olympics through the crafts that the students do at college. Many crafts were involved. The glass trumpet was made with students as well as the iron work holding the glass. In the glass trumpet, students made fire coloured glass beads and on top of the beads the fire was made from felt produced at the college farm. The wooden handle was lathed out of wood from the college’s Kinver woodlands and the leather wrist strap was made by students in the leather workshop. The glass was engraved by students naming the torch “Glasshouse College Olympics 2012”. The torch was a real collaboration of staff and students from various workshops working on a project to reflect both the values of the college and the Olympics. The torch will be displayed at an evening celebration event that will coincide with the Olympic Torch relay coming to the area. Gail Hickman, Student Council Coordinator at the college says “The students are thrilled to have won the competition and are very proud of the torch. They deserve to win the it following all the hard work they put into the torch and I’m sure they will enjoy the evening celebration when the torch will be on display”. As part of the Olympic celebrations, the students are putting together a program of sporting activities for the college to try out and this program will have a grand finale of an Olympic styled “Glasshouse Games “ on the 10th July at the Dell Athletics Stadium. Lee Lough from Glasshouse College 7 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Effective Play has been working closely with the college to make the event a success. He says “we want to engage the students in an atmosphere and environment that is really fun for them, but also look at the values of the Olympics”. The students have organised a video diary of what is happening at the college in the run up to the Olympics and these can be viewed on You Tube and the Facebook page dedicated to this, both under the name of “Glasshouse Games 2012” to keep everyone informed of the exciting things that are going on at the college this term. Neil & Hardeep, second year students students and blog about it on the Get Set network. The site also has information and pictures about the Olympics and Paralympics. When we told the tutors about, this they seemed very interested in the whole thing. The making of the colleges very own unique Olympic torch was amazing. Various workshops took part in the making of the torch. So myself and Josh talked about that and thanked the tutors who took part in the making of the torch. With Gail Hickman’s and Ami Blakemore’s hard work, we at the Glasshouse College are holding an Olympic style sports day at the Dell Athletics Stadium. This is instead of having our usual end of year student games at the farm. There are going to be 57 students from our college, 12 from Freeman College and 12 from Ruskin Mill College attending the sports day. While we were doing our presentation Gail and Ami handed out activity packs about the Olympics to the tutors. They are full of activities for the tutors to do with their students. We also talked about being teamed up with a college in Hong Kong that is also a college for people with learning difficulties. We also told them that over Easter, Anona is going to Hong Kong to have a look around the college. The presentation went very well and all the tutors who attended seemed very interested in what Josh and myself talked about. Get Set Continued overleaf with Jake, third-year student Myself and Josh Hancock gave a presentation to the tutors about the Olympics and Paralympics.We were dressed as the 118 men and ran in slow motion in to the refectory. We talked about the fact that England is holding the Olympics in our capital London. Then we went on to tell them that there is the Paralympics which are for people with disabilities who cannot take part in the Olympics. We talked about the Olympic values and why they are important. Before our presentation, Matthew Turnball found some really good pictures that represent each of the Olympic values. In a way, everyone of the Olympic values have a personal value to each person. The Get Set network has a major part in the Olympics and we spoke about how tutors can get involved with their You cannot be serious! Aaron swinging a forehand. Glasshouse College 8 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Go! with Joe, third-year student Recently, we took part in an athletics event which took place in the Wolverhampton Athletics Arena. There were various other people taking part in it from various other schools and colleges. Since I’ve been at this college, I’ve grown in confidence and it’s made me a lot more determined to do stuff, being out there and that, and going to this athletics thing really helped me. I managed to take part in the 400 metres men’s race, and I came first, so it’s quite a good achievement. There were loads of people there cheering on, there was track and field events and it was a great day put and I think everyone really enjoyed themselves. Joe pokes his toe in front to claim gold! Guard of Honour with Gail Hickman, Chair of Student Council Students from Glasshouse College in Stourbridge will form a Guard of Honour to line the route as athletes make their way through the Olympic Park into the Olympic Stadium, for the London 2012 Olympic Games Opening Ceremony. At the start of the Athletes’ Parade, during the athletes’ procession from the Olympic Village to the Olympic Stadium, the students who will join 249 other schools from across the UK and make up the 2,000 student Guard of Honour which will line the route, holding lanterns and banners they have created to support one of the 204 competing teams. For many of the 10,500 athletes the Guard of Honour will be their first experience of the London 2012 Games. The students have been preparing to provide a vibrant and diverse welcome for athletes competing at the Games.The students are already learning about the cultures and athletes of the Hong Kong team as part of their celebrations for London 2012 World Sport Day taking place next month on 25 June. World Sport Day, presented by Lloyds TSB, will see schools across the UK join together in celebrating how sport can bring the cultures of the world together. They will support the athletes of the Hong Kong team. Glasshouse College has been selected through the reward and recognition programme of the Get Set network, the official London 2012 education programme. They have demonstrated a commitment to living the Olympic and Paralympic values and incorporating them into their school lives and curriculum. The college’s plans for World Sport Day and what they have learnt about their chosen teams, include a member of the Glasshouse College visiting the Hong Kong college that Glasshouse College has been twinned with, and, a visit from Chinese visitors who helped students with writing and speaking in Chinese and also helped make the banner that will be waved during the Guard of Honour celebrations. Josh, a first year student says “I am so looking forward to going to London for this celebration and I am really excited about being part of the whole Olympics 2012”. As well as having the opportunity to cheer on the world’s best athletes and be part of a global moment, the school children will also get the exciting chance to tour the Olympic Park and see some of the London 2012 venues before the world turns its attention to Danny Boyle’s Olympic Games Opening Ceremony in the Olympic Stadium later that day. GlasshouseGames2012 @RuskinMill /RuskinMill 9 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 A Message from the Festival’s Director, Keith Brocklehurst This year’s fesval is our 5th and celebrates 50 years of studio glass and 400 years of glassmaking in Stourbridge, with pre eminent glassmakers from around the world demonstrang and giving talks. The Brish Glass Biennale, Britain’s foremost contemporary glass showcase exhibion, will inaugurate the new arts centre building. The Glass Heap Challenge will see teams compeng with innovave up-cycling soluons for glass waste. Blowing the Boundaries will feature a geodesic dome with a unique 360 degree video projecon of glass related imagery, plus live performances. There are opportunies see alfresco glass blowing, to join a workshop and make glass yourself or bring your own wearable glass ouit and be part of the celebratory nale, ‘Glassionistas’. There will be fun for all the family and aracons and refreshments at the various sites. We look forward to seeing you there. Glass Festival - Friday 24 to Monday 27 August Masterclasses - Monday 20 to Thursday 23 August British Glass Biennale - Friday 24 August to Saturday 15 September Glass Afloat - Wednesday 1 to Monday 27 August Master Classes include: Ian Hankey (UK) Richard Marquis (USA) Bandhu Scott Dunham (USA) Fritz Dreisbach (USA) John Lewis (USA) Shelley Doolan (UK) Antoine Leperlier (France) Diana East & Sean Taylor (UK) Vanessa Cutler (UK) Tanya Veit (USA) Alison Kinnaird (UK) Allister Malcomb (UK) For full programme information and booking visit www.ifg.org.uk 10 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 “It literally saved my life.” Whilst a student at Ruskin Mill college, Charlie Avent found his pathway in life. During his three years at the college, Charlie was able to work with and ride horses. In 2009, he went on a Catalonian trip with a house-parent (Run of the Mill, Spring 2010), worked the horses around the college grounds and, as mentioned below, was introduced to Heartshore Horses for Work Experience (Run of the Mill, Summer 2010). Since leaving, Charlie is working as an apprentice with Heartshore and recently was interviewed by the Stroud News and Journal which, with kind permission from the Journal and reporter Chris Warne, is printed below. AFTER enduring years of torment at the hands of bullies who poked fun at his autism, Charlie Avent was depressed, self-harming and despairing. Suffering regular panic attacks he started to contemplate suicide until one day he met Oscar and discovered his true calling in life – horse whispering. Now working as an apprentice at Heartshore Horses in Minchinhampton, Charlie tells SNJ reporter ChrisWarne about how he stepped back from the abyss and came to view his condition not as a curse but as a blessing in disguise Charlie at Heartshore Horses. Photo by Carl Hewlett. WITH a broad smile on his face 23-year-old Charlie Avent gently tends to his horse Spirit before throwing an affectionate arm over her broad brown neck. introduced to my art tutor’s horse, Oscar, from that moment my life changed completely.” Indifferent to the strong gusts sweeping the vast expanse of Cotswold countryside around them, man and horse together exude an air of calm, standing in splendid isolation amid the howling winds and driving rain. The happiness and contentment at the heart of this pastoral scene is a far cry from the pain and anger that defined Charlie’s life only a few years previously however. Buoyed by the connection that had formed between her student and her horse, Charlie’s art tutor Patricia Digby arranged for him to visit Dawn Oakley-Smith, a horse whisperer who runs a riding school, Heartshore Horses, near Minchinhampton. At the yard, which boasts a herd of 23 horses, Charlie was welcomed with open arms by Dawn, her daughter India and the rest of the team. Back then he was the victim of bullies, who targeted him simply because of his autism. “I was losing the will to live and I doubt I could have lasted another day or two with all that going on,” said Charlie, who lives in Nailsworth. Highly appreciative of the way the horses were cared for and trained, free from coercion or any sort of physical punishment, it did not take long before Charlie felt truly at home there. “I would have panic and anxiety attacks all the time because of the bullying and I was just unable to understand the world around me. “But when I was “My autism makes me very sensitive to what is going on around me so it is very important to me that the horses are treated in the right way, he said. 11 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 He is also busy trying to raise awareness and understanding of autism, determinedly stressing that the condition need not be an impediment for those who live with it. Charlie’s success story has now prompted Dawn to offer therapeutic camps and courses at Heartshore for children with autism, as well as for those with learning or behavioural difficulties. Charlie with working horses at Ruskin Mill college “I went to traditional riding schools when I was younger but I never got on with them. Once I was told off for not wanting to hit the pony I was riding on and that just set me off.” At Heartshore Horses there have been no such issues however and Charlie feels totally at ease with Dawn’s methods. His sensitive temperament means he is well suited to the philosophy of natural horsemanship embraced at her yard and the more he has learnt about the art of horse whispering the more he has thrived. “I see my autism now as a potentially very valuable tool,” Charlie said. “I have been able to turn my weakest point into one of my strongest. I suppose it is like an axe – it can be really nasty or it can be used to construct beautiful things.” Watching Charlie with Spirit, a five-year-old bay filly which he has had for just over two years now, you get the impression that he is able to almost connect with the horse on another level. It is as if he has developed an unspoken bond with the horse which allows him to instinctively relate to her and gauge her mood. The service she offers has already produced remarkable results, with severely autistic children learning to ride and lead the horses around her yard, much to the astonishment of their parents. Locally, Dawn has encountered some resistance to the methods she employs to train her horses. Her techniques, which differ markedly from those used at traditional riding schools, are not to everyone’s tastes and she says some passers-by have expressed their displeasure when they have seen her out riding with the horses unbridled. But, she has asked for people to respect her approach and is hopeful they will, if only to avoid upsetting some of the happy children on horseback. Charlie, especially, would like to win over Heartshore’s critics. He does not regard traditional riding schools as the ‘enemy’, but as he puts it: “I just came to realise that natural horsemanship was what I needed. “It literally saved my life.” “Natural horsemanship is horse whispering, which basically involves understanding how the horse thinks,” said Charlie. “Horses have their own way of communicating and it is all based on body language. I have been learning how to understand that.” Working with horses at Dawn’s yard has not only radically altered the way Charlie views his autism, it has also helped to give him stability, structure and direction in life. Having once been destined for a care home, he now lives independently in a flat of his own and is currently writing a book ‘Following the Hoofprints’ about his time at Heartshore, which is due to be published later this year. Charlie triumphant on his Catalan adventure 12 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Stringing, Fusing & Slumping The Art of Stained Glass at Ruskin Mill College Stained Glass with tutor, Alec Hole I have been teaching Stained Glass and running my business at Ruskin Mill for eleven years now. Much of this time I was based at Ruskin Mill, but I moved to a new workshop at Gables Farm 18 months ago. This workshop is larger and lighter, with enough room to accommodate the two disciplines of stained glass and warm glass. One of the ecclesiastical motivations for stained glass windows was to tell the stories of the Bible with images of glass, transformed with the infusion of light. I encourage my students to develop ideas or choose designs which describe their story, which can be transformed into a beautiful object. I have taught a large population of students with a large range of abilities. Most will be initially introduced to the discipline of stained glass, which requires the ability to cut glass accurately to a design, to frame the glass efficiently using lead and to show the fine motor skills necessary to solder the lead together. The majority of students appear to thoroughly enjoy the absorbing nature of the craft, inspired by the vibrancy of the colour of hand-blown glass, defined by black lead, with the prospect of making something imbued with meaning for them, which is beautiful. Most students will begin by practising glass cutting on inexpensive window glass, which when achieved will lead them onto a simple sun-catcher. This will demonstrate the threefold process cutting, leading and soldering, inherent in any project. This will generally lead onto a more challenging project, designed or chosen by the student. Stained glass can be extremely challenging, demanding focussed eye-to-hand coordination, the ability to persevere despite frustration, to problem solve when leading the glass together and the fine motor skills inherent in all three processes. The process is very much exponential in nature, where the success of one process is heavily dependent on the success of the previous one. Some of the projects which students will make include simple sun-catchers (glass hangings), stained glass windows for their homes, stained glass mirrors, tiffany lampshades, incense burners, clocks etc. In addition to stained glass, students have an opportunity to experience the scientific craft of warm glass, i.e. fusing (melting glass together) and slumping (warming glass so that it slumps into a mould) to create three-dimensional objects. The glass-cutting skills achieved with stained glass can be transferred to this, but more often, warm glass is less disciplined and more experimental without the necessity for precision. Often students will get more from their efforts out of the kiln than they anticipated. Tim working on his sun and bee panel, right. I teach part-time and run my business making commissions in glass for my clients. The students have the opportunity to learn those skills within a real context where I am partially earning my living from the craft which I love. 13 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 glass might crack. I’ve always liked colours, especially through materials you can see through. Working in glass has its dangers but if you treat it the right way, and take care, it can go well. In the future I would like to build up stained glass equipment like Alec and have my own workshop but do it as a hobby as I think it would be more enjoyable than as a job. I would also like to go to Stourbridge and do more glasswork. Above and left: The ancient and mysterious art of stringing. Above: Marianne putting her work into a kiln for fusing. The Science of Molecules with Tim, 2nd-year I worked with Alec last summer before I came to Ruskin Mill College which was arranged through Connexions. I told them that I was interested in glasswork and took the opportunity with both hands. I like to use big blocks of colour so that the sunlight can shine through. I started with a window hanging with a design from a book. I then let my creativity go and worked with curvy lines which has then led me to working with fused glass. I’ve learned so much, such as making stringers which are long thin pieces of glass stretched using a blow torch, which can make intricate shapes. Cutting glass to begin with was difficult, especially curved lines, but has become easier. Leading needs to be accurate otherwise the pieces of glass won’t fit the design. Fused glass involves heating up a design of layered glass in a kiln. This process takes the sharp edges out and the colours also change where for example orange turns to a red colour. In fusing , you have to use the same type of glass as it needs the same co-efficient of expansion. The molecules can then expand and contract at the same rate under heat otherwise the A range of Tim’s work. 14 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Transforming Lives Nathan on a week’s Wilderness Trip in Wales, a challenging adventure offered to 2nd-year students Shared Lives Carers, David and Katja, and Nathan, 3rd-year at Ruskin MIll College, talk about some of the ingredients that have transformed their lives, over an evening meal, of course David and Katja have been house-parents at Ruskin Mill College for four years and bring their skills and insights from having worked with people around the world. Both David and Katja are very enthusiastic about their work and David summarised his approach simply in that “ I’ve always enjoyed taking care of people so that this particular work is attractive to my disposition. We like the rhythm of the work and providing the necessary support and education”. Katja says also that “It is a spiritual path for both student and house-parent and a continual learning process. It is an especially strong mirror for both our students and us, as living closely together we share each others energies and patterns.” David and Katja have taken great advantage of the free time during the day when the students are at college. They have just completed a four-year course in classical homeopathy and are due to become registered homeopathic practitioners. They see this as another string to their bow especially as it helps to develop a professional and objective approach to working with young people with complex difficulties. They were keen to point out that “we can observe behaviour without making judgements or reacting to a situation and it supports us in having a deeper compassion with the people we work with. It’s another strand to healing and promoting good health. Identifying that which makes our students unique we see as not a problem but a key to unlocking their potential”. Following a silent blessing on the food, Nathan, left, Katja, centre, and David share a moment after a busy day. Taking a holistic approach to life and human development is a key vision in Ruskin Mill Trust’ work and over the last two years, David and Katja have seen a remarkable improvement in Nathan’s wellbeing and his development. With college, parents and student permission, they have used classical homeopathy as part of their overall therapeutic approach to caring which has helped with improving sleep patterns, diet and general responsiveness and communication. Having served supper, Nathan Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 was ready to share his time at Ruskin Mill College as he prepares to leave in July. Nathan, centre, at Heartshore Horses riding stables, Minchinhampton. Nathan’s Story Nathan, by his own admission, found accepting and settling into Ruskin Mill College very challenging. Having come from an educational background that couldn’t meet his needs, and with a string of diagnoses and challenging behaviour, it is testament to the good work of tutors, student journey managers and houseparents that Nathan has been able to grow and develop into a very friendly and communicative young man. Nathan takes up his journey. “I live in Reading, a nice town in the UK. I was at college there but didn’t like it as I was picked upon. I was living with my mum and my social worker set this place up at Ruskin Mill College. I am diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome and ADHD and came for a three- 15 day assessment and liked it. I enjoy working inside and outside and there’s a lot to do here. It was difficult getting used to the college but I had a lot of support to help me settle in. I’ve enjoyed so many things such as football, pottery, jewellery, fish farm, cooking, animal husbandry and lunch club. I’ve done Work Experience at Barton End stable, both helping with riding for the disabled and my own riding, Heartshore Horses, and Crazy K9 where I help to train puppies and teach them tricks. I recently went into an assessment flat at college which was fine when I had a friend staying but I didn’t like it on my own. I have learnt to cook at college and can manage my money better, but I still spend it. I have made friends at college and will keep in touch with them when I leave. I would like to work with animals and I like looking after children as I am an uncle to two children and I did work experience in a nursery. I would like to work in a riding stables as I’ve learnt so much about it. I get on well with my house-parents and help around the house and we go out together. I feel I am well looked after. It has been a good experience being at Ruskin Mill and I think I will miss it.” Above: Feeding time at the sh farm, Ruskin Mill College. Below: Work Experience at Crazy K9. Below left: Animal Husbandry “When I rst met Nathan in his second year, his condence was very low and nding it very difcult to be at college. Once we had identied the underlying issues and made an action plan, it was wonderful to see him blossom. Successful work experience, close team working with Nathan’s mum and the dedicated support of David and Katja, contributed to that success. He surprised himself by undertaking the wilderness trip where he realised how independent he could be.” Julie Woods Student Journey Manager 16 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 WILLOW WORKS Joanna with student Robert at High Riggs Working the Willow with Joanna Hunt, Basket Making Tutor The students are currently making handmade biodegradable organic hanging baskets. Students go through the whole process from coppicing the willow, selecting the correct willow and binding the willow. And then they go on to sell the baskets. They go through the whole ‘seed to table’ process. The students sell the smaller baskets for £2.99 and the larger ones for £4.99, and twenty per cent of everything sold goes to College trips. They are involved in the pricing and display of the baskets and the public absolutely love them! Making the baskets is a very methodical, rhythmical and organic process – it can’t be rushed and it’s great to sit outside on a sunny day like today overlooking the valley. Alot of hand-eye coordination and patience is needed, and it often calms down some of the more energetic students. year and I’m having an awesome time! I absolutely love Freeman College. People understand me for what I am; they can see my hidden talents. I used to go to a normal secondary school but I didn’t like it at all – there was too much writing. But here, I get to use my hands which I find really therapeutic. At the moment I’m also making a bench. I’ve made two benches so far. One of them is for my mum and my nan. It saves them money in buying an actual bench and they tell me that they are very proud. I love being able to contribute. I want this bench to go to a local primary school. What I am with Josh, 1st-year Willow work is great – we make the baskets for profit, but we also make it for other people which hopefully makes them happy! The hardest part is trying to make the willow into a shape, so sometimes if it snaps I get frustrated. Though, most of time it’s really relaxing if you take your time and try not to rush. I’m in my first Josh giving his bench a nice clean shave Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 17 Soulful Experience: Volunteering at Ruskin Mill College Ruskin Mill Trust provision oers a range of excing volunteering opportunies. At Ruskin Mill College, Jasmin explains how the skills and inspiraon she nds through being a volunteer, is helping her new business, Soulful Gardens, to take o. Jasmin is a keen gardener and volunteers for Ruskin Mill on the horticulture team learning about biodynamic gardening and in the tree nursery and farm. She is the founder of the Soulful Gardens company which combines the biodynamic approach to gardening, not just by planting with the phases of the moon and the careful preparations to the soil, but by adding simple features such as ponds and flow forms, lawns, stone flower beds, herbal gardens, willow arches and wildlife art. “Ruskin Mill has been a source of inspiration for me. Every day I learn something new about the plants and ways of cultivating them that is effective in increasing their energetic value. The implications for gardens are huge.” Interested in the holistic approach to gardening, her background has been in regenerating gardens using recycled materials and was excited to discover that this principle runs throughout Ruskin Mill. “Everywhere I go I see people working together to make sure that the college runs smoothly. The farmers plough the land with the horses ready for planting, the horticulture team provides the foliage for the animals and the manure and waste produced from into compost for the soil.” Rudolf Steiner’s approach to combing art with science, believing that both are important for any thriving garden, is evident in the colourful displays of flowers and vegetables at Ruskin Mill intermingled with sculptures and recycled-glass murals. Jasmin has also been doing stone carving at the new educational building and made bean climbers and archways out of willow and birch, working alongside the coppicing team to do this. ‘There’s a lot of research that shows that both art and nature have an impact on how we feel and our health. As little as two minutes of exposure to either can boost mood levels and reduce stress and perhaps that’s why the students and staff at Ruskin Mill look so relaxed, they are immersed in both.’ Jasmin is currently working on a collection of wildlife paintings to be installed in gardens, as she is convinced that the element of colour in them and their link to nature has a positive effect on the overall feel of the garden. “The light of the sun reflects on the paintings and light is a powerful force in a garden and harmonising its rhythm, as well as is aesthetically pleasing to the eye. I think this is why I love to make ponds, the sound of the water from the flow forms or water feature helps to restore the gentle rhythm of the garden but it is the reflection of the sky and the plants in the water that is the most beautiful.” Jasmin is pleased to be able to apply the learning at Ruskin Mill in her gardening work at Soulful Gardens. Here, she works intuitively to restore the energetic and aesthetic value of a garden and transform it into a relaxing and healthy space. She is often able to see straight away what is working and what needs to change. She plans to continue to work at Ruskin Mill as well as develop Soulful Gardens and believes that it is the garden that is the key to restoring and maintaining a healthy and relaxing life style. “Gardens affect how we feel. So much time is given to the interior of the house but not so much to the garden. It makes sense to do both.” For more info on volunteering at the College visit: www.rmt.org Jasmin’s business: www.soulfulgardens.co.uk Perennial plants and owers contact: www.scperennials.co.uk For owforms, please contact Simon Charter at www.ebbandflowltd.co.uk 18 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Artwork by Tom, Alex, Matt and Josh. Anti-Cyberbullying Week with Jake, 3rd-year student A friendly visit from the local police The 27th of February to the 2nd of March was anticyber-bullying week.This report is about everything that happened during the week. The week kicked off with a Facebook Awareness Workshop, which showed students how to apply privacy settings on your account. This is so only friends you have on Facebook can see what you put on your account. Matthew Turnbull told the group about how to change important information you may or may not have on Facebook. He also told us how we can report and block people if we need to. The information Matt gave us was very helpful and I learnt a lot more about Facebook than I ever knew before. They should teach this in every school and college across the country. Gemma, Louis & Chris in the video conference Some of the students with staff present talked to the police about cyber-bullying. After talking about Glasshouse College 19 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Facebook they went on to talk about the fact bullying can take place using MSN and text messaging. The police have a new non-emergency number which is 101 and it’s a lot cheaper than the 0800 numbers. The police also explained if people report someone on Facebook for harassment they will issue the bully with a £40 fine. If it does not stop they could appear in court and, at worst, the bully could end up in the pen (prison). On the Wednesday of Anti Cyber-bullying week, we held a video conference with Ruskin Mill College and three of their students. They told us that cyber-bullying makes them upset and stays with them for a long time. Is cyber-bullying a problem at Ruskin Mill? They said it is not really a problem and some of them don’t even have Facebook. Students display their informative T-shirts: front (above) and back (below). We are talking about cyber-bullying and being asked questions about it too. If people leave comments on photos you have on Facebook and you do not like the comments that is counted as cyber-bullying too. We are also talking about how far cyber-bullying can go and in the most extreme cases it can sadly lead to suicide. We are currently coming up with a story about cyberbullying where the bully is played by George Maudsley and the victim who is played by Mark Higgings. The rest of us are witnesses and bystanders. The story is based upon a rumour which viciously spreads. The rumour is based around Mark and a donkey and that’s all I’m saying on the matter. Alex Timbrull, Tom Southall and Matthew Turnbull with the help of Josh Barr designed an amazing piece of art work. It is a painting called Cyber-bullying Hurts. It is done as if it is a piece of work from a comic strip. It took them a lot of time and effort and the final piece is amazing. If you want to see it, it is on a wall in the student council room of Glasshouse College. Alex and Tom both came up with the idea for this amazing anticyber-bullying painting and believe me it is a professional looking piece of art. We also got T-shirts printed to visually show our students what they may be putting on the internet. The T-shirts were a good way of showing you need to be more careful with what you put on Facebook. The T-shirts were a really good idea and I am confident they got the message forward in a way that the students can understand. A Positive Experience with Chris Pritchard, Ruskin Mill Trust Marketing and Communications I travelled to Glasshouse College on the Thursday of Anti-Cyber-Bullying Week to deliver some workshops with the students and a presentation to staff about the positive experiences of social media - and how it can be used to improve communications, fundraising and marketing initiatives. Students and staff at Glasshouse have really begun to engage with the Trust’s Facebook and Twitter accounts, which are updated hourly with the latest news, views, photos, achievements and discussion from all Ruskin Mill Trust provision. If you haven’t ‘liked’ our Facebook page, or followed our Twitter account, then why not give it a go. Almost 1000 people are following us - join them and stay connected. /RuskinMill @RuskinMill Welding a Future at Ruskin Mill College TJ with Barry in the link-box at Gables Farm Iron Age Forge is one of the core subjects of the Practical Skills Therapeutic Education method at Ruskin Mill Trust provision. Working a forge, hammering red hot metal on an anvil and producing useful and beautiful items is a challenging, strengthening and fulfilling activity for many. In this article we meet TJ Hobbs, 3rdyear, who has embraced the ancient technology and moved on to the modern technology of welding in the college’s Farm Machinery Maintenance workshop. Under the guidance of tutors Barry Boyt and Garrick Nelson, TJ, as he likes to be called, is now finishing his NVQ Level 2 in Engineering Fabrication and Sheet Metal Welding, assessed by Stroud College, and has recently moved into his own flat. TJ was happy to admit that before coming to Ruskin Mill College he was “on the verge of getting into serious trouble”. Diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome, dyslexia, OCD tendencies, dysgraphia, ADHD at the age of 9 and statemented with dyslexia and Asperger’s Syndrome, TJ’s options were running out, his mum was at the end of her tether, and so were the social services. TJ came for a three-day assessment at Ruskin Mill College and the funding for his placement quickly followed. It took TJ a bit of time settling in and, as Barry reports, “in his first term, he was very anxious, rude, stroppy and arrogant. We came to loggerheads over a small matter, but, to his credit, he came back and apologised and from there on, he got on with it. A plaque on the workshop door now says TJ Hobbs: Apprentice and Garrick and myself are very proud of him.” TJ has done many courses on his personalised timetable over the last three years, especially in the outdoor workshops and on the farm. “I love working outside doing practical manual work on the land as well as woodwork and metal work.” TJ admits, “forming a relationship with the tutors was more important than with the students.” He was offered an apprenticeship in welding before arriving at Ruskin Mill College, but the funding fell through and he has since thrived in the college environment, whilst gaining qualifications in welding and chainsaw use at local colleges. TJ grinding the hay-bob Ruskin Mill College Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 TJ showing students his skills at welding Whilst working with Barry and Garrick, TJ has undertaken a range of college-related tasks. “I’ve repaired the hay-bob, which would’ve cost £400 to replace, made a link-box, two trailers, a tool rack, charcoal burners, repaired a tractor, helped with iron work, repaired the canoe trailer for Plas Dwbl and all the other little things that go unaccounted for.” On the subject of Health and Safety, TJ has a straight answer: “I see health and safety as just common sense,” and on helping other students: “If you can’t show somebody how to do the job, you can’t do it yourself.” TJ and his own metal fabricating project up with the idea for the NVQ Level 1. But when we saw what he was capable of, we upped it to a Level 2. Garrick and I are both over the moon. We’ve put a lot of pressure on this young man’s shoulders, because to do this, and pass an NVQ2, is a first. We can show the rest of Ruskin Mill and the world that even if you’ve got special needs with Asperger’s or whatever, you can do it.” With funding for his placement running out, TJ knows that getting a job might not be easy, as finding work experience in local companies has been unsuccessful for health, safety and bureaucratic reasons. Whilst the college continue to look for work experience, TJ has now moved into his own flat with his girlfriend and is managing money, bills, getting up in the morning and working on a relationship, with some support. As usual, Barry has the last word on TJ’s achievements: “The first time I met him, he was an angry misplaced young man who had a lot of grudges with the system. He progressed and came TJ and Barry with the repaired hay-bob 21 22 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Hayley Jennings from the Stop Smoking Service and Matthew, a former student. Through Glass Darkly with Gail Hickman Head of Glasshouse Student Council Students from the Glasshouse College in association with the Dudley Stop Smoking Service, have unveiled a pair of glass lungs in the magnificent Ruskin Glass Centre to help raise awareness of the dangers of smoking to young people. The project started in the summer of 2011 when a flyer landed on my desk. The flyer was about an arts based project to keep young people from smoking. The message had to be through the medium of arts. The medium of arts means the message had to be put a cross by using a piece of art work. We were successful in the application and were awarded £1,950 to produce the project. The first part of the project was to do the research. A group of students and staff went to the Huntarian Museum in London were lots of body parts are preserved from years ago. They also took the opportunity to go to the Natural History Museum to see the human anatomy displays. Since our speciality is glassmaking, we formed an idea to make a pair of glass lungs. Richard Field, Alex Timbrell and Tom Southall took on the task of making the moulds in which the glass lungs could be blown. At first they needed to make a clay sculpture of the lungs so the negative plaster mould could be produced. After the moulds had been produced, Roger Holloway blew the first lungs into the moulds.These were practice lungs to see how the moulds would work with the lungs. The coloured lungs were blown successfully and were brilliant. Our blacksmithing tutor Gaz Hodgetts made the spine and ribs out of stainless steel and the lungs were placed inside. Gaz had help from James Farrington Hughes who is a student at Glasshouse College. The graphic designing was done by the man, the myth and the legend, Chris Day, and student Tom Pritchard. They did the artwork to bring the whole thing together. We are not the only who have done a Kick Ash project in Dudley. There is a website where all the projects can be seen and the link is: www.dudleykickash.com. A big thank you to Alex Timbrell, Tom Southall, Richard Field, Roger Holloway, Keith Brocklehurst, Gaz Hodgetts, Tom Pritchard, James Farrington Hughes, Daniel Jones, Chris Day and Matthew Ginda. Without all these people the project would not have been possible to complete. Glasshouse College 23 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 A BIG thankyou to Dudley Kick Ash who funded £1950 for this unique project This has been a fantastic project for all involved. The lungs, which we unveiled on No Smoking day, are now on display in the Ruskin Glass Centre, together with a montage of photographs showing all the hard work that went into making them. I am very proud of everyone who contributed to this initiative. It is a real mix of student vision and staff expertise. True Colours with Keith Brocklehurst: Glass Manager, Tutor and IFG Organiser “It makes quite a stunning display, and reminds people that when they are smoking, inside they’ve got lungs that are living and breathing, not glass ones. On the final display there will be a pink lung for the healthy lung and then a smoky-coloured one for the lung that’s damaged by smoking. Hopefully this will encourage the students to stop smoking.” Thinking Twice with Chris, third-year student Student Tom carefully making the clay molds “I used to think that if somebody chose to smoke then that’s fine – let them get on with it. But certainly this project has made more aware, it’s made me sit back and think maybe we actually do need to encourage people to take a different way or dealing with their emotions and different routes of dealing with the issues why they have taken up smoking. There are hundreds of alternative therapies out there – many of them that deal with the stresses that you feel smoking helps you deal with. People that chose to smoke are killing themselves essentially. This project has made us think twice about the habits we take part in.” 24 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 FUNDRAISING Painting by DavidWilson, 3rd-yr Ruskin Mill College on his fundraising marathon run. See page 64. Why do we Fundraise? with Janine Christley Ruskin Mill Trust Director of Fundraising Run of the Mill is full of wonderful stories about student achievements and successes and demonstrates the huge variety of opportunities young people have to develop their particular passion or skill. This diversity for experience is carefully planned to maximise creativity, independence and self esteem, however as with many other charities, it is getting harder to maintain as government funding gets tighter. Consequently we have to fundraise to develop and maintain our centres, many of which are heritage buildings, farms and gardens and woodlands, or money to buy new tools and equipment for the workshops. Our farmers would love to build dairies for cheesemaking or new animal shelters, tutors are keen to replace their tarpaulins or sheds for purpose-built fully equipped workshops, and students love taking part in drama productions, exhibitions and outings. This is why we are enormously grateful to all our supporters, whether compassionate trusts and foundations, wonderful individuals or corporate friends. These stories about exhibitions, projects, buildings and theatre productions wouldn’t have been possible without this help. Thank you. Together we are changing lives. Become a Friend Become one of our Friends and work with us to help young people re-imagine their future. There are many ways to help and we’d love to keep you up to date with our activities. Our Twitter (@RuskinMill) and Facebook accounts are (www.facebook.com/RuskinMill) regularly updated, and almost 1000 friends, parents and supporters are following us on Twitter. You can also visit our website (www.rmt.org.uk/donate) or use the QR code below. For further information, please contact Janine Christley, Director of Fundraising on 01453 837617 or janine.christley@rmt.org. We look forward to hearing from you. Three Peaks Challenge On August 25th 2012, the Executive MBA Team at Bath University will take part in a Three Peaks Challenge; climbing Ben Nevis, Scafell Pike and Snowdon, all within 24 hours! Team member Nathan said: “As MBA students we often take education for granted and feel that everyone deserves access to learning. That’s why we have choose Ruskin Mill as our charity for this challenge.” We would like to say a massive thank you in advance to Wayne, Nathan, Nathan, Charlie, Tori, Camilla, Steve and Michael who aim to raise at least £2,500 for Ruskin Mill Trust. If you wish to donate, or learn more about the team, please visit: www. justgiving.com/bathmba3peaks. Good luck team! Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 A Life-changing Experience In January 2008, I travelled to Goa in India to visit a charitable trust called El Shaddai Child Rescue. It was the trip of a lifetime, and the memories are still really vivid and unforgettable. Every year my school chooses two students to travel out to India and I was chosen in Year 9 at the age of 14. I was really excited when I found out. the day, and they also have six houses for boys and girls. I found it incredible that every child that I saw or met in Goa had a smile on their face. They were always smiling. And it made me think of how we need Play Stations and X-Boxes to make us happy, but they need nothing because they have nothing. All they had was a tattered football to kick around. Their smiles will stay with me forever. You have to have a lot of emotions when you go to a place like Goa – when you arrive, you have to keep a strong mind By Bekki, a third-year student. and act appropriately in dire circumstances. You see the slums and you think about how little they all have – they haven’t even got the simplest and cheapest of things – like ChildRescue is a registered, non-prot charity under the name paper clips. They wash their clothes on a big stone. El Shaddai Charitable Trust, with a mission for ensuring equal opportunities for all children, regardless of race, caste, religion, I travelled with one other student and two members of staff, community, ability or economic status. Visit www.childrescue.net. and our flight from Gatwick to Dolum was 9 hours long. It was my first long-haul flight. When we arrived, it was like walking into a heater – it was that hot! My strongest memory of the trip was walking into the slums for the very first time. There’s a picture that shows my emotions. I felt guilty. I felt guilt and sadness, because there wasn’t anything that I could do to physically help them and give them the stuff they need. It was really upsetting. It shows that when you give to a charity, every penny counts. The experience has changed me. It changed my outlook on everything. It has made me environmentally conscious and caring about where I live. If somebody drops litter I tell them to pick it up. I have also become involved with fund-raising for Red Nose Day. The El Shaddai Trust has the Little Acorns day shelter which provides a safe haven during The sadness on Bekki’s face is truly palpable. 25 26 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Diversity and Development at Plas Dwbl Farm College Ruskin Mill Trust’s newest provision is unique in many ways but two of the most interesting aspects of Plas Dwbl Farm College are its location – in Wales and in a National Park setting. With almost one academic year under its belt the small provision is flourishing and has begun to grow strong links with the local community. One of these links is with the National Parks itself, through regular visits from their Park Rangers and Conservation Officer. After 33 years of biodynamic management, the fields of the hill country farm at Plas Dwbl are full of diversity and colour and at this time of year the hay meadows are awash with flowers, including eyebright, yellow rattle and bee orchids. The County Botanist for Pembrokeshire first started visiting Plas Dwbl in 1985 and has been monitoring the land on and off for the past 27 years. Plas Dwbl has at least three rare plants – Vicia orobus, Alchemilla glabra and the Greater Butterfly-orchid – and is the only Pembrokeshire location where these are still growing in fields. These varieties would once have been widespread in enclosed upland pastures around the Preseli Mountains and have persisted at Plas Dwbl because of the low input farming methods of bio-dynamics practised over the years. With the development of a Ruskin Mill Trust provision at Plas Dwbl, care has been taken from the outset to acknowledge the ecology of the locality and to ensure that our activities will work to enhance and improve the bio-diversity of the farm. The Pembrokeshire Coast National Park Conservation Officer is a regular visitor and has already gifted two barn owl boxes to Plas Dwbl Farm College, which students have helped to locate in a tree and a derelict barn. June is the month when the Marsh Fritillary Butterfly usually emerges and Plas Dwbl has plentiful supplies of their main food plant, the Devil’s bit scabious, Succisa pratensis. Conservation Officer for the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park Authority, Julie Garlick, examines the fields at Plas Dwbl (right) for signs of the emergence of this rare butterfly. As a backdrop to education, Plas Dwbl Farm College is a rich canvas for learning about the inter-connectedness of all living things and the importance of differences and diversity. With a public footpath running the length of the farm, staff and students are also very aware of their connection to the local community. National Park Ranger, Richard Vaughan, has begun regular work experience days with students at Plas Dwbl and they have started by taking on the task of maintaining the public footpath for walkers in the area, beginning with the clearing of drains beside the footpath in spring. Water is never in short supply in Wales but managing water brings many challenges on a farm located at the base of the Preseli hills. With the help of a generous grant from The Peoples’ Postcode Lottery, staff and students have now installed a wind/ solar pump which has been connected to an existing well so that well water can be utilised in horticulture and to all the troughs on the farm, thus reducing the farm’s reliance on mains water. After weeks of preparation the day finally arrived when the unit could be assembled, hoisted into position and connected to the water, as the pictures on the next page illustrate. While work continues on the farm, in horticulture, the forge, the woodlands and the kitchen, the next piece of important infrastructure for the college are composting toilets! The team at Plas Dwbl Farm College have chosen a waterless system surrounded by willow called The Tree Bog for their new composting toilets. We are extremely grateful for funds from two sources – The Little Green Grant in Pembrokeshire and Awards for All, a Lottery grants scheme for Wales. Student, Andrew andWoodland Tutor, Rhys Townsend, use their treeclimbing skills to hoist one of the barn owl boxes into position. As Plas Dwbl Farm College draws close to the end of its first year of operation, there is time to reflect on the incredible Plas Dwbl Farm College & Ruskin Mill College Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 RichardVaughan, Park Ranger, oversees two students, Matthew and Ben, clearing the drains: Right: Installing the wind/solar pump. efforts made by staff, students and volunteers to work this unique piece of land in sometimes challenging weather conditions and to grow all aspects of a community for learning. That learning is often just as much about how to live together with respect and dignity as it is to work with nature in all her seasons and Plas Dwbl Farm College is fast becoming another of those beacons for human development in the Ruskin Mill Trust spectrum. Making Sense of Water Ebb and Flow create an exciting garden, with the help of Ruskin Mill College There was a very special attraction at this year’s Malvern Spring Gardening Show in May. Ebb & Flow Ltd, with the help of a small team of local craftspeople and producers including Gables Farm, presented ‘Making Sense of Water’, an interactive play and handson experimentation garden aimed at educating Primary School children into the fascinating characteristics of water and its role in the natural environment. Designed with sustainability, practicality and fun in mind, the garden featured hand-pumped Flowform features and a water course sand table, a rocking Flowform boat, living walls planted with herbs, fruit and vegetables and a green roofed sheltered area for water experiments. Whilst the Ovella cascade, Emerson, Sondril and Rocker Flowforms on show were all produced by Duncan Leeson and students in the casting workshop at Ruskin Mill, all of the herbs, fruit and vegetables in the living walls, were grown and planted into the walls by Tim Rahmsdorf and students at Gables Farm. Many of the visitors, who filled the garden on most of the show days, told us how much they enjoyed the interactive nature of the garden and how inspired they were by the various elements in the garden, especially the Flowform cascade and living walls. Our thanks go to all of the staff and students at Ruskin Mill College who helped bring this garden to life. Since the show, the entire garden has been relocated to Northern Ireland where it has become part of a large sensory garden project associated with a special needs school. For more information contact Simon Charter and Warren Abis Tel/Fax 01453 836060. www.ebbandowltd.co.uk 27 28 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Tractors on the Farm H M C H C T I H O T A N L Q S A Y M N X C A S A Z U I C F F B M Z L C H E J C M N N A O O W Q D F B A B L B R K M T A P Q K L A S I A J M S A L T E S W L I R E N L Y V O R P L B C K R Y M B H L H A R Y S E N I L X X E A A H T H H D T C R L by James, 2nd-year L L V R C R I L W S L R R E U U U S S K R T A Z D J A U S A B B C G B O C E P F V W S I R C O V O O W H H M F X B H L D M O F L X I Y C S W B A T A Y H O W D J N R K M W O L E G H O U K N L G J Y A R D E P E Z Back Box Hydraulics Ball Hitch Nato Hitch Bull Scraper Cale Crush Silage Cow Straw Bale Healthy Yard Chain Harrowing Farmers Gold My Little Beauty by Mark Lloyd Freeman College Pandora’s life was short but very adventurous. Her father’s name was Sundance and mother Teeny, they all lived happily in the barn which led out onto the croft. Pandora loved to skip and jump over the hay bales with her sister Ruby and half brother and sister Lone Star and Snowdrop. She was very mischievous and a great escapist and could squeeze through the smallest gap in the gate and we were always having to find her and put her back. Pandora was the first one to follow her mother out into the croft and used to duck under the fence into the herb garden to nibble on the parsley. Her mother would frantically try to call her back because she knew that the herb garden was forbidden to goats but Pandora took no notice. We would try to catch her but she was too fast so it was left to Fleet the sheepdog to corner her so that we could catch her and she would be ‘gaffered’ – this means ‘bossed’ up here on the farm – and she would be put in the rabbit hutch as punishment to try to train her not to go in the herb garden. All the other kids had learnt their lesson but not Pandora, as soon as she was let out she would be back in nibbling the parsley and sage, she was indomitable, it was just too tempting and she was just too naughty. She would call to her sister to come and join her but Ruby was sensible and stayed with her mother. I called her ‘my little beauty’ because she was so cute, she would come inside and sit on the sofa nibbling my fingers and jump all over me to play. (see photo). I had great plans for her to come with me to visit schools to show the children farm animals and I had bought her a little collar and lead and she would quite happily walk along side me. In the end it was her mischievous little spirit that was her downfall as she broke her neck whilst trying to escape thru the gate. It was so sad but almost inevitable that her life would be short. I miss her terribly, we all do, she was unique, so mischievous but so cute. I will never forget her. Although she was only tiny and not here for long, she will leave a big hole in the planet and in my heart. 29 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Poets Corner Love and Care Friendship Poem Friends are more important than ever You should get along with them Introduce each other in school and college It’s alright if they are friendly or not When you two met each other You love deeply in your heart, and you are in love And caring for each other, that is a strong Bonding love But what really maers is in your heart Be yourself like a good book, one of a kind, If you do care and feel in love with this person Even a great character you really are. Tell that person how you feel about them The love in there hearts, will always be with them Someone you believe as a friend of caring, They are happy together and birds sing for their love. Trustworthy and even spend me together Somemes they nd it hard on each other, but that’s Friends and Family are happy for them Part of us all! The light of God shines for their love The happy man is proud of his beauful owered woman Even we live in dierent places from our homes And le when we nished school and college. The spirit of love is in the air as we celebrate This happy day. But you’ll always remember them in your true heart And have happy memories you missed of all. Rhys Noble, 1st-year Freeman College As they say, friends always been there For one another, Always!! Rhys Noble, 1st-year Freeman College The Feel of the Forge The feel of the dusness and the sckiness in the dark The sound of the bellows to make the re sparkling and bright The smell of the crackling ames burning away swily The joy for the Forge to work easily The joy for the re to keep you warm The love for the work The love for the Forge Tom Fenning, 2nd-year Ruskin Mill College 30 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Jessop’s Bear Above:The Jessop’s Bear cast in pewter at Freeman College and Alex and Gabriel bearing the gift to happy parents. A Pewter-ful Gift For Poorly Babies In December, students from Freeman College in Sheffield completed the final stage of the Jessop Bear Christmas Decoration Project. Following an approach by Robert Coombs Neonatal Consultant at Jessops Hospital earlier in the year, Jewellery Tutor Gill Salmon has been working with a small group of students to design a festive decoration as a gift for the very poorly babies in the high dependency unit (SCBU) at the Jessop Wing of the Royal Hallamshire Hospital, Sheffield. Students came up with a number of designs and two students, Laura Green (Jessop Bear Project co-ordinator) and Gabriel Kinneavy (responsible for one of the designs) presented a selection of designs to the Jessops team. Laura had many questions and advice to offer during the presentation. A unique design was chosen that combined a collaborative piece and the detailing from Gabriels design. The Jessop Wing opened in 2001 and is a purpose built maternity unit where approximately 7,000 babies are born every year. The caring staff go beyond the call of duty to provide specialist care for babies born prematurely or who become unwell. commission with an agreed price by the hospital of £5 per decoration. Students Gabriel Kinneavy and Alex Chester presented the completed boxed decorations to Dr Robert Coombs and his staff.This has been a really worthwhile project, because students have participated in a real time commercial project that addresses the criteria of new enterprise initiatives in the curriculum, through which they have contributed to their wider local community. Laura Green, 3rd-year I had a timetable change to Jewellery with Gill Salmon and she told me about the project for Sheffield Teaching Hospital. I thought that it was a good idea. I didn’t do a lot of the design side but I did work in the budgeting and costing and visited the hospital to meet the consultant and present the information including the possible designs. He chose the design. I also did some market research to see which was the best idea – a spoon, a tree hanging or a bracelet – and the tree design won. Manufacture of fifty decorations commenced immediately Danny then produced the gift with students. I had to check by students on work experience in the college’s pewter the image we used to make sure that it wasn’t covered by workshop with tutor, Danny Rowen.This was a commercial copyright. The packaging had to be cost-effective as we Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 31 had a budget of just £5 for each item and we had to consider health & safety issues to make sure that it had no sharp edges. It was good to be involved in the project. We went around the ward and some of the babies were tiny. We were told that around 50% of the babies survive. Jessops Bear – Gabriel, final year student I got involved in the project in September 2011 with Alex and Laura. It was an offer I simply couldn’t refuse. I initially drew a bear and a young cub with santa hats. This design was picked, and molds were made from the illustrations with special clay and sculpted by other students. The molds were then cast in pewter and presented to the new born babies at Christmas time. The babies were all born a little bit early, prematurely, so we made these as a gift to put in their first ever stockings. It’s a wonderful idea, and a really generous project to be part of. I hope the babies cherish our gifts for years to come and not try to swallow them! I’m in my final year now and I’m quite excited about the future. I want to be an actor – I already played Daniel in Sterling Silver last year and next year I’m studying a oneyear course at Norton College, three days a week. I’m looking forward to broadening my horizons. I will miss Freeman College - it makes you mature enough to put your past behind you. Alex and Gabriel with Dr Robert Coombs. Student Work on Jessop’s Bear Commended by Worshipful Company The Jessop’s Bear project was an exact match for an Open Competition, one amongst a number of competitions constituting Pewter Live 2012, organized by the Worshipful Company of Pewterers, in Pewterers Hall, London. The brief for the competition was; design a pewter memento or souvenir for sale through the gift shop of an established institution, retail price range £20 - £100. Freeman College student work towards the design and production of the pewter Jessop’s Bear was submitted to the Pewter Live 2012 competition and was selected as a ‘Finalist’. All ‘Finalists’, were included in the catalogue and invited to attend an exhibition of works in London on Thursday 14 June. Finalists at the Pewter Live Open Competition with Freeman College students. The core group of students involved in the project, and staff, Jewellery Tutor, Gill Salmon, Pewter Tutor, Danny Rowen and Carole Baugh attended the event. The participating students were; Laura Green, project coordinator, Gabriel Kinneavy, designer, Stevie Watson and Alex Chester, production. There was a prestigious judging panel, chaired by Sebastian Conran. We were delighted to receive the position of ‘Commended’ in our category, which was populated by professional designers. Freeman College student work is currently on exhibition at Pewterers’ Hall and in the beautiful and professional catalogue. We brought a certificate for Freeman College back to Sheffield and have just received individual certificates for the 4 participating students and Jessop Hospital. We also hope to receive a copy of the official photograph of all the winners; but here is one as all the winners gathered. 32 Freeman College Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Freeman College Scouter Honoured in 2012 St George’s Day Awards list On the 26th April 2012 Freeman College Weaving tutor, Stuart Groom, who has been involved with Scouting in the UK and further afield for many years, was recognised for his outstanding contribution to scouting in Derbyshire and the UK with the award of the Silver Acorn. The Silver Acorn is only awarded after 25 years of ongoing distinguished service to scouting. Stuart received his award at a special St George’s Day celebration within Derbyshire where both National and local awards were made. This was followed on Sunday 29th with a visit to Windsor Castle for the National St George’s Day parade where this year the salute was taken by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. These were two days he says he will remember for many years to come. Stuart, left, receiving his Silver Acorn award Stuart has been involved in Scouting since moving to Derbyshire from the West Midlands and became a Scout Leader and has built the troop up from 12 young people to over 40. In 2000 he was selected to lead the Derbyshire contingent of 36 scouts and three leaders to the World Scout Jamboree in Thailand attended by 36,000 scouts and guides from all over the world. Stuart then took his group onto Soeul in South Korea where they stayed on home hospitality with Korean Scouting families for a further week before flying home. In 2007 he managed the International Trading Centre at the 21 st World Scouting Jamboree at Hylands Park, an event attended by 40,000 scouts and guides from every country in the world and was able to sell goods for International scout groups which helped to fund their trip to the UK raising £36,000 in just ten days. Mounted Police at Freeman College! Police horses George and Kingston visited Freeman College in March this year - with their police officers, PCs Melissa Gill and Alex. They came right into the courtyard of Sterling Works where students and staff were thrilled to see them and made a big fuss of them. George and Kingston are 16 hands in height and kept very good order during the college morning break! As Mark Barratt, Freeman College’s support & attendance manager said “That was the most stable morning break we have ever had”. The Mounted Section of South Yorkshire Police are based at stables at Ring Farm near Barnsley. They have two sergeants, 14 constables and 15 horses. Their duties include patrolling town centres, controlling crowds at football matches as well as ceremonial duties. The police horses are chestnut and grey Hunters with good natures. Cathy Nutt, Freeman College’s work experience co-ordinator, explained to Run of the Mill “We used to have a work experience placement for a Freeman College student with the mounted police - cleaning out the stables and looking after the horses. The mounted police remembered us and, when they were in Sheffield, they just popped in to college to visit us and have a cup of tea (the police officers had a cup of tea, not the horses). We are now planning to take a group of students to visit the police stables and the mounted police have promised to come into college again next term. David Taylor Admin & Resources Manager Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 33 The Trust Colleges Play Their Part Students and staff from Ruskin, Glasshouse and Freeman Colleges raised over £600 for Sports Relief and had great fun doing so. At Ruskin Mill (below) fancy dress took centre stage as participants ran through the valley, uphill through the woods to the top of Gables Farm. At Glasshouse College (above left), the fun run strengthened local relationships with the police and the rugby club who were both involved. Ollie Cheney, Principal reported “ The Community Police Officers marshalled the route to ensure there were no accidents involving people falling in the canal and the college narrowboat was on hand to pick up any one who was getting tired.” At Freeman College, students and staff wore sports gear for the princely sum of 50p each, had competitions, and organised a penalty shootout at Tintagel House and a BBQ. Alison Barber, Student Journey Manager, reported that “dress ranged from football shirts to skiing goggles” and the “Best Outfit trophy was awarded to Lewis Hides who wore his sports kit all day.” Well done everyone, you have made a difference!. 34 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 RAG-RUGS & NIPPERS’ SLIPPERS Making a Rag-Rug with Bekki, a third-year student I really enjoy rug making – it’s a very calm and therapeutic craft. To make the rugs we recycle scraps of velvet, wool and cloth – so we are essentially making a rag-rug. Its good to recycle the odd leftover bits to make sure nothing is wasted. The wool that we are using for the rag-rugs is Berber wool from Turkey. To make the rug we use a speed shuttle. A speed shuttle is a very easy tool to use and it is a hooking tool. It has been around for one hundred years. We hook the scraps of material into the hessian backing. Hessian is the grey tweed backing material. Because we do a lot of different projects with Margaret, such as rug work, felting, slippers, sewing and bags, it takes quite a while to complete a rug – Margaret reckons about two years intermittently – about sixty hours of reflective work. Rag rugs became popular about eighty years ago, as farmers made them out of scraps for necessity and to keep them warm. Margaret has told us that they used to sell for 2/6 (12.5p) at a local mill and they now sell for over one thousand pounds! I’m not going to sell mine - I’m going to keep hold of it. It has a tree, butterflies, a bumblebee and a sunflower. I love the summer so I wanted something to remind me of the brightness and joy of summer. Bekki with her Rag-Rug Ruskin Mill College 35 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Nippers’ Slippers with Verity, a third-year student Wonderful Students with Margaret Docherty, tutor & artist At the moment I’m making felt slippers for young children and babies. The slippers are all the colours of the rainbow – bright and colourful for the young kids, and it takes me around thirty minutes to an hour to make one pair of slippers. I have to make the slipper really small – I love how tiny little babies’ feet are compared to ours! Bek and Verity are great students. Verity especially always comes into work early and often stays later to complete a project. In textiles, students make all of the decisions and I try to give them as much variety as possible. They are very calm in my workshops, they find the craftwork very relaxing. I’ve also found that students surprise themselves at how they can use the skills learnt in my workshops back at home. Like Verity said, all you need is a kitchen table, some soap and the materials. For example, a former student Tom Best has his own speed shuttle, and his work is displayed in a family gallery. I wish both Bekki and Verity the greatest of success in the future and can’t wait to see the great work they produce in their lives after Ruskin Mill. To make the slippers all you really need is a table top, soapy water, fibres, a rolling pin and of course and most importantly – the felting techniques.You could even do it at home, which is what I plan to do when I leave Ruskin Mill. I’ve made about fourteen pairs of slippers so far and I’ve improved with every attempt. For example, some of the earlier ones are a bit thin, so I had to work on that. I’m going to embellish them on the top and sell them for £12 a pair. Hopefully in a couple of year if I keep making my own products, I will have my very own market stall in Stroud maybe. I love the whole process, from the design, the making and the selling. I’m in my final year at Ruskin Mill College and I feel quite anxious about leaving – I have had such a good time here, I’ve absolutely loved it. If I could stay here I would, but I also feel that the college has given me skills to move on. I’ve done a lot of work experience with Crazy K9 working with dogs, so I’d like to have a job like that! Verity with her slippers for nippers 36 37 Freeman College Student Work for Precious Cargo Rian Hallatt 2nd-year Sculptural Vessel, coiled terracotta “I wanted to make a large piece with pottery tutor Amanda Packham. We knew it had to be made in two sections out of clay using the coil method. I smoothed it with metal kidney tools.The base was made using the same method and then the piece was joined and red. I had already agreed to do some copperwork with George so I was able to include some copper strips. This project took a long time but I am happy with the result and it looks good in the exhibition.” Adam Booth 1st-year Wet Felted Basket Jonathan Pringle, Felting tutor, on Adam’s project: “I had a brochure with all the items we handled at Weston Park Museum. Adam and I looked through the brochure and there was a Native American woven basket which he liked. It was a real challenge for Adam to make his basket, as it required a lot of handeye coordination and manipulation. It has a wet-felted body and a needle-felted design, which required a lot of concentration and Adam did really well.” Adam:“It took me ve weeks to make and I chose the colours.” Saskia Khan 2nd-year Copper Bowl “To make the bowl with tutor, George Evans, I pierced a circle on a copper sheet and hand-raised it to make the shape. I then pierced out the buttery from copper and soldered it onto my bowl. I chased the pattern with a chasing tool and it took me a term to make it. I showed it to the Lord Mayor and she thought it was really good, so my bowl is being shown at Weston Park Museum. I am very pleased with it and I went to the opening event at the museum.” Continued overleaf 38 Sylvia Dunkley, Lord Mayor of Sheffield “I think that the students should be really proud of what they have achieved in producing items for the Precious Cargo exhibition. They obviously enjoyed looking at the cultural section ofWeston Park Museum and were inspired by what they saw.This exhibition is a wonderful showcase of traditional crafts that the students at Freeman College have been learning. I hope that people will come and see this work as it is worth the visit.” Richard Bartholomew 1st-year Felted Bowl “Jonathan gave me the idea to make a felt bowl. I made it by doing wetfelting and he helped me choose the colours. To make the bowl, I used a circle of plastic and moulded it up into a bowl. The plastic was then covered in layered wool and felted with soap and water. I then turned it over and layered the other side with wet felt, shrunk the whole piece by rolling it and formed the bowl by using my hands. When dry, the felt will keep the bowl’s shape and I am very happy with my nished work.” Lizzie Johnston 1st-year Engraved Terracotta Head “I took my design from the patterns on the work I saw at the Weston Park Precious Cargo handling session and worked with tutor Amanda Packham. I made the piece in terracotta in two parts and stuffed the head with newspaper to support it.” Amanda says “Lizzie works with clay very nely and with dexterity in ngertip detail. She gained more condence in creating features using tools as the project developed and now wants to move onto working with the challenges of functional hand built pieces.” Thomas Roland 3rd-year Weave Form#2. Painted, cast plaster, copper leaf gilt “I took the design from a weaving pattern following my visit to Weston Park Museum. I made a test piece in clay and then made the shapes of incised lines inside the clay. I poured plaster into the clay mould, let it dry and got rid of the clay, which gave me the textured pattern. I sealed it with a coat of gesso (a mixture of whiting and rabbit skin glue), onto which I put a layer of clay paint and then gilded it with copper leaf. Finally, I lacquered it so that it would not tarnish. It was really good to see it nished and lit up in its case at the exhibition.” Clare Starkie, Senior Curator of Decorative Art at the Weston Park Museum 39 “From the Museum’s point of view, we tend to look at objects from how pieces are decorated and from where they come. Within our collection, what is missing is the more factual information on how things were made and because many of the artefacts were collected a long time ago and often from the other side of the world, the knowledge of how the craftsmen made these items has been lost. Working with the students from Freeman College, who have hands-on experience of making similar objects, gives us a fresh perspective on the craftsmanship involved. The students came and handled our objects very well and then went away to design and create objects of their own and this takes a real skill and a craftsman’s eye to achieve this. It also goes to show that it doesn’t matter where you come from, it’s about sharing knowledge and learning from other people to ensure the continuation of craftsmanship across the ages.” Ben Booth 2nd-year Handbag Toggle (above) “I made a handbag toggle out of copper with Victoria, the jewellery tutor, as part of my BTEC Accessory project. I got the idea from a copy ofVogue magazine, in which handbags toggles seemed very popular. All the models in the magazine had a pug dog with them, so I thought I would photo-etch a picture of a pug onto my toggle. I used a piercing saw to cut out two round shapes out of copper and then hammered a long piece into a ring. I then soldered the two pug pieces onto the ring and spent a long time ling and sanding it into its nal shape. I then drilled two holes into the ring to attach the piece of fabric, sand-casted it using melted pewter for the bone shape and soldered the two holders onto the back of the bone. It took me a long time to make and was a very difcult project, but I’m very happy how it turned out. I nally had it silver-plated by a company in Shefeld.” Liam Rogers 3rd-year Wolf (above right, with brass Zebu, circa 1930s, Nigeria from theWorld Cultures collection) “At the handling session, I saw a brass snake and was drawn to that as I have an interest in animals. I saw that it was in 3-D and wanted the challenge to make an object like that as I have not really made anything in 3-D. After some research, I decided to make a wolf. I found it incredibly hard to make a model of the wolf, so Nick helped me with this, which took about six sessions to do. It’s made out of wood and milliput (specialist epoxy putty), which I then painted and gilded with yellow-gold leaf. I’m very proud of this and when I saw it lit up in the exhibition, it looked very good.” Continued overleaf 40 Naomi Gargett 3rd-year Bracelet, Necklace and Broach “I came up with the idea because I was thinking about water. I saw some pieces which also gave me the idea and worked with tutors Andy West, Jill Salmon,Victoria Kershaw and Jonathan Pringle. The design on the front was made out of acrylic and paint and I made the metal to hold the acrylic. It was a difcult project but I felt very happy with it.” James White 3rd-year Scoop “We had all been to Weston Park Museum, handling items, and selected an item on which to base our projects. I chose a scoop and planned it out with Nick Palmer, the gilding tutor.The bowl of the scoop was made around the shape of a balloon with layers of papier-mâché. The handle was made out of wood, glued to the bowl and then covered with papier-mâché itself. I then covered it with a base coat of clay, called bole, then a layer of size (bone glue) and gilded it. It was decorated with a lime paste in the style of the original design and I am very pleased with it.” Hope Stewart-Fincher 1st-year Ball Pendant “I started thinking of bells for my design but then decided to make it into a conker. I made prototypes out of copper withVictoria but the nished design was in silver. I cut two pieces out and used a doming block to make them round. I used a punch to put the holes in and the smallest doming block pen to make the spikes.The chain was made of jump rings soldered together. It was pretty complex for my rst piece of jewellery so I am very pleased with it and it looks great in the display.” Freeman College Student Work for Precious Cargo 41 Bag made with sisal yarn on a peg loom CommunityWeaving with 1st-year and 3rd-year students: Lizzie Johnston, Fiona Doman, Saaim Hussain and support worker, Jess Macnair. Alice Evamy 1st-year Crank Totem-Pole Sculpture “I went to the Precious Cargo exhibition and was inspired there by a Canadian spoon with totems on the handle. I then produced the totem-pole based around it by carving into the clay and I tapered it as the spoon’s handle tapered.” Tutor, Amanda Packham says “Alice worked with energy and strength to carve the clay out into a totem pole. She became more decisive as she made decisions about pattern and form, creating a piece that grew with condence.” Joe Dixon 3rd-year Earrings “I made earrings as part of my BTEC in Jewellery Accessories. I did some research on the Internet and liked the idea of having pointy, dangly earrings. I also got some ideas from our visit to the museum. I made the earrings rstly out of clay in Pottery and then out of silver in Jewellery. I shaped the earring on a round anvil, made the patterns through photo-etching and nally polished them. It is brilliant to see them nished in an exhibition.” Continued overleaf 42 Freeman College Student Work for Precious Cargo Jack Price, 2nd-year Butterfly Necklace “I looked for ideas with my tutor and saw buttery pendants which got me planning. I started by shaping the wings using acrylic, made the centre bezel, worked on the design inside the wings and soldered it together. I then placed the wings on the bezel which was challenging. Then I designed the tail and antennas and nally set the gemstones, with Victoria’s help where we used a Madagascan Ruby in the centre and Tiger Eyes and Amethyst in the tail. I am happy with this work and look forward to giving to my mum when the exhibition nishes.” At the opening of the Precious Cargo Exhibition, from left: Graham Moore Museums Shefeld, Rhys Noble, Clare Starkie Museums Shefeld, Sylvia Dunkley, Lord Mayor of Shefeld, Ben Booth student, Carole Baugh, Exhibition Curator, James Lee, student, Adam Booth, student Helen Kippax, Principal Freeman College. Avi Denaro (left in picture), 1st-year with Lee Gilbert, Baking Tutor, preparing food for the exhibition opening refreshments Avi has the last word. “I’ve been making cream scones in Baking, including focaccia, fruit apjacks, pancakes and a range of breads. I enjoyed baking, measuring the ingredients, mixing and tidying up. I used the mixing machine, which I nd fairly easy to use, and Lee gives me advice on which setting I should use, such as setting the timer in order to mix it for the right length of time. I use our industrial ovens, which also have a timer to let me know when to take things out. For the focaccia, I baked the bread for around twelve minutes, and the apjacks were baked for twenty minutes. I would like to do more baking, especially at home.” Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 A Fish For All Seasons Danny Rowen, Pewter tutor, explains the thinking behind the sculptural carp I’ve always had an idea to make a fish with the scales put together in pewter, copper and bronze. I designed it in my mind and started with a wire frame and built the head first and then scales from the bottom upwards. Each scale had to be hand-cut, shaped, polished and soldered separately. It was started about 18 months ago and I spent a couple of afternoons a week on it. I knew some students would be able to help in this project, so they were involved in both the design development and putting some of their ideas into the project. After I made this, I started my PSTE Human Development course and was asked to read Temple Grandin’s Thinking in Pictures. She is a social engineer, making things for animals and wanted their lives to be less stressful. She thinks out all her practical projects and designs in her head and I feel that I work this way too. She calls this ‘abstract thought’. I recognise this in some of the students who can work things out in pictures. Some tutors and support workers have also joined in with this project. We haven’t made decisions on what to do with the fish, a female fish called Sushi. I am very pleased with the way it has worked out and everything that could have been done has been done. I could imagine it being at the top of an indoor flowform or water feature. 43 44 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Never Throwing in the Towel Dry Spinning the Wool Both Ashley and Alicia agree that this is the most fun part of wool processing. They bunch the wool up inside a towel and take the towels out of the felting workshop on a lush green walkway. Both students have smiles on their faces – Alicia even lets out a little giggle as they begin to dry-spin the wool. Alicia says that it makes her feel “elated” as she spins the towel round and round and round like a windmill.They spin the towels for about five minutes, though I’m sure they could carry on for hours! It looked like a lot of fun! The cochineal beetles can be found on the prickly pear in Mexico. It is one of the most expensive natural dyes in the world, and also manifests as the E-number E120 which is present in lots of sweets, such as Skittles. (Taste the rainbow!) Alicia describes the cochineal beetles as ‘small’ and also thinks that they look like miniature woodlice. Only ten grams of this precious and expensive beetle are needed to dye Alicia’s scarf, because the dye is incredibly intense. Alicia, First-Year “In felt-making, I made a felt ball. You have to use water and soap to make the ball stick. I used red and blue because I like the colour red.You have to roll it with your hands. This helps shape the ball and makes it stick. I also made a scarf. I stuck the wool onto the blind curtain. I pressed down the scarf with the net curtain, and I used warm water and soap to make the wool stick. Then I rolled it. I dyed the scarf with cochineal beetles and it will make the scarf pink. I will dye the scarf red as well and will use Brazil wood.” Alicia’s designs for her scarf Prickly pear cacti: home to the cochineal beetle Glasshouse College Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 “I used a pestle and mortar and turned them into a fine powder,” says Alicia, describing the process of transforming the small purple beetles into a natural dye. She then put them in a pan and added a bucket of water before placing the wool (shorn from the sheep at Vale Head Farm) into the bucket and stirring it. A Rewarding Term with Paulina, Felt-making Tutor “Ashley has really come on this term. Anybody you ask will tell you that. Previously he was closed up, clammed up but this term he has really opened. He has learnt to look after himself. He too can now do his shoelaces up! His mum and dad were thrilled when they found out that he could now tie his own shoes.” “Both students have learnt a huge amount in a short space of time. Alicia has excelled all expectations because previously she would not come to the farm because she wasn’t a big fan of animals. Now she comes every day! She knows how to react when the chicken comes into the workshop, and she knows how to react when the dogs are sniffing her. She is no longer scared.” “When she arrived, she also found it difficult to talk, but now she has begun to find her own voice. She goes out of the workshop on errands by herself and she has learnt to make fresh Dutch coffee. The red scarf was a huge challenge as it required a lot of patience. She likes to rush, you see! “It’s wonderful, it’s truly wonderful.” Alicia proudly sporting her magnicent red and orange scarf Ashley, First-Year “I have made a felt ball. It was multicoloured. I used soap and water to make this.You have to roll the ball between your hands. I have also made some ankle weights. These will be used in eurythmy. I had to use a net curtain to make this. I am now making a mobile phone cover. This is going to be rainbow coloured.” And also, it’s the little things that we can all do that our students often struggle with – such as tying your own shoelaces or hanging up your apron after a mornings work! Alicia can now tie her own shoelaces and hang up her apron. Before she couldn’t make any choices, but now she can, after only one term at Glasshouse. It’s wonderful, it’s truly wonderful.” 45 46 LANTERN FESTIVAL Celebrating Midwinter at Ruskin Mill College Festivals at Ruskin Mill College Throughout the year Ruskin Mill College celebrates festivals to connect us with the cycles of nature, establish a yearly rhythm for the students, and strengthen our community. We share stories, food, songs and activities which are linked to the seasons and expressed with beauty, creativity and reverence. In deepest winter we held Lantern Festival – our biggest festival of the year. The lantern procession is a celebration of the inner light we each carry within us; and a promise that even as we move into the darkest and shortest days of the year, the sun will return to us again with the spring equinox. It is also a brilliant example of the whole College working creatively as a community, where everyone plays a part in the many small and large details required to support this complex event. Originally planned for December, the festival was postponed to January due to high winds and torrential rain. Against the darkening skies, the familiar winter landscape was transformed by the light, warmth and sparkling reflections of the lanterns and fires around the procession route. The evening got under way in Horsley Mill courtyard where students, staff and parents enjoyed a wonderful spread of freshly baked bread, cheeses, chutneys provided by the catering team, accompanied by some fireside songs from Tutor Hamish Guerrini – including an acoustic version of Bruno Mars’ popular tune, ‘The Lazy Song’, which was imaginatively rewritten by student Bede Solley. The evening’s highlights were, of course, the hundreds of lanterns of all shapes and sizes along the procession route. Using paper, willow, and wood, students and lantern makers Eppie Short, Rosa Verge, Ruth Liengaard, David Flower and Patricia Digby had created a glittering, magical luminary spectacle. A sail boat floating serenely on the millpond, Merlin the wizard, a giant panda, a flame haired dancing girl: all remained as vivid images in the mind’s eye long after their lights had faded. Carole Richards, Events and Facilities Co-ordinator MAY DAY FESTIVAL 47 May Day and the cows get their Freedom Now the wheel of the year has turned again, and with it, the sun has returned – marked in May with the celebration of the Spring Festival. While the cows – newly released from the barn enjoyed their first taste of fresh spring grass; Farm Tutor Hamish Guerrini, with students Martin and Phoebe, told a very funny story about George the bull’s famous ancestors and their role in the development of Edward Jenner’s TB vaccine. Above:The Stick Band providing the entertainment and left: George the Gloucester Bull, causes a sensation when he got stuck in some muck and needed to be rescued! To finish, there was a memorable performance by the excellent Stick Band and everyone enjoyed plenty of ice cream. The Composting Kingdom at Gables Farm The Composting Kingdom of Gables Horticulture, designed around 23 big “bread loaf ” heaps, represents the digestive tract, breaking down old tired substances to allow fertile new energy for the plant growth of Spring. Here we have the center of microbial communities, engaged in intense warming and transforming, life birthing vitality. The Pheonix from the ash. Martin Slade took on building his own weed compost heap in the Autumn, layering weeds from the garden with turf, with dried leaf material and with thin layers of discarded moth infested wool from the weavery (high in nitrogen on two fronts). Now it has settled down to a solid three foot height, but originally Martin balanced it at five feet - a good achievement! He no longer has composting with me, but I hope to engage his strong arms for an hour in the summer term to turn the baby over. David Wilson is working presently on his high quality potting soil pile, layering chicken straw with kitchen fod waste, then wool, and then, thanks to Philip Leonards efficient, high speed lawn mowing, a layer of succulent grass cuttings. This pile should be ready for spring planting in trays of cabbage, lettuce, or squash perhaps - 2013. Well Done, David! You must come back to visit and see the fruits of your dedicated effort. David, left, and Christoph on a ‘bread loaf’ heap Christoph Rubach, Tutor 48 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Freeman College Student Council Join NUS The Role of the Council by Laura Green, 3rd-year National Union of Students The Freeman College Student Council decided as a group that they would like to be part of the National Union of Students. So we set about applying to join. This involved writing a constitution which was agreed on by all members of the council. The application went through successfully and all students at Freeman College are now entitled to an NUS ID and discount cards. The Student Council recently decided to visit the Glasshouse College. The purpose of the visit was to meet the Student Council there and to discuss and share ideas. So on the 1st of May we all took a mini bus down to Stroud for the day. When we got to the Glasshouse College we all introduced ourselves and were shown around. We then had a meeting with the council and we talked about bullying and a new mentoring scheme which we would like to put in place. This was an excellent opportunity to see how the council works there and what kind of ideas they come up with. Each year at Freeman, students are asked to vote for who they would like to represent their college and be on the Freeman College Student Council. A voting form is send round to each student, listing those who have put themselves forward to be a candidate. This year the council has 7 members. It has members from each year, some who are day students and some who stay residentially. The main role of the council is to listen to and discuss ideas of staff and fellow students on how to make our college a more exciting and enjoyable place to learn. I have been a member for 2 years and as a group we have organised many events and celebrations such as Sports Relief and the Royal Wedding buffet. We have also managed to get some meat put on our menu once a week which a lot of students were in favour of. We have even managed to get a space designated as a student Common Room. We work hard to be role models for other students. We were then lucky enough to have a go at glass etching and glass engraving before we had to return to Freeman College. Laura Ellis, College Administrator Top: Jack and Mark with their NUS cards and the councils at Glasshouse College. Above and right: Having a go at glass engraving at Glasshouse College. Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 George meets Padraig, Superstar Golfer George, right, with the other lucky golfers and golng superstar, Padraig Harrington, third from right. Since we last reported on George in the Winter 2010 edition of Run of the Mill following his gold at the home of golf, St Andrews, he has continued as a Special Olympics competitor. In May this year, George was among five golfers invited to the BMW PGA Championships at Wentworth by three-time Major winner Padraig Harrington. George has been playing since he was 11 and plays off a 12 handicap. As a Global Ambassador, Padraig serves as an advisor to the Special Olympics International Sports Resource Team on golf, offering his extensive expertise to help further the sport of golf around the world. Padraig commented, “This has genuinely been a highlight of this year’s Championships for me. Every golfer has a handicap, and every golfer comes out to play their best. In my book, these golfers are par for the course. They inspire me.” The Golfers were treated to a VIP day and included a sumptuous lunch at Richard Caring’s Grill Restaurant. Padraig then treated them to an exclusive clinic on the putting green. George was clearly excited about his meeting and fresh from tree felling he dropped by the office: “I had never been to Wentworth Golf course before and its a massive course. We walked around the clubhouse and went into the Ryder Cup room commemorating the European win. I’d never met Padraig before and he was really kind and shook my hand. We had a lesson on the putting green which was really good, it helped a lot. He putts with his left hand over his right and told us just to keep the putter in a straight line, back and through. We watched him putting and he was perfect every time, but told us we should practice two to three hours at a time. We watched some of the golf and saw Luke Donald playing. The weather was boiling hot and it was a brilliant day out.” Ruskin Mill College Cater for France On Sunday May 27th members of the college catering team, Sandy Harding and Frances Graves and the Assistant Principal Caro Birtles along with three students Clare Oliver, Daniella Esbensen and Ollie Mawby, catered for 90 members, both French and English, of the Twinning Association for Nailsworth and Leves. We cooked a typical English meal of sausage and mash and onion gravy followed by apple crumble and cream. The event was enjoyed by all and everyone pitched in as a team. This looks like being the beginning of a relationship between Ruskin Mill College and the Twinning Association. Andy Davies and two of his NPTC in Skills for Working Life students, Ollie Mawby and Jake Fisher, are negotiating with Nailsworth Town Council and Horsley Parish Council to paint a mural of scenes from Ruskin Mill College looking through a window to a scene in Leves. Caro Birtles. “On the Sunday I helped to prepare food, put it into a car and take it to the Arken Centre. When we got there, I cooked some of it and served it to the French people, with Daniella. It was great meeting the French visitors and they looked like they enjoyed themselves.” Clare Oliver 2nd-yr 49 50 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 A Beacon for Training and Therapeutic Activity Opens at Catterick in Partnership with Clervaux Trust The Veterans Artisan Bakery is a partnership between Clervaux Trust (www.clervaux.org.uk) and Riverside ECHG (www.riverside.org.uk), and is located in The Beacon, Catterick Garrison. Its purpose is to provide vocational training and therapeutic activity for the 31 residents at The Beacon, who are ex-service veterans from the armed forces who have found themselves homeless. Barista training (accredited through Union Coffee, our supplier), marketing and logistics and delivery. One of the trainees; Charlie Campbell, is gaining work experience four days per week. He is expected to go on to further training and employment within the catering sector. We are working with Crossfields to develop an NVQ Level 2 qualification which can be delivered here. The bakery is run by Kevin Irvine, Head Baker, who recently left the armed forces as a Warrant Officer, Class One, after 22 years in the catering corps. Kevin is able to empathise with the veterans following his experience in the army and has done tours in Afghanistan, Iraq, Northern Ireland and Bosnia. Kevin is supported by Rick McCordall, Commercial Manager at Clervaux Trust, who was responsible for the setting up of the bakery and helping the bakery work towards commercial viability. Since the project started, there has been lots of coverage in the media including local TV, press and radio, as well as a feature on the Radio 4 Food Programme aired on Sunday 8th April 2012. The Right HonourableWilliam Hague, Foreign Secretary, and MP for Richmond, Yorkshire, opening the newVeterans Artisan Bakery. Mr Hague also was guest of honour at the ofcial opening of Clervaux Trust in January 2009. The Veterans Artisan Bakery and coffee point opened for business on 4th January 2012 and the project employs two full time and one part time member of staff. Seven veterans have accessed the vocational training in the bakery and at the coffee point since it opened in January. This training includes life skills such as time management, presentation, work ethos, discipline, sense of pride, satisfaction from customer recognition and seed-to-table ethos. More technical training includes basic food hygiene, artisan bread making skills, basic cookery skills, customer service, front of house and A veteran in the well-equipped new bakery, preparing scones 51 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Above: Mr Hague with a veteran and the media. Left: Colonel Nick Millen, Commander of Catterick with Janine Christley, Director of Fundraising at Ruskin Mill Trust. Colonel Millen said of the new project,“The Clervaux bakery is perfect here at Riverside because the fact that Clervaux is doing what it does, in taking people who have slipped beneath the net and transforming them, makes them perfect. What is so wonderful now is that we’ve now got local products and local people working together, and we’re now churning that back out. Clervaux is absolutely at the centre, its pivotal. It provides the right security, dignity and aspiration all in one place.” A local celebrity chef, Rosemary Shrager, launched the bakery at the end of February 2012 and is very supportive of the project. The project has developed a partnership with Richmond Soroptimists providing on-going volunteering support and help when required. Working in partnership with the Soroptimists, there is an intention to set up a market stall in Richmond to sell the bread and baked items and provide further vocational work experience for veterans. The project is ahead of plan on sales and profitability and sales have increased month-on-month since the project started. This been achieved from a combination of the coffee point and events catering. Sales are expected to continue to increase based on improved awareness, reputation and other developments. The bakery is now supplying a shop in nearby Richmond and we are in talks with Sodexo, the contract caterer who provides the catering for the whole of Catterick Garrison. For more information, please contact Rick McCordall on rickmccordall@clervaux.org.uk or 07808 501553. Clow Beck Tyll van de Voort, Land Manager, reports from Clervaux Trust’s 100-acre site The land continues to offer plenty of opportunities for students and adults with special needs, the animal and land construction side being the most popular with students, horticulture with the adult clients. The Biodynamic Apprentice Training Scheme at Clervaux is going strong. Nanda and Dom will complete their training in January; Roberto will start his second year in September. There are strong links and good exchange with the Botton Village apprentices group and Clervaux is well represented in the national biodynamic trainers’ group. (continued overleaf) 52 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Two of our six Golden Guernsey goats are in kid and a further two will go to the billy this autumn. The apprentices are looking forward to venture into a bit of goats cheese making. Our sows Norma (Tamworth) and Tilly (Mangalitza) both had good litters of 10 and 7 piglets respectively and Clow Beck and Clervaux Café’s freezers are filled to the brim with sausages, bacon and pork cuts. We have reared a new batch of 50 laying birds and should, within a few weeks, produce plenty of eggs again, with a total of 60 - 70 odd hens. Unfortunately the largest fox any of us has ever seen came on several raids, killing 20 chickens. We have now relocated the birds closer to the buildings again in a third chicken house. And finally, we have acquired two young male donkeys this winter (Jack and Jill) to expand the animal curriculum into grooming and possibly carting. They are a cherished sight for staff, students and ramblers. We certainly hope that we can continue to offer three training placements, not least because all construction, farm, animal, horticultural, and work is done by the apprentices, Dave and myself – without them we would have to shrink our activities. I would also like to stress the invaluable educational and cultural contribution made by the apprentices, from role modelling to student support – we would be a poorer place without them. Tina Murray has managed to secure a small grant to build a pedestrian bridge over the Clow Beck. This bridge has been completed within the grant budget in early June and now provides excellent access to the old orchard, chicken run and bee hives, as well as easy pedestrian access to Clervaux’ fields across the beck. We have currently 22 ewes, 30 shearling ewes, and 40 Aprilborn lambs – 92 sheep in total. I have so far experimented with two pure breeds, Lleyn and Hampshire Downs, and it looks as though overall the latter are the breed that thrives best on our land. Both the Clervaux Café and Clow Beck kitchen have so far used all our meat lambs. The wool, barring what we need for weaving and felting, will be sold through the Wool Marketing Board. By the end of this year we will have extended our flock to 53 ewes and will be expecting around 100 lambs next March. Clow Beck Eco Centre, Jolby Lane, Croft-on-Tees, Nr Darlington, DL2 2TF Tel: 01325 729860 Email: info@clervaux.org.uk www.clervaux.org.uk Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Working 9 - 5 at Ruskin Glass Centre Rachel, second-year student “Hi, I’m a student at Glasshouse College. I really enjoy working with Kevin in glass cutting and sand blasting. I find doing the work really fun and enjoyable to work with Kevin Barry. On a Saturday I come in at about 9 am, and do paid work with Kevin. I sweep the floors and then sit down and get on with jobs. I help with kids’ parties – the sand blasting – and also sell items to the public. I also enjoy taking the money and using the card machines. I’ve sold some of my own stuff – some coasters with dolphins and footballers. I like dolphins and I like it when people buy something that I’ve made! I’ve been working in here since September, so about six months now. Most Saturdays I work 9 – 1, but sometimes I have worked 9 – 5. I stayed at home after finishing year 11. I had nothing to do except help my mum with the washing-up. I don’t know what would’ve happened if I hadn’t found the Glasshouse. But I did, and working in sessions with Kevin and also Brian Mason make it all worthwhile.” “In the future, I want a workshop like this,” says Rachel, whilst smiling. Before she came to Glasshouse College, Rachel had no interest in the manufacture and design of glass, but now she wants a career in the glass industry. “I like designing things and I like producing one-offs – they’re unique and they also sell better!” With an eye for design and an emerging awareness of business, the future is looking bright for Rachel. Kevin Barry, glass-maker and tutor “I noticed Rachel’s potential very early on because she’s very chatty and great with people in a shop environment, so I asked her to come work with me on a Saturday. She helps with everything and sets a fantastic example. She’s also incredibly trustworthy when it comes to the transaction of money, and there’s a strong possibility that I’ll ask her to work here when she leaves Glasshouse College next year.” 53 54 A Midsummer Night’s Dream Ruskin Mill College Drama Group Pay Homage to the Bard Tutor and Director Penelope Rubach explains her bold move to take on the Bard The decision to direct the students in a production of a Shakespeare play was a bold one, and at times I felt, foolhardy. I was partly curious to see if such a challenge could be achieved, interested to see how we could find the best way of working and whether the students would be carried by the material, and very keen that the students should have the magic and experience of ‘the bard’. I was heartened and uplifted throughout the process with how deeply the students connected to the characters, story and historical context in ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’, and how they pitted their will to the great task of understanding and learning the language and lines in the play. It was a challenge, yet each student rose to this challenge to the absolute best of their ability, as did all the members of staff involved and the backstage crew, creating the team that was needed to pull off this great enterprise. It was a truly wonderful experience for me to watch the final performance, and to see the cast really living the play and giving it to their audience with total energy and enthusiasm. The pace was fast and they were evidently enjoying and completely engaged in the experience, as were the audience, and I was both moved to tears and laughter as I was able to let go and watch the story unfold as if I were really watching it for the very first time. I would like to wish a very big THANK YOU to everybody who made this enterprise possible; to Ruskin Mill and particularly Caro Birtles for trusting me with this vision, to all the students for their incredible hard work and trust, to Sarah Scott for her endurance, good spirit and endless hard work, Helen Rowe for all her volunteering and stage management help, Padraich O’Rian for his lightness of heart, goodwill and support, Daniella Ubsdell for her beautiful costumes, Rich Piri and Lucy Mieckle for all their support and positivity, Hamish Guerini for his clowning brilliance and help with set, Luke Brinsford for his positivity and talent, Jane Beckley for her set design and trees, Sam Bloomfield for stepping in, but never actually making it onstage, Howie Knightly for building set, Jack Shepherd for lighting the show, Rob Birmingham and Josie Masedo for the poster, Sarah Millin and Paul Libson for organising staff and support throughout the year, Matthew Woodward for the video, to my husband Christoph Rubach for living the process with me at home, help with voice work and for stepping into the role of Oberon only ten days before the performance and learning all those lines, and a big thank you to all those staff members who helped backstage and on the door during performances and people too numerous to mention who have supported this project along the way. Here are some comments from students and staff Sarah Scott- Assistant director “Working on ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ has been an amazing experience. Over the past nine months I have witnessed our students facing and conquering so many challenges and it has been inspirational. Together we lifted words from a page to create a wonderful show and shared so many experiences. I am proud to be part of such a fantastic group of people. Watching the students work together and support each other has been enlightening and uplifting and I will cherish this experience forever.” Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Kaarah Gibson (Kellie Cooper) 3rd-yr - Hermia “I really got into my character Hermia; I also did some Directing and Choreography. Hermia is loyal, kind, loving, fiery, and fierce. She was quite fun to play. My favourite part of the play was when Hermia went for Helena and Demetrius held her back and kept pushing Hermia down to the floor. It can get very tiring though and tensions run very high before and after the production.” James Dustan 2nd-yr - Demetrius “It was good fun being in the play. I got a little bit of stage fright to start with but I managed to pull through it. I managed to do the play and really enjoyed it. Even if I don’t do the play next year, I’ll film it!” Matthew Goodyear 3rd-yr - Puck “What I did to overcome my stage fright was to picture the audience as penguins. That helped the audience to not be so scary. It was cool to play Puck, who is a manipulative, shrewd and clever character. To learn all those lines was pretty tense. I think I did pretty well overall.” Martin Slade 1st-yr- Bottom “It was really fun to play the character of Bottom. It almost reminded me of myself at times. He is a very big headed and funny character yet he is lovable as well, just like me. It was very hard to learn all those lines but I got there in the end. In my personal opinion, when Bottom’s trousers fell down and his holster came off with the sword, that was the high point of laughter in the performance. I had better do drama next year otherwise the production won’t be funny.” Isabela Raphael 2nd-yr- Helena “It was a really challenging experience. The crew the music and the director were amazing, the technology was brilliant, and the way it was staged was moving.’ Christoph Rubach, tutor - Oberon “Meeting a community of cast members enthusiastically engaged toward a joint imagination was exiting and inspiring. I enjoyed the challenge of learning so many beautiful Shakespearian lines, spending hours in the Norton wood enacting a magical King of the trees, sometimes using two thin, three metre sticks to strengthen my gesture and royal speaking intention. I was thrilled to experience the limelight again, and give our lovely audience the gift of ‘the bard’, his wisdom and love, filled with humour but also deep human respect.” 55 56 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Cizenship Through a Lens with Tutor Cathy Bloeld Part of being a good citizen is about being observant and knowing about what is going on in the world around you. In Citizenship lessons, students have been developing their ‘looking and seeing’ skills to become more aware of their environment. During the cold weather we had some fantastic frosty mornings and some of these pictures reveal patterns and shapes that have been highlighted by the frost. We were also interested in the contrast between natural and man-made materials. These photographic projects as well as helping us to improve our ‘looking’ have also made us think about what is going on around us. We stopped and looked with interesting results. Photo by Tom Fenning Photo by James Southerington Photo by Shawn Pepler Photo by Luke Bates Photo by Joshua O’Donnell Photo by Luke Coulston -Jenkins Photo by Alex Reich Photo by Chris Hart Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 57 Copper Spinning a Water Feature Graham Oldfield, Copper tutor, Applauds Chris’s Achievements When Chris first arrived in the workshop, he expected to be able to spin copper on the lathe but it takes time to develop the technique. But he stuck at it and worked really hard. I have had him for three mornings a week and he has attended all of them. Chris can now show other students his skills and help them get started. The project to make a copper water feature based upon flow-forms for the garden at Tintagel House has been very challenging as everything needs to be precise. Each bowl needs to be positioned perfectly for the water to flow and there will be a lot of trial and error involved. Chris has applied himself 100% to this project and I am very proud of what he has achieved and I think he is too! Chris, 3rd-year, Transforming an Environment make some forms out of copper. We made some drawings and I didn’t want to make it too complicated. There are six copper bowls which I spun on the lathe and one brass bowl to make it look different. There is a copper pipe up the centre where the water will be pumped up and the water will come out of the top and flow down the bowls. It is being fitted together and will be installed into the garden during the summer term. The spinning was quite easy as it is my third year with Graham. The tricky bit is fitting it together and will require some careful soldering. I really enjoy practical sessions and metalwork as well as working with and understanding animals. I’ve spent two and a half years looking after horses with my homeprovider Graham. One of the horses, Misty, has arthritis and Cushing’s disease so it has given me a good insight into looking after the needs and medication of an animal on a day-to-day basis. I hope to go to Sheffield College and do BTEC Level 2 or 3 in Animal Care. I would like a job doing anything with looking after animals. Left: Chris on the lathe forming shape; above: soldering together; below: polishing up in preparation for installation. The project started off in Horticulture at Tintagel when we looked at the pond which needed completely restoring. So I had the idea to sort it out and I was given a £100 budget to get it going. It used to trickle down the bank and had never worked properly since I have been here. We’ve cleared the ponds and dug out the trenches. Then I came up with idea of a water feature and I like copper spinning, so I talked to Graham and he agreed to try and 58 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 MUSICAL TALENT Jack (and his guitar, Miranda) a second-year student I play a 1970’s ignition bass violin which Paul McCartney regularly used in his Beatles days. I found an interest in music four years ago, and after listening to a lot of Metallica, I bought a guitar on a whim. I do a lot of finger play, and I can even play backwards. I’m not in a band, but I’d love to be in a band – rocking and meeting people all over the world. My true dream is to bring back grunge and punk, the type of music that can really say things to the authorities and the government. Music is one of the few things that can move the world without violence. And comedy too, I suppose. I love stand-up comedy, especially comedians such as Jeff Dunham and Lee Evans and I’ll be compering the end of term music and telling a couple of my own jokes. Jack Sarah a second-year student In the end of term music performance, I’ll be singing ‘Wherever You Will Go’ which has recently been repopularised by the Twinning’s Tea TV advert, and I’ll also be singing ‘When We Stand Together’ by Nickleback. I like to try out all different types of music, and I feel like I’ve developed a good range of material. I’ve always loved music, though I have to admit that my first ever CD was a Geri Halliwell song! I love drama and music, because at the same time you’re being somebody else but also more yourself than ever before. When I’m singing, I’m just playing me. Before I came to Freeman College I went to St Helens, which is an autistic school for 6-19 year-olds. I was pretty much there for my whole life. Coming to Freeman College has been life changing. I know it’s a strong word, but it’s true. I’ve been able to do things here that I’ve never been able to do before. It was a very daunting move, but I made friends straight away on my first day. I now live with three other students in supported independent living. I would like to live independently soon enough. Freeman College has helped me follow my dreams. I work at Montgomery Theatre on a Wednesday night and help with their productions. My ambition is to work in the theatre. Sarah Ruskin Mill College Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Art with tutor, Patricia Digby Working Horses Print by Aran Houlihan-Burne Clay Print & Brush Drawing by Jacob Davies Print by Christopher Buckeridge Winter Landscape by Tim Organ Frogs by Thomas Borysewicz Anteater by Amelia Cook 59 Ruskin Mill College 60 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 College Activities by George Nicol, 3rd-year W S R N U M E R A C Y C L I N G P F L W T O T B U I L D I N G C S B S M A A E G I I R A M T C O O K I N G E M I H O P L D L R K I A R M U S I C L A N G U A G E T R D O Animals Building Canteen Cizenship Coee Shop Cooking Coppicing Cycling Drama Driving Theory Eurhythmy I N S I H M P T L U F I S H F A R M I E N N G S T O N E C A R V I N G O E M A V R A G L A I R L E I L A N T E R N M A K I N G F A G O S A C J E W E L L E R Y K I N E E Felt Making Fish Farm Flow Forms Football Green Woodwork Guitar Horse Riding ICT Iron Age Forge Jewellery Kitchen L S E N E R H S T O R Y T E L L I N G S F O S M A R K E T G A R D E N O I N G T S O W O E W I L L O W W O R K W F T G C H T R F A C N D R A M A P I A N O F E U I E R G Land Work Language Lantern Making Leather work Literacy Living Skills Lunch Club Maintenance Management Market Garden Massage O P H S I N G I N G E N E O I R I T O I E R M A I N T E N A N C E D D C A T I R P U M A N A G E M E N T N Y E W E C A Z Y F R S K I T C H E N D S F O F O S Y R E W O H E I C T L E A T H E R W O R K A C N E O Y Mechanics Mosaics Music Numeracy Nutrion Oce Skills Paper Making Piano Poery Singing Soap Making N N S I K N L I V I N G S K I L L S A T T M G I T E H N N L U N C H C L U B H V B H S O W O O D L A N D W O R K L A A I I A M W A L K I N G I C O F F E E S H O P N L Y M O S A I C S V L G C O P P I C I N G L A Speech Stained Glass Stone Carving Story Telling Walking Weaving Wilderness Trip Willow Work Woodland Working Run of the Mill is published by Ruskin Mill Trust to reect its work, vision and development. With thanks to all students, staff and others for their contributions. Special thanks to Paul & Gavin for technical support, the tutors and staff at our provision for their support, Richard Thatcher for word-processing, proofreading & additional support and Chris Pritchard for his editorial assistance. Please contact Chris Pritchard (Marketing and Communications) at chris.pritchard@rmt.org if you have any feedback, updates or requests for the website and social media accounts. Run of the Mill is edited and set byWill Mercer at Ruskin Mill. Email: william.mercer@rmt.org Printed by Tewkesbury Printing, using vegetable inks and paper from managed forests - www.tewkesburyprinting.com The Colleges Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Adieu With another academic year completed, we say farewell to a record number of students from all our centres. We wish them all the very best for the future and here is a small selection of highlights of their time with us. Ruskin Mill College Daniel Addis Harley Ashley Callum Alexander Kieran Barlow-Jenkins Leon Biddle Matthew Butcher Kellie Cooper Jessica Dickinson Marianne Drinkwater Richard Duncan Jaimes Fisher Matthew Goodyear Michael Hale Sara Handzlik Edward Hart Rosie Hely-Hutchinson Thomas Hobbs Aran Houlihan-Burne Alexander Jacquier Oliver Krisson Becky Morris Kai Patman Alexander Phillips Molly Pieri Verity de Pulford George Nicol Clare Oliver Stephen Pitt Joe Radbourne Robin Rahman Jake Sidwell Aaron Simon Liam Smith James Soper Phoebe Verity Nathan Walls Ryan Ward James Wells David Wilson Jamie Yapp Glasshouse College Lyam Alderson Jamie Burbridge Jake Charlesworth Tarran Ellis Jake Griffiths Josh Hancox Daz Ings Daniel Jones Zoe Montgomerie Gemma Nicholls Richard Paxton Matthew Pelling Tom Pritchard Francine Quartey Aaron Randall Sam Robinson Lisa Short Thomas Southall Daniel Spillane Alex Timbrell Neale Walton Richard Willis Freeman College Chris Austen Ricky Baguley Chris Chatwood Ben Cook Brandon Distefano Joe Dixon Chris Grew Matthew Hall Aaron Howard Saaim Hussain Sabrina Khan Wasiq Khan Gabriel Kinneavy Liam Latham Sammy Leighton Mark Lloyd Chris McAssey Mark Masling Sam Middleton Jason Overend Curtis Rogan Liam Rogers Thomas Rowland Kayleigh Silvers Maria Talboys Callum Tew James White Darren Whomersley Juliana Zhu Plas Dwbl Farm College Andrew Biddle Sarah Christopher Will Morris 61 Becky: I’ve made lots of new friends at Ruskin Mill College and I’m going onto the Berkshire College of Agriculture to do a Level 1 Diploma in Animal Husbandry. I’ve enjoyed working with animals on the farm and I would like to thank all the staff and students during my journey. It’s been a really great experience and it has helped me with my anger. I used to be very angry. They’ve given me the right amount of space to deal with this and the support has been very good. I’ve done work experience at Heartshore Horses and the Coffee Shop. I’m going to live independently with some marginal support and look after my new pet Derek the Lizard and three goldfish. Richard: I’ve made a big project in Stained Glass for my leaving present and I’m going onto Stroud College to do Passport to Independence to build up my CV and work experience. It has been a very good experience at Ruskin Mill and I’ll keep in touch with my many friends. I’ve enjoyed working at the Gables Farm shop where I am told I have excelled. My independence skills have improved since being at the college. Aran: I’ve enjoyed my time here working on the farm and I’m very interested in the biodynamic approach. I’ve made lots of friends and a highlight was to go to the Palace and receive my Gold Duke of Edinburgh award. The people in Stroud are so friendly and I’ve served at both the Stroud and Woodchester churches. I’m also going to the Berkshire College of Agriculture and doing Animal Husbandry, whilst staying in the halls of residence there. I’ve loved every second of being at Ruskin Mill College and it’s been brilliant. Dan: I’ve got loads of qualifications including Green Woodwork, Papermaking, Horticulture and Flow-forms. I enjoyed working with Barry in the Farm Maintenance workshop, doing grinding. I’ve made lots of flow-forms in work experience with Duncan and I’ve also done work experience in Nailsworth at Emmaus and at the Green Spirit shop. It’s been really helpful being at Ruskin Mill College and I’m going into supported living. Tarran: My highlights at Glasshouse College are working in Bronze Casting with Tim, Paul and Andy, working at the farm with Ed and the animals and with Ron Smart in the Farm woods. My greatest achievement since being at the Glasshouse College is doing work experience at the Belbroughton Animal Sanctuary. When I leave, I’m hoping to go to live at Camphill. Zoe: Since joining Glasshouse College, I’m much more confident and grown up. When I look at the rings and other items I’ve made in Jewellery, I feel proud of the skills I’ve learned and of what I’ve achieved. I’ve made some really good friends here too. I’m moving to a shared house in Ashford, Kent, where I’m going to try and get a job working with animals. Gemma: My highlights from being at Glasshouse College are meeting new people, making new friends and getting on with staff. I also really enjoyed being a part of the Gododdin theatre production and going on tour. My best achievements have been gaining more independence, getting to lessons on time and developing my work skills. I loved getting elected onto the Student Council three years running and being able to help the college and students, working with Gail and Ami. From July, I’ll be living independently in Stourbridge, and in September I start my full-time college course at Stourbridge College. I’ll be studying level 1 in Childcare. Tom: My biggest highlight was taking part in the production of The Gododdin. Playing the part of “Old Jones” made me feel really good. My greatest achievements since being at the Glasshouse College are growing in self-confidence, and taking great steps in maturing into adulthood. I’m moving to Clevedon to live in supported accommodation. I hope to go to a local college in either Bristol or Weston-Super-Mare. I’ll also be looking for a job in a local café, as I’ve really enjoyed working in the Ruskin Glass Centre Café. Aaron: “Making friends and meeting new people, and learning new skills that will help me in life.” My best achievement is learning to travel independently, and doing things that I’ve not done before. I will be going to Clervaux in Darlington to do more independent work. Neale: My personal highlights since being at Glasshouse College have been learning how to blow glass, repairing and working with bikes and performing mechanical work. My greatest achievement has been joining the Security Industry Authority and gaining a level 2 qualification in Security Guarding, and getting my flat. After I leave, I’ll be studying a level 2 Public Services diploma at Dudley College and continue to live locally. Chris : “Coming to Freeman College has been a life-changing experience!” He has just accepted the keys to his first tenancy and is enrolled on a Catering Course at City College. 62 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 United We Stand! Kai, 3rd-year, reports on meeting our challenges together The game I’m talking about here is football, but on another level it’s actually real life. It’s about how you behave on the pitch as part of your team and about how you behave off the pitch with your team players in life, like your friends, your work colleagues or your tutors. There’s 2 sides of me in football. I think everyone in sport has two sides to them: One side of me likes to play ‘attractive’ passing and movement in football when I feel I have a generous team in which I may get the ball back. Friendship and Team Work The Individual The physical skills you learn at this college help you survive in the wilderness but the most important emotional and mental skills of friendship and teamwork take you to another level of not just surviving, but thriving. Sometimes you have to do things independently and other times you have to do things as a team. However, maturity in friendship and teamwork, is knowing when to do something and how to do it. I have managed to learn this through my experience as a football captain and a wilderness hiker. The other is where I, like other people, can be really passionate and want to enjoy myself on an individual level, but you can quite easily get frustrated because things might not go your way. For example you don’t get the ball back or you can’t score. Things can start individually and then can pass across the team. It could be that a really frustrated player is not getting what they want, not scoring or always fouling on the tackle or even showing dissent. Football is a team sport. The key thing is “what’s the point of having other people on your team if you’re not going to pass to them and not use them?” Everything you do as an individual affects the team. If you don’t play very well, your team may not play well either. The Football Team The Wilderness Team Top: Kai on theWilderness trip in May 2011. Above: Kai, right, with the Ruskin Mill College football team. And that goes for when you’re out in the wilderness too. Only the game is no longer a game, but is all about surviving and thriving. The whole trip across the mountainside was as huge as it felt. The nerves were on – a kind of nervous excitement. Although I didn’t expect to see snow and hail! These were quite strange things to have in May. People were feeling a bit off balance, including me. There was one point where I just wanted to stop walking and imagine myself not being on the mountain any more; that I was back at college with the rest of my friends. As the hail finally stopped, we got to the bottom of the mountain and I really tried to spur the other students on. On the way down another student suffered a great medical difficulty, which meant he was unable to Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 63 continue. Because of this I made a personal vow that I would help myself and everyone else to accomplish this student’s dream of trekking miles over unfamiliar and treacherous terrain. The funniest thing and in a way the coolest thing was we celebrated Rosie Hely-Hutchinson’s birthday. We took a huge day off. We were all worn out after a very tiring trip the day before, with all the worst weather. Our camp was in two groups, separated by a rope bridge across a deep ravine. The extreme weather made it too dangerous to cross the rope and regroup for Rosie’s birthday. However, with the help of a local fisherman, by the afternoon we made it across to the others. He brought a cake for Rosie. It was wonderful how the local people of Knoydart showed us such compassion, boosting our morale by enabling us to be together and providing a cake to celebrate with. It was a strange way to celebrate a birthday, being in the middle of nowhere, with no bowling alley and no TV – no activities except walking, cooking and making camp. In such extreme conditions, in such a wild place, we all felt as glad as each other just to be back together again in one camp with a cake to share. Trust Kai at Gables Farm Shop doingWork Experience. The wilderness trip is a good way to explore your relationships with other people, what they like to do, how they like to do it. I am a lot more aware of what I should and shouldn’t do in getting on with others. I had a lot of trust and faith in everyone around me. I trusted that we were all going to try and get on as a team and independently at the same time. Being on a wilderness trip, on a football team, shows your true boundaries, your strengths and weaknesses, and how to use these qualities to move on into your future. Tea with the Lord Mayor of Sheffield Following a tradition now established at Freeman College all incoming Lord Mayors and Master Cutlers in Sheffield visit our Wentworth workshops to have their hands cast in pewter. As a thank you to the students who cast the Lord Mayor & Consort’s hands four students James Lee, Ryan Hallatt, Stevie Watson, Alex Chester went to afternoon tea at the Lord Mayor’s Parlour Monday 12th December. We were warmly welcomed and spent a lovely friendly ½ hour looking at some of the Town Hall silver collection. The Lord Mayor, Sylvia Dunkley donned her official robes and each student had their photo taken wearing the tri-cornered hat. We were even treated to handling the Mace and Stevie marched with the Mace in front of the Lord Mayor. It was a genuinely pleasurable and relaxed visit. 64 Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 David Runs For Fun 26.2 miles in the Rain, Wind and Cold! David, 3rd-year student at Ruskin Mill College, took on the challenge of running a marathon. After weeks of training with staff member, James Cheseldine, the day arrived but the weather was foul. James picks up the story of 3 hours 42 minutes spent in Milton Keynes. 29th April 2012: 0955 David: “We joined in with a group of 1000s of runners” There it stood. The MK Dons stadium. Huge, grey and lowering, yet still dwarfed against the backdrop of the Milton Keynes sky, even huger, even greyer and even more lowering, clouds so heavy with rain they almost seemed to be pressing us down into the spongy verges and saturated streetways of the town. Runners huddled at the start in hats and gloves, covered in bin liners flapping like kites in the wind, a handful of hardy spectators stood under a barrage of umbrellas, applauding as we began the first steps of our 26.2 mile journey. A few steps, inconceivably far still to go, and a scene which bore little resemblance to the images I had held in my mind for months of fresh and bright spring mornings, cheering crowds, fancy dress and colours. We started training in October, David wearing a pair of my old trainers to see how he would get on. After a few runs it was clear that David was going to be good. He hardly seemed to notice 7 miles at my pace. We went out and bought some better kit, and after autumn half term we joined Stroud Athletics club. David: “My favourite thing about running is going to the club and taking part with the others.” We trained with the second fastest group twice a week. I began looking for a half-marathon we could do, but December is low season for road racing, and it looked like we might be waiting until March. But by Christmas I’d already changed my mind; David was showing no signs of reaching any limits, and a full marathon looked achievable. David: “It was freezing.The rain kept falling, the conditions got worse. We were shivering.” A Scots drum and bagpipe band stood bravely in the lashing rain playing us out on the first stretch; but round the next corner there was little but the biting northeasterly to accompany us through the floods and mud. Someone went down next to me in a huge puddle; this David training under welcoming weather conditions was no road race today. Some of the puddles on the cycle paths, canal sides and pavements around the course were turning out to be knee deep and several metres wide. Verges became churned up and hazardous as people tried to skirt round the puddles. From 8 miles onward, there was no way we could have been any wetter, and a few miles with heads down took us to half way. We’d taken it easy up to now; in the fearsome conditions I knew we would need some energy for the second half. We picked up our pace from 8.30 to 8.00 minutes/mile, and started overtaking other runners. David: “There was water then orange juice to have as we were running.” The course turned southwards at 15 miles, in theory the wind would be behind us more in the last 10 miles. There Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 65 were picturesque parks and lakes, but it was grey and freezing cold, and there was no sign of improvement. Runners around us were stopping to walk, but we kept going to 20 miles. Some people say 20 miles is half a marathon; what they mean is that it’s half the pain. Most of the pain comes in the final 6.2 miles. My sodden running shoes felt like they were made of wood as my feet slammed them into the pavements: downhill stretches through underpasses hurt most of all. David: “My muscles and feet were hurting, but not a lot.” David kept going; we kept overtaking and the last few miles gradually ticked away, until we found ourselves once more in the shadow of the football stadium where the race finally ended. We managed 3 hours 42 minutes, slower than we hoped for, but still a great time for such an awful day. David: “We did 26.2 miles. I remember that I went to get a medal after doing the Milton Keynes race; it was sensational.” RUSK10 to 70 700 Get Involved A message from the Fundraising Team David added to his achievement of running a marathon by raising £200 for Ruskin Mill Trust. But you don’t have to be one of our students to fundraise for us. As you will read elsewhere in this magazine, Matt Lougher shaved his head on World Autism Day and raised £2000! And in August this year, a group of MBA students from Bath University will be partaking in the Three Peaks 24-hour Challenge, and aiming to raise £5000. Running marathons, shaving your head and climbing a mountain are just some of the ways you and your friends can get involved with fundraising - and there are loads more ideas on our website: www.rmt.org. If you choose to fundraise for Ruskin Mill Trust, then you can rest assured that we will provide extensive resources, support and guidance. We are here to support you, in supporting us. Most of all, we want you to have a memorable and enjoyable experience - we want you to put the ‘fun’ into fundraising. With improvements in technology, fundraising has never been easier! If you choose to fundraise for us, your friends, family and collegues can easily donate money on our online giving sites: Everyclick and JustGiving.We have also activated JustTextGiving which makes giving money even quicker and simpler! All you have to do is text ‘RUSK10 £5’ to 70070. Simple as that! As a charity we need your support to continue developing the Trust and looking after our wonderful students, our stunning heritage sites and our glorious landscapes.We are incredibly grateful of all of our fundraisers - thank you, your dedication is making a difference and changing lives. 66 The Colleges Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 Welcome to more edited highlights of letters, email and visits from ex-students. We continue to enjoy receiving your news, so please keep on writing in to us. We hope you have a very enjoyable summer and we look forward to hearing from you. Will Mercer (william.mercer@rmt.org). James Allington lives in Horley, Surrey, where he attends college and has moved into supported living. He is looking to pass his driving test and get a car and he says ‘hello’ to Rich Pirie, Rich Turley, Alan and Roman & Olga. Peter Atkins lives independently in Coventry, in Warwickshire. He spends time with his family, rides his bike a lot and is waiting to do voluntary work in the summer. He says that he has come a long way in himself since his health improved and lots of things have been sorted out, now that he is a lot stronger in his mind. He is looking forward to enjoying some holidays in 2012. Tom Best is still in his great flat in London with his flatmate, who used to work for the same company as his dad. Tom used to work in a coffee shop, but now he is making his own rugs and slippers and he is perhaps looking to sell them. In his spare time, he has been playing cricket, splitting wood and doing farmwork and says that he would like to come up and see us again. He is looking forward to enjoying a holiday in Cuba. Adam Black lives in Blandford in Dorset, where he has his own flat but with sleep-over support. He has been doing animation work at Arts University College Bournemouth and a support package for people with Asperger’s. He is looking to start freelance work in 3D modelling soon. Anna Bonati lives in Monza, in northern Italy, where she has been living with nuns, of whom she is not a fan. During her time at the Mill, she enjoyed games, gym, painting and spending time with her friends and would like to return to England, though that’s not possible at the moment. She would like to become a great actress and says that people frequently compliment her on her acting skills. Ashley Byfield lives in Bromley, in Kent, and is looking forward to moving into his own flat in supported independence. He volunteers one day a week at a local café, but he is looking to move into employment in the future. He sends his greetings to Dan Gooch. Debbie Carter lives in Witney, Oxfordshire, where she lives in supported independence, attends youth club and does voluntary work in a charity shop. She also says hello to Dan Gooch. Joe Dolan lives in his own flat in Crawley, West Sussex, which has one bedroom and is very nice. He attends a school of art, studying “transpersonal arts”, and volunteers with an environment scheme, doing coppicing, tree-felling, stream clearing and the like. He is planning to carry on living independently, developing his life skills and doing more artwork. Rashida Donaldson (Bazzar) is still living in Handsworth, Birmingham, and she is expecting a baby! She would like to get in contact with Bobby Matthews. Peter Fitzgerald lives in Wroxham, Norfolk, on a home support living scheme. He enjoyed all the outdoor activities at the Mill and is looking for an outdoor job, maybe in farming or the military. He also wants to get a motorbike and a house. Michael Fogg lives with his girlfriend in Mountfield, East Sussex, and does occasional work painting and decorating as a builder’s mate. He apparently enjoys receiving Run of the Mill immensely, which is always pleasing to hear! Harry Green lives with his parents in Malvern, Worcestershire, where he works part-time as an assistant cook at a care home and attends a technical college during the rest of the week. He also does evening classes in pottery and stained glass, is taking driving lessons and still finds time to do felting as a hobby! Next year, he hopes to do a catering course, carry on with his craftwork and maybe move into a supported flat. Carla Gwynne is still living in Kidderminster, Worcestershire, with Tommy, her partner of five years. Although he has had some health issues of late, he is getting better and she has had the chance to renew her ties with her aunts, uncles and cousins and with her partner’s family. She still enjoys art and music and keeps us all in her thoughts. Mark Hafner lives in Exeter, Devon, where he’s moved into a flat and volunteers at a local charity shop. He has just had a baby girl, called Lily-Jo, and he is looking forward to marrying his girlfriend and moving in with her. He says hello to Richard Pirie. Louis Heather lives with his parents in south-west London, where he doesn’t do a great deal during the day, but during the evenings, he goes running, attends a prayer group, has piano lessons or meets up with friends. He is doing various voluntary tasks with the aim of easing into part-time work and to find a solid life direction. He is also looking to move into a new house-share with five other people nearby. He says that one of the best things about Ruskin Mill was the friendliness, care and commitment he received from the staff, including the many different crafts available. Daniel Hood lives in supported independence in Ilford, Essex. He has developed a great interest in tattoos and wants to get a part-time job in a tattoo shop. Brittany Katen is living in Kings Stanley, Gloucestershire, with some support, though she says she wants to be able to live on her own in the future. She has Run of the Mill ~ Summer 2012 been to college, but she’s currently between activities. Alex Keston is living in supported independence in Edgware, Middlesex, doing a professional cooking course at college, which involves baking, cooking and front of house service in the college’s restaurant, as well as the more challenging theory work. He says that he would like work in catering at a small hotel or school and do some volunteering, maybe in a charity shop. Darryl Lee has a brand new flat in Alton, Hampshire, where he has full-time work at Sainsbury’s. He has got himself a fairly new car and has a wonderful girlfriend, whom he hopes to marry in the future. He says a big thank-you for the support and guidance Ruskin Mill gave him. He will treasure his happy memories forever. Robert Lock still lives with his parents in Witham, Essex, where he has now passed his Comptiq A+ qualifications! He wants to gain experience in working with computer servers, obtain a full-time job in IT and to settle down with a girl and start a family. Ross MacDonald lives in Aylesbury, Bucks, where he has moved into a new flat and is now looking for parttime work. He went surfing on holiday in Cornwall and says he wants to travel around England in a camper-van! Richard Marshall is back with his parents in Croyde, Devon, which he says is very nice. He now attends a local college four days a week, would like to live on his own in future and says ‘hello’ to Sam Mukumba. Bex Maynard lives with twelve other young people in a house in Hove, East Sussex. She does cake decoration at college, a course in picture framing in Bognor Regis and does salsa dancing as well. In the future, she wants to get a job, do a hair and beauty course and move in with her boyfriend in London. She says hello to Lucy Meikle, Joanna, Caro, Iraina, Marianne, Charlie Tessloff, Kelly Allan and Tom Drywood. Ryan Mills lives with his grandmother in Kilsby, Warwickshire, and helps out at a local charity shop. He enjoyed coming to the last RMC open day, where he got to meet his old tutors and house-parents and wished them well. He’s spent the last four years studying art & design at college and he is now looking for paid employment. Callum Morgan lives in Yate, Bristol, studying animal care at college, amongst other things. He says that he enjoyed all of Ruskin Mill and that it was a really fun place to be. Neal Patel remains in London, studying catering at Hammersmith College. He has worked as a chef in a hotel and wants a full-time catering job in a restaurant. Katy Ponting is still living in Yate, in Bristol, where she is supported independently and has become an Avon sales leader! She says that she would like to get a house or flat with a garden and to get married and start a family. Ben Roberts is living in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, where he has helped decorate a mate’s place and has done a bit of mechanics work at a car business. He will be undergoing cognitive behaviour therapy sessions and has finished epilepsy training. He is hoping to find a parttime job somewhere. Sammy Roberts is still living in Stroud, Gloucestershire, where she edits the regular newsletter of Gloucestershire Voices, a self-advocacy group for people with learning difficulties. She is also part of a team of people who talk to people in local care homes about the quality of their lives and the support they receive, which keeps her very busy! She says hello to Sue Reed, Ian Blythe and Will Mercer. Anna Robertson lives in Alnwick, Northumberland, with live-in help. Since leaving the Mill, she has been cooking, swimming, reading books and watching plays, though she says that at the Mill, cooking was both the most useful and least liked activity she did! She hopes to come and visit soon! Robert Sisley lives with his parents in Lincoln, where he volunteers at a Young Enterprise venture at his old school and attends Lincoln College part-time. His family have moved to a new house with a large garden, which he hopes to make into a vegetable garden to produce food for the family and sell the surplus. He is also looking into getting some chickens as well! Christopher Teague is living with his parents in Yate, Bristol, where he does voluntary work at a tree nursery and a community flower-growing business. He enjoyed bird-watching and conservation whilst at the Mill and hopes to work in the field one day. He would like to thank Peter Skinner for all the help he gave him. Luke Watkins is living in Hereford in supported independence. He has finished a horticulture course at college and is now doing voluntary work in the local area. He plans to take driving lessons when he feels capable. Lyssa White lives in King’s Lynn in Norfolk, where she says she is consistently looking for work. She moved into her own flat in October 2010 after two years in supported living. She passes on her greetings to Ian Blythe, Marianne and Maria. Daniel Woolley is now living in supported independence in south Devon, having moved into his own flat just before Christmas. He does various activities at a farm he goes to regularly, such as woodwork, metalwork and cooking, and he is looking to get manual and meaningful tasks that will occupy his days and help him to get a paid job. John Wright has his own flat and a wonderful girlfriend in Newark, Nottinghamshire, which he says is great. He is starting to volunteer at his swimming club and wants to train as a swimming coach. Nicholas Wright is living in Bristol with roundthe-clock support to help him in his independence. He attends college, goes to a social network and has entered into a relationship. He says that he wants to get into a job working with computers. 67 “It literally saved my life” Ex-student, Charlie Avent at Heartshore Horses See article on page 10