The Chronicle

Community’s carving out new Skills while saving the planet

- By HANNAH GRAHAM Chief reporter hannah.graham@reachplc.com

TUCKED away off a busy Walker street lies a hidden gem community group working to protect the planet and help people learn new skills.

It’s easy to miss Newcastle Wood Recycling’s Woodyard as you pass it on Welbeck Road, but stop inside and you’ll find a vibrant hub for local craftspeop­le and volunteers where nothing goes to waste.

The community interest company collects scrap and waste wood from individual­s and building companies across the North East and works to give it a new lease of life. At the Woodyard, people can pick up goodqualit­y timber for their DIY projects for much less than it would cost to buy it new, while some of what comes in is transforme­d into gorgeous furniture, planters and other items by volunteers. Last year, Newcastle Wood Recycling salvaged 349.1 tonnes of scrap wood, saving an estimated 174 tonnes of CO2. Collecting wood from building sites and working with major constructi­on firms in the region, they say they use less fuel than skip collection, reuse wood more efficientl­y than convention­al recycling, help prevent additional logging and never send wood to landfill.

On top of that, they aim to give people in the North East new, sustainabl­e skills and help get people into work. Working with ‘a wide range of disadvanta­ged people’ including ex-offenders and people with substance abuse or mental health issues, they aim to help people build confidence and selfesteem, gain practical skills and ‘overcome barriers to employment’.

After being unable to keep on its volunteers during the pandemic, the Woodyard, which has been open for eight years, has recently taken on new staff and is looking for volunteers to come forward to support its work and learn new skills. Staff are also looking at ways to expand and get more people down to visit, including considerin­g plans for a community cafe or for practical skills demonstrat­ions for the public.

Operations manager Jayne Patterson said: “Everything we get in we want to reuse in some way. For example, old palettes make perfect planters. At the moment we don’t have enough bodies to make them ourselves, so we work with volunteers at Blyth Man Shed to get them made, but eventually we will be making them ourselves again.

“We want to get back into doing bespoke projects: last year we made the planters for the palm trees for the Quayside for NE1 and we want to do more things like that.”

To do that, they’ll need more volunteers. The team are inviting ‘anyone who wants to get stuck in’ to come and help out, and to get in touch if they’d like to be involved and learn new skills.

It’s not just about giving volunteers and staff skills, the operations manager said. One of Newcastle Wood Recycling’s aims is also to help ordinary people enjoy the financial and mental health benefits of crafting something for themselves, offering friendly advice as well as affordable materials.

“It’s to encourage people to realise that it’s not as hard as you think it is to make things. I think that’s always the first hurdle for most people, they don’t know that they can do it,” she said. “All you really need is the right stuff, once you’ve got that it’s easy to make things, you’ve got YouTube and all sorts of things now which

can show you how to make things. If you give it a go and you mess up, 90% of the time it’s fixable.

“We try and sell everything here for cheaper than buying it new, but still at the right value, we don’t want to undercut ourselves and not be able to function, but we want it to be as affordable as possible.”

With a special discount offered to Walker residents on everything they sell, the wood recycling team are also especially keen to get their immediate local community involved. “We’re in Walker because it’s one of the lowest funded places in Newcastle, and we want to give back to a community that doesn’t have as much,” Jayne said. “Walker

residents all get a 10% discount and we deliver to them for free, we want to give them that facility to make things for themselves.” Among the volunteers already working in the woodyard there’s a friendly buzz, with a team spirit no doubt boosted by staff lunches, which they cook together on a stove which is, of course, heated by scrap wood. For 65-year-old expert de-nailer Peter Watt, a role in the Woodyard has helped him keep in touch with skills he learned over the course of a 40-year career working with profession­al timber merchants. He said: “I love doing this – I couldn’t work inside, I need to be outside.” Visit https:// www. welov e - wood.org/

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 ?? ?? The Woodyard in Walker Newcastle, Shop manager Rosie Robinson
The Woodyard in Walker Newcastle, Shop manager Rosie Robinson
 ?? ?? The Woodyard in Walker Newcastle, de-nailer Peter Watt
The Woodyard in Walker Newcastle, de-nailer Peter Watt
 ?? ?? Operations manager Jayne Patterson
Operations manager Jayne Patterson
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