The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Perthshire care home hopes to nail timber donations

- ROSS GARDINER

Aspec ia l i s t Per thshire care home is seeking donations of timber for a unique in-house carpentry project that develops skills and produces luxury handcrafte­d items.

The carpentry workshop, opened five years ago at ASC in Balbeggie is an “i nv a l u a b l e ” asset for service users and residents at the facility, which caters to adults with learning disabiliti­es and challengin­g behaviour.

The workshop produces items for sale and donation to private individual­s and the 25 care homes run by Balhousie Care Group, of which ASC is a part of.

The workshop has just completed its second wheelchair-accessible wooden table for another Balhousie Care Group home in Rumbling Bridge.

Service users have started working on Christmas decoration­s and other items such as chopping boards and candlestic­ks.

However, in order to continue with their therapeuti­c exploits, the care home needs more donations of wood.

Heading up the ASC workshop is Bob Foulds, a former care worker at the facility, who developed it from scratch in a shed.

Running the workshop is now a full-time job for Bob, a retired RAF aeronautic­al engineer with a love of carpentry.

He said: “It’s a win-win for us at ASC because it’s a place where our service users can learn carpentry skills but also life skills, and it’s a safe, relaxing place for them. It operates similarly to a men’s shed.

“They can have a laugh, come in for a cup of tea and a chat. It really relaxes them. And at the same time we’re producing beautiful one-of-a-kind items for our sister care facilities.

“There’s strong demand for our items, among the care homes and from individual­s, through word of mouth – so much so that we’re running out of wood.

“We’d love to expand and fill orders from the general public, although I’m aware that the needs of the service users come first. I’m conscious of keeping order numbers small for that reason.”

Robin Wallace , operations manager for ASC, added: “The ASC workshop is an invaluable asset for so many reasons. It is teaching our service users important life lessons and skills and promoting independen­ce, which is what ASC is all about.”

 ??  ?? HELPING HAND: ASC supervisor Bob Foulds, right, assists a service user at the workshop in Balbeggie.
HELPING HAND: ASC supervisor Bob Foulds, right, assists a service user at the workshop in Balbeggie.

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