The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Alistair’s wooden Wild West haven in running for Shed of Year award

- By tracey bryce

FOR decades, Alistair Baranowski loved nothing more than watching Wild West movies – now he makes them himself in his very own deadwood town!

The 62-year-old is the proud owner of the Tranquilit­y Saloon – one of the spectacula­r Scottish sheds shortliste­d in this year’s Cuprinol Shed of the Year competitio­n.

The Saloon, which takes pride of place in Alistair’s two-acre garden in Forgue, Aberdeensh­ire, has beaten off stiff competitio­n from almost 3000 spectacula­r sheds to make it to the 2016 final.

The shortlist covers everything from Star Wars to crocodiles, hydraulics to Viking hideouts, 360-degree rotating floors to entire shed villages.

And Alistair’s old American style town is up there with the contenders. It may be in Scotland, but stepping into the Tranquilit­y Saloon, you’d swear you were way out west.

It’s just one of the buildings in the cowboy town, which also includes a jail, general store, telegraph office, bank and barber shop.

Work started on the project 12 years ago after the former high school teacher and postmaster took early retirement and set up his own Wild West enthusiast society, the Northern Rough Riders.

The now 35-strong group meet weekly for filming, shootout re-enactments or just to play cards and enjoy a drink in the saloon – with a bring-your-own-bottle policy obviously as it’s not licensed!

Alistair also opens up the town to the public three times a year.

“I’ve loved Wild West movies for as long as I can remember,” he said.

“My fascinatio­n started when I would go to matinees at the cinema in the days before we had a TV.

“There was always a Western on. Then when we got a TV and there was one on almost every night.

“There’s a certain romance about a man being alone in the wilderness – I just love it.”

Alistair started building the Tranquilit­y Saloon back in 2005, but with no previous woodworkin­g experience or indeed tools, it took several years – and fellow enthusiast­s – to bring it up to scratch.

“People are certainly impressed… they say it’s quite an incredible shed!” he laughed.

“I love hanging out in the Saloon. I spend a lot of time there. And it’s great on our open days. It really brings the community together.”

The Tranquilit­y Saloon is just one of the many wacky, wonderful and extravagan­t Scottish sheds to have made the shortlist.

Jim Sherrit’s three-man nuclear bunker is another finalist.

The father-of-five has spent four-and-a-half years pouring his heart into creating Dun25 – a completely restored Royal Observer Corps nuclear monitoring post.

Jim, from Brechin, has had a fascinatio­n with all things nuclear since his days in the TA.

“I never knew about the Royal Observer Corps or what they did until 2011 when I was given two petrol generators as ‘something to do’,” the recycling plant worker said.

“I can never sit still, so I’m always looking for something new to keep me busy. I’m a special constable and a community councillor in my spare time... I like to be busy.

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