Ayr Advertiser

Addiction recovery

- Stuart Reid stuart.reid@newsquest.co.uk

BOSSES at a recovery hub in Ayrshire are looking to take the service they provide to local people “to the next level”.

The River Garden project, based on the banks of the River Ayr at Auchincrui­ve, brings in people from across Ayrshire and beyond who are in recovery from drug and alcohol addiction.

They will stay at the site, between Ayr and Mossblown, for three years, where they will learn to live a life free from addiction through work-based rehabilita­tion that helps them develop new skills, build their self-esteem and learn how to work collaborat­ively with others.

On the project’s official website, River Garden Auchincrui­ve, as it’s officially known, is described as “a training and social enterprise developmen­t centre offering a residentia­l programme for people in the early stages of recovery from drug and/or alcohol addiction”.

Taking inspiratio­n from projects as far afield as Italy, Sweden and the United States, it aims not just to help people into long-term recovery but to reintegrat­e them into employment and mainstream society through abstinence, trust, firm boundaries, mutual support, respect for life and responsibi­lity.

Having been transforme­d around a decade ago, the facility has capacity to care for up to 24 residents, having taken on its first in 2017.

River Garden will welcome its first female residents later this year, after planning permission was granted in September 2023 for new residentia­l buildings for service users and staff, providing 36 additional bed spaces.

The ultimate aim is that it will be able to help up to 56 people at a time on their journeys of recovery.

A key part of each service user’s journey towards recovery involves engaging in meaningful work, and those staying on site take on jobs at the project, in the garden or cafe, to help prepare them for life away from Auchincrui­ve.

The cafe, known as The Bothy, is open to the public five days a week and is fast becoming hugely popular, with a series of five-star reviews on ratings website TripAdviso­r testifying to the high regard in which it’s held.

The Bothy has played a key role in establishi­ng River Garden’s status in the wider community since it opened its doors, though the initiative’s service users also produce vegetables and herbs for the cafe, and bespoke wooden products for the home and garden.

An events team has been set up too, and The Bothy has played host to legendary Scottish pop group The Bluebells, up-and-coming Scottish alternativ­e music band Constant Follower, and the cast of the short film Miraculous, including Scottish actors Colin McCredie and Tam Dean Burn.

Those projects, establishi­ng ever-closer links between River Garden and the wider public, are the building blocks that the team behind the initiative are intent on adding to in the years ahead.

According to official police figures, the number of drug deaths recorded in Ayrshire last year fell to 83 - the lowest annual total since 2017.

But with 707 drug deaths having been recorded in Ayrshire since that year, the steady fall in the number of lives lost to drugs in the area isn’t changing the River Garden outlook or approach one bit.

General manager Jardine Simpson said: “When people come here, we need the commitment from them that they are in recovery and they’re no longer stuck to their addiction.

“That’s the first main step in us being able to help them and making sure their life isn’t controlled by their addiction.

“When they’re here, they get involved in a lot of different things which can stand them well for when they leave here and go on and try and find work.

“We’ve had numerous success stories from people who have now had full-time employment for a number of years.

“This really can save someone’s life.”

Just one of the success stories mentioned was Harvey, who

 ?? ?? Images: River Garden Auchincrui­ve
Images: River Garden Auchincrui­ve
 ?? ?? Auchincrui­ve has helped so many people recover
Auchincrui­ve has helped so many people recover

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom