The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

LUCKY ME, LUCKY EWE!

Michael Alexander speaks to the founder of a recently formed North East Fife charity that is helping young people, through farming placements in animal husbandry and food production, and has ambitions to do more

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Come rain or shine, there’s always plenty of work to be done at Lucky Ewe whether that be milking, feeding, mucking out, weighing lambs or counting sheep. But the Fife charity is also striving to create a place where young people can go to build skills and confidence in the workplace. Since gaining its charity status in March 2020, Lucky Ewe has gained funding and attracted volunteers, working towards the goal of facilitati­ng farming placements in animal husbandry and food production.

This helps people to develop their skills, experience and provides a stepping stone towards future employment.

Each week, young people with additional support needs, and others who are simply struggling with life in the classroom and beyond, visit the charity’s flock of dairy sheep at Bonnyton Farm, near Largo.

Being outdoors and mucking in as part of a team gives them the opportunit­y to forget everything else in their life for a short time and helps build confidence.

The tangible benefits to families of young people with pronounced emotional needs saw Lucky Ewe chairwoman, Joan Brown, nominated as a Platinum Champion and invited to the Jubilee, where she was presented to the Duchess of Cornwall.

Buoyed by the success of the project so far, and following the economic and mental health impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic, the charity’s trustees and volunteers are stepping up their ambitions to develop a wider community presence at NHS Stratheden, outside Cupar.

Moving to this new location would allow them to increase their flock numbers and expand the experience­s they can offer to include more food crops, such as eggs, honey, fruit and vegetables.

However, the charity’s recent attempt to acquire the 71-acre site at Stratheden has been knocked back by NHS Fife. They now have until June 30 to appeal.

In an interview with The Courier, Lucky Ewe chairwoman Joan Brown explained why she thinks there should be “Lucky Ewes across the country”.

She also revealed how her experience­s as a secondary school teacher, and being the mother of a daughter with a learning disability, inspired her to set up the charity.

Towards the end of her career, the nowretired Auchmuty High School principal teacher of learning support had studied for a doctorate in post-school transition­s for young people with additional support needs in education.

Through her daughter Alana’s experience­s, as well as through her own profession­al life and research, she realised there “still isn’t enough post-school provision for the learners with additional support needs or young people experienci­ng emotional turmoil”.

This means they are often “not able to smoothly go on to the next step in life”.

She discovered that businesses wanting to take on apprentice­s didn’t have time to bring them on in a slow and easy way to foster confidence. It was with all these things in mind that Lucky Ewe was born.

“About five years before I retired from teaching at 60, I decided I wasn’t going to do what most teachers do – buy a camper van!” she said. “I think when you’ve got someone in your family who’s not soaring through and not finding things easy, you realise there’s a massive amount still needing done. So that’s when I thought – Sheep! Outdoors! Long before anyone said you should be outdoors because it’s good for your mental health!”

Five years before retirement, Joan, who lived on a farm as a young child, decided to get some agricultur­al experience by spending her Easter holidays on lambing placements through the Worldwide Opportunit­ies on Organic Farms (WWOOF) scheme.

But what she was really doing was laying the groundwork for Lucky Ewe.

At first she got a tenancy at Peat Inn, between Cupar and St Andrews. But when this fell through, Lucky Ewe, now incorporat­ed as a charitable organisati­on, began renting some land from now-retired Madras College teacher and former Cupar resident Pete Beaver, of Bonnyton Farm.

Lucky Ewe has been visited by numerous teenagers and young adults with different needs. They range from a traumatise­d lookedafte­r child, now 18, who was very depressed while at school, to another youngster who identifies as non-binary and is “on a journey”.

The interns help milk and feed the sheep, including one animal that two boys have named Spongebob. They help pack bags of sheared wool, clean and fill the water butt and clean poop from the stock tunnel.

But they are also given time to sit, chat and reflect over a hot drink, in a way that engenders therapeuti­c conditions and allows them to open up in a non-judgmental environmen­t.

Most of those attending are referred from services like Care Visions, Fife Council Pupil Support Services and Fife’s Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service.

Joan, who also sells sheep’s cheese for the charity, says the benefits have been tangible.

She was honoured when a parent nominated her for the Royal Platinum Award in recognitio­n of the efforts made by the charity to reduce anxiety and offer alternativ­e learning experience­s to young people. There’s

one sad story, however, that stands out when she talks about the establishm­ent of the charity and the needs it’s tapping into.

Having held their inaugural meeting in summer 2019, they moved to Bonnyton Farm in autumn 2019. Incorporat­ed as a charitable organisati­on on March 13 2020, the country went into Covid-19 lockdown 10 days later.

This meant that a 17-year-old lad who’d been accessing them through a local foster care trust was no longer able to attend – despite their attempts for the rules to be bent to allow him to do so.

“When he started coming to Lucky Ewe, he couldn’t even wheel a barrow,” recalls Joan.

“After three weeks he could lift a bale, wheel a barrow, stop a sheep in its tracks, do it all! Then Covid came along and unfortunat­ely he was prevented from coming. The trust felt they couldn’t take the chance.

“To cut a long story short, he took his own life in May 2020 just after he turned 18.

“He had been put into sheltered accommodat­ion when he turned 18, and a few weeks later he was dead. It was just shocking

– tragic! He had a lot of stuff going on in his life. I’m not saying it was because he couldn’t come to Lucky Ewe that he took his life. But it was the social isolation that killed him.”

Joan takes no pleasure in telling that story, but she hopes it helps highlight the serious problems some young people face and the hidden benefits the charity can bring.

Since then, they’ve got more funding and money for salaries from the National Lottery Community Fund and the Robertson Trust, among others. Lucky Ewe employs four parttime support workers and an administra­tor.

Joan first became interested in putting in an asset transfer for agricultur­al land at Stratheden when she was chair of local environmen­tal group Sustainabl­e Cupar.

Community Empowermen­t legislatio­n allows a properly constitute­d community body to take over a publicly owned asset that is not being well used.

Lucky Ewe got everything in order to make the community asset transfer applicatio­n.

Stratheden would be much more accessible than their current set-up, would be close to mental health facilities and could be developed to become sustainabl­e, they say.

However, after a long wait of two years, Lucky Ewe received a letter from NHS Fife on May 31 to say their applicatio­n had been rejected.

Reasons given included not providing sufficient evidence how Lucky Ewe intends to fund their proposal and concern that a building they want to use is in a state of

derelictio­n; not enough reasons for needing the extra land; insufficie­nt evidence of community support; infection control

concerns; and concerns that a lease could impinge any future developmen­t plans for Stratheden.

However, responding to this, Joan says: “There’s no problem with the NHS needing the land in future because all they need to do

is put a clause in the lease to say if they need it for purposes other than farming, then they can have it back at a year’s notice. We are not trying to stand in the NHS’S way!

“We are answering all their points. We are also framing it in a different context: a community farm in Cupar to benefit those with additional support needs. How cool is that? And we are willing to do the work!

“We are trying to make them realise it could be a massively good thing to do! And this sort of thing should be happening all over

the place.”

WHEN YOU’VE GOT SOMEONE WHO’S NOT FINDING THINGS EASY, YOU REALISE THERE’S A MASSIVE AMOUNT STILL NEEDING DONE

 ?? ?? CONFIDENT AND SKILFUL: Arwen Justice, 15, feeds Spongebob the lamb at Lucky Ewe.
CONFIDENT AND SKILFUL: Arwen Justice, 15, feeds Spongebob the lamb at Lucky Ewe.
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 ?? ?? FEEDING THE FLOCK: Robert Carr, 12, Arwen and farm support worker Colin Marshall looking after the sheep. Below, Lucky Ewe founder Joan Brown, who was nominated as a Platinum Champion. Pictures by Mhairi Edwards.
FEEDING THE FLOCK: Robert Carr, 12, Arwen and farm support worker Colin Marshall looking after the sheep. Below, Lucky Ewe founder Joan Brown, who was nominated as a Platinum Champion. Pictures by Mhairi Edwards.

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