GRANTS totalling more than £10,000 have been awarded to 12 grassroot groups and charities who are using nature to improve people’s quality of life.
The Nature Heals Seed Fund was launched by the Dorset Community Foundation in partnership with Dorset High Sheriff Sibyl Fine King who has made promoting the healing power of the natural world as one of the themes of her shrieval year.
The fund is aimed at small projects using nature to benefit people.
West Bay Discovery Centre has been awarded £500 to run children’s art workshops to help them appreciate the geology and the fossils of the cliffs and beaches at West Bay. The first workshop saw youngsters aged three spend a day at the beach to create their own cliff formations using sand, cardboard and stones to help understand how they are formed over millions of years. The next workshop will see them create cyanotype photographs – using sunlight to expose and ‘fix’ shadows left by objects.
Staff member Liz Bryant said the workshops will help young people appreciate the geology at West Bay in a new and creative way.
He said: “They had a really lovely day at the beach and it was nice to see so many families.
“The children were able to explore and celebrate not just how it looks but what it is made from, how old is it, where has it come from, and what does it mean to us in our lives now and in the future.”
The Big Yellow Bus Garden Project community garden at Shillingstone, near Sturminster Newton, has been awarded £1,000 for adaptive tools, as well as items like kneelers and portable sunshades, to help older people and those with disabilities take part in horticultural activities.
The four acre site has a community orchard, growing space and formal gardens and is used by young people, older people, refugees and adults with disabilities. A third of the food grown goes to Sturminster Foodbank, a third to Blandford Foodbank and the rest taken home by gardeners.
Founder Paul Williams said: “The grant will help us make the garden more accessible to people so we are very pleased. We want as many people as possible to be out enjoying working in the garden.
“People get real satisfaction and a feeling of wellbeing from knowing they are helping to grow produce that is feeding people. When you plant a seed and nurture it, seeing it grow actually feeds you back and when people see they have produced a crop of potatoes or carrots, the feeling of self-worth in them is palpable.”
Dorset Community Foundation director Grant Robson said he is proud to have connected so many worthwhile projects with a donor who cares so much about using nature as a healing tool. “We are very thankful for Sybil’s support for this fund and delighted that her generosity will fuel so much good work.
“These are all small projects but they are having a huge impact.”
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