December’s Guardian Spotlight: Tom
December 18, 2014
This month we caught up with Tom Hepworth; volunteer at the Rural Arts Centre at Stepney City Farm.
Having joined Dot Dot Dot in October, Tom has already given over 50 hours of his time assisting at the wood workshop, helping to build and organise projects and workshops for the local community as well as developing the Rural Arts Centre’s workspace itself.
Completed in 2013, the Rural Arts Centre is a unique facility amongst all of London’s City Farms. It aims to preserve and promote those trades, crafts and arts which were once an intrinsic part of our daily lives but are now at risk of being lost from today’s society. It hopes to achieve this through environment, observation, engagement and education. A working city farm, in one of the poorest and most crowded Boroughs in the UK, Stepney City Farm is a valuable community asset. It helps the local community in a variety of ways including; providing volunteering opportunities, open green areas for neighbours to meet and children to play, and a stimulating setting for schools to provide an alternative to classroombased learning.
Every Saturday Tom facilitates the open studio, where the public are invited in to learn about the rural arts and traditional woodwork that Tom specialises in. Most recently Stepney City Farm held a ‘Craft your own Christmas’ Crafty Saturday where people joined Tom and other resident artists to make Christmas gifts and cards as well as hand carved Christmas Elves. Tom also works closely with the Rural Arts Centre delivering free workshops for unemployed residents of Tower Hamlets.
Tom told us a little more about his experience volunteering:
“The variety of jobs and projects I am involved in is great, however it’s the interaction with the public and other farm volunteers, particularly on Crafty Saturdays, which I find most satisfying and rewarding. Children love the workshop space; the sight of tools and old wooden machines that they’ve never seen before, the chance to pick up and play with wood shavings, the experience of seeing people working and making things that they wouldn’t normally get to see, and the overall sensory excitement of workshop. It’s a real pleasure to see their faces light up and to answer their questions.
A similar childlike joy is visible in the adults who enter our space and have the opportunity to try wood turning on a traditional pole-lathe, or to make a functional spatula on a hand-built shave horse. These open studio sessions spark inspiration for further involvement and an excitement at the possibility of learning new skills or pursuing alternative forms of employment. They also help the farm to provide a positive and interactive space for local people to spend time, for free, as families or as individuals. Children and adults alike have the opportunity to engage with sights, people and ideas that they might otherwise never have, especially if they have lived their whole lives in the centre of London.”
Get involved
There are number of volunteering opportunities at Stepney City Farm ranging from weekly drop in sessions lending a hand with whatever is needed, to time spent developing the farm’s garden, undertaking animal duties or getting involved in the farm’s youth and education programme.
- Find out more about volunteering opportunities at Stepney City Farm
- Subscribe to the Dot Dot Dot newsletter for updates from the team
Summer Garden Party
August 20, 2014
Every few months we hold a little party for our guardians, local residents and our various partners and it always manages to put a smile on my face. Last week we held our Summer Garden Party at a housing estate in Poplar where we have been working for the past few years. It was chance for all of our guardians, living in various parts of London, to come together to meet each other and swap volunteer stories and generally have a nice evening in sun. A particular highlight for me was that previous Dot Dot Dot guardians also came along and said that they still felt a strong connection to Dot Dot Dot and the other guardians – amazing!
It was also great to have various local residents come along including members from the resident’s association board – this gave the new guardians a chance to introduce themselves and generally break the initial ice of moving in somewhere new.
Of course a highlight for many was the wonderful food provided by FoodCycle, an amazing organisation creating delicious dishes out of food waste. We enjoyed a selection of various cakes and savoury snacks including Dot Dot Dot Lizzie’s favourite, the vegetarian sausage rolls – which were very quickly devoured by all.
Bring on the next party!