Summers at Pinkery

Attracting inner city teenagers to get to know one of their most beautiful public assets - Exmoor National Park

 

See eXfactor film (Pinkery 2005)

Listen to Radio Programme (Pinkery 2006)

See an example of a film made in Film Week – Rambling on Exmoor                            (Raised in Somalia, a refugee in Bristol, one young man discovers the peace of Exmoor to be an inspiration for reflections on identity & belonging).

 

During the summers of 2005 and 2006 we worked in partnership with several Bristol-based organisations to run courses at Pinkery Residential Centre in Exmoor National Park.

Over each summer’s six week period we ran a series of themed weeks where groups participated in range of creative workshops (including music, dance, film making, martial arts and survival activities) and outdoor pursuits (including sailing, windsurfing, quad biking, canoeing, beach sports, surfing, body boarding, climbing, mountain biking, falconry and horse riding). 

The Project was established in partnership with Exmoor National Park Authority to develop long term, sustainable relationships with Exmoor for a wide range of newcomers.  We also succeeded in showing how a week-long stay can reap a multiplicity of simultaneous benefits that are reflected in the remits and strategies of a wide range of government agencies and funding bodies:

  • Developing creativity (Arts Council)
  • Health and wellbeing - good food & exercise, fun, freedom & power (The Department of Health)
  • Connecting Communities (The Home Office; Commission for Racial Equality)
  • Developing social skills, teamwork and confidence (DfES; Home Office)
  • Participation in sport and outdoor activities (Sport England)
  • Accessing and developing an understanding of the countryside, conservation & sustainability (DfES; Defra)
  • Exposure to positive role models, the chance to reflect, expand horizons, self-development (Connexions, Youth Justice Board, Home Office)
  • Supporting rural economies (Defra, RDA)

The following organisations participated:

Ashley Youth Project, Connexions,  Full Circle, Channel 0, Knowle West Media Project,  Bread Youth Project’s Kumani Group, Lawrence Weston Youth Group, Bristol City Academy,  Dance Bristol, St Paul’s & Felix Road Adventure Playgrounds, The Mede, Inns Court (Bristol City Council Young People’s Services), Positive Futures’ Project X in Knowle West, Knowle West Media Centre, Young Bristol, Youth Music Action Zone.  Many young people were referred by Social Services.

Our action research project has shown the value for money that can be achieved through the use of public funds to enable people to access the countryside who may not normally do so and the huge range of benefits that are gained when people can step out of the normal environment that shapes them.  It has also shown something that would probably come as a shock to much of the British public -- just how little opportunity and choice many people in our society have to do simply that.

Please see The eX Factor Project-- Blueprint & Findings for more information on the design and impact of the project.

"Darren, has been working with me for about a year and he never really took part, he was always on the peripheral, letting other people get on with the work, didn’t really have the confidence, just watching. But he came to Pinkery, and he learned a lot, he worked hard, and since we’ve come back, he’s just been so much more confident… He’s totally turned around from being right on the edge to being right in the centre. It’s really paid off for him. He’s really going places. I think it’s affected other parts of his life, as well, that sort of confidence.”
Music Tutor, Summers at Pinkery