
On the Mend
2023-12-13 • No comments • • Perth City
On the Mend is a learning and skills based upcycling project where the positive impacts of making and mending, on building self-esteem, good mental health, and a connected community are promoted. The project has no barriers to participation and encourages creativity, trying a new skill, repairing, reusing or repurposing rather than buying new. On the Mend works in partnership with the CATH Shop on the High Street. The CATH Shop is Revolve certified (a Zero Waste Scotland quality standard for reuse) and last year customers prevented 48,000 items from going to landfill. Between our existing shop on the High St and our new premises we want to highlight the journey donated goods take to being upcycled and all the environmental and personal benefits that can bring. This project will pave the way for a changing city centre and developing a resilient stronger greener economy that is accessible to all.
The On the Mend project has operated from various locations across Perth but our most recent, along the Ladeside had no heating and was damp. We were lucky, alongside other CATH projects, to be offered a vacant shop on the High St at a greatly reduced rent. On the Mend moved to our new home at the end of November. We have with little to no budget created a warm and welcoming upcycling space and true to the spirit of the project have completely furnished the space with reuse furniture.
Funding from the Community Investment Fund has meant we are able to offer upcycling groups on Wednesday 1-3 and Friday 1-3. These have been well attended and have generated interest with individuals wanting to volunteer to share skills in upholstery, sewing skills, upcycled clothing, knitting and crochet. We have also been approached as a venue for repair cafes and other community groups booking workshops to support wellbeing.
The On the Mend project proposal for the Green living fund would support us to
1. Continue to rent a property on Perth High Street with a focus on reuse, waste reduction and recycling, putting reuse and engagement with recycling at the centre of the community. Help to breathe some new life into a depleted city centre environment and make reuse the norm on the High Street.
2. Engage the community in recycling by offering open to all and free/low cost upcycling/crafting and making and mending opportunities. Many shoppers in Perth see the benefit of buying donated items during the cost of living crisis and this project would promote creative uses for items that would go to landfill.
3. Allow us to open this resource for longer hours to engage with more people.
4. Share skills across the community with increased volunteer involvement.

Community Eco Events in Pitlochry and Aberfeldy
2023-12-13 • No comments • • Highland
Pitlochry Community Action Trust (PCAT) in conjunction with the Aberfeldy Development Trust seek funding to stage two Eco Fairs, one in each town, next April (2024). The purpose of an Eco Fair is to provide opportunities for local people to engage with organisations and individuals who can help them use energy more efficiently, reduce their energy bills and their environmental footprint and help promote a more sustainable lifestyle to the whole community. The use of sustainable transport, including public transport, active travel, e-bikes and electric vehicles will be a theme of our next Eco Fair. Sustainable food, reduction of food waste and sustainable gardening along with reducing packaging waste and recycling are also part of our agenda.
Overall objectives are: to reduce the environmental impact of individuals and therefore the community. Specifically: • To encourage household energy saving through local energy advisors such as The HEAT Project, Warm Connections, Home Energy Scotland and Warm Homes Scotland. • To promote a more sustainable lifestyle to local people through local food initiatives such as Pitlochry Garden Share, • To promote active transport through businesses such as Escape Route (e-bikes) and government grants available to support the purchase of e-bikes, • To promote more sustainable travel, through public transport, Community Car Shares and electric vehicles.
We want to stage the Eco Fairs in our Town Halls partnered by The HEAT Project and Warm Connections. We need to hire these facilities and promote the event throughout our communities and outlying areas. Eco Fairs are family friendly events, and we want to put on activities for children and provide refreshments from sustainable sources to encourage families to attend the Fairs. We will market the Fairs in local magazines, in our schools, on our websites (www.pitlochryaction.org.uk/ and www.aberfeldydt.org/), as well as on those of our contributors, and through the distribution of flyers.
Participating organisations: The following organisations participated in a Pitlochry Energy Fair in November 2023. All reported that information was shared with enough individuals for it to be a worthwhile investment of their time and expressed interest in future events. The HEAT Project, Home Energy Scotland, Eolas Architects, Studio East Architects, RW Bell Green Energy, IS Plumbing and Heating Fife (Vaillant), Pitlochry Garden Share, and Escape Route.
In total around 50 people attended the event, with the Heat Project signing up 13 new clients. Activities for children enabled parents to engage with contributors in a relaxed way and free refreshments encouraged them to stay longer and discuss the potential of their new knowledge with one another and contributors.
Eco Fairs: If we receive funding we can expand on what we achieved on both our stalls in Pitlochry Coop and November’s event where we engaged with our community about what local support they needed in regard to both the ongoing Energy Crisis which an element of the Cost of Living Crisis and include an event in Aberfeldy and invite other organisations to participate including:
MG electric vehicles, who have already expressed their interest, Other electric vehicle dealers, Enterprise Car Share and CoMoUK Car Share, The Atholl Centre Food Bank and Community Larder, Breadalbane Community Larder, Handam Refill Shop, Glen Lyon Coffee Roasters and Wasted Degrees, Birdie’s Clothes Shop and Roobedoo Sustainable clothes, homeware and gifts, Aberfeldy & Pitlochry Repair Cafes, Healthiest Town, Aberfeldy and Citizens’ Advice, Dun Coillich Community Land Trust, Aberfeldy & Pitlochry Climate Cafes, and PKC Climate Action Team.
Outcomes: We will monitor the total number of people attending and seek feedback from participating organisations as to the number of clients arising from the Eco Fairs. We will produce a short report on each Fair for both Trusts and for Green Living should you fund us.
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Community Food Growing in Pitlochry
2023-12-11 • No comments • • Highland
INTRODUCTION
The Pitlochry Garden Share was founded in May 2022 by 5 local residents with the aims to facilitate food growing in our community, reduce food poverty, support mental and physical health and increase biodiversity in our gardens. We are an unincorporated organisation with currently 28 members. We share private gardens to grow organic food, sharing the work, the tools and the harvest, and we donate some of the produce to the food bank. We recently established a larger community garden and have been working hard to develop it. We also hold a stall in town once a month to share any excess produce and seedlings in exchange for donations that help us cover the costs of buying seeds (we are learning how to save seeds too). We engage with the wider community in various ways: for 2 years in a row we picked apples/plums in private gardens around town to avoid food waste and we organised our first apple pressing event this year. The excess produce from the gardens is also used at monthly community cooking events called the Open Kitchen, free to attend, where we share recipes and tips on preserving fresh produce to reduce food bills and food waste.
We collaborate with other organisations like the charities Tayside Woodland Partnership (creating a community woodland) and the Atholl Centre (food bank), and we also support the local Community Action Plan Trust by holding a stall at their events.
Our IMPACT this year
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No of Volunteers: 30
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No of volunteer hours: 1290h (garden & admin work)
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Produce grown: 650kg
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No of households we helped reduce food bills: 60
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Produce donated to the Food Bank: 70kg
PLANS FOR 2024
We have been developing the community garden and our plans for 2024 include the following three elements which we are seeking funding for:
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Part One – Build a 4m x 10m polytunnel to extend the growing season; build a 3m x 6m shed to store produce and provide a shelter for volunteers; build a rain catching system using IBC tanks and pump to create a steady water supply for the garden.
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Part Two – Create a child friendly area in the garden so parents can bring their children to learn about where their food comes from and grow their own vegetables.
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Part Three – Developing a fruit tree nursery to bring on fruit trees and bushes for future planting in the community garden. This will be used to share learning about grafting and other tree growing techniques. This will also create a free/or by donation supply for the wider community.
Supporting the project is a local Arboriculturalist, Woodland Ecologist & Horticulturist, an Ecologist & Master Shed Builder, and a Garden Manager. More information and photos available on our facebook page https://www.facebook.com/pitlochrygardenshare

Kinross-shire Repair Cafe
2023-12-08 • No comments • • Kinross-shire
Kinross-shire Climate Cafe is proposing to set up a Repair Cafe, video link - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UvIvvJl09dg.
This initiative would be the first of its kind in Kinross-shire, based on the experience of the Repair Cafes in Crieff, Pitlochry and Aberfeldy.
Our aims:
- encourage local people to reduce waste through repair of their broken items with a positive outcome of waste reduction and mitigation of climate change,
- reduce living costs as it is usually more cost effective to repair a good quality old item than to buy a new one,
- develop community links and exchange of expertise in the practical setting of Repair Café,
- strengthen our community in climate change adaptation with a supportive popup climate café,
- provide a swap shop facility to further reduce living costs and promote sustainable fashion.
Kinross-shire Repair Cafe would be a community-led project run by Kinross-shire Climate Café volunteers. The events would take place on four different weekend days in 2024 from 11 – 3pm in the local town halls. The format of the Café would be informal: a walk-in café where people come and bring their broken items to be repaired. Clients would not pay for the repairs but would pay for parts and materials used. There are two possible locations that we envisage for the location to widen the area of provision: Kinross and Milnathort. But the Repair Café would also be providing repairs and working with a wider Kinross-shire community with the total population in excess of 11,000.
The events would be advertised through the local press, leaflet distribution at Kinross Farmers Markets, social media and Loch Leven Community Library. The project will support the local economy by involving small local businesses with repair expertise, links with the future Repairers have been made. It will create opportunities for people with skills currently out of employment or retired who are experts and craftsmen. The repair Café would involve 10 volunteers for each event, which amounts to 200 volunteer hours.
One of the aims of the project is to reduce the living costs as through repair you lower your spendings in the long term especially if items that are broken are of better quality. This helps to reduce the effect of inflation on your household budget.
Finally, as part of Repair Café we would also hold a swap shop to reduce textile waste and a pop-up climate café to have friendly chats on different aspects of climate change adaptation and how to cope with the climate change crisis.

Bioblitz - raising awareness of our local wildlife, insects and plants
2023-12-13 • No comments • • Eastern Perthshire
We want to raise awareness of our local habitat and teach people to recognise local wildlife, insects and plants and to understand their needs for survival. We plan to conduct regular mini biolitzes asking people to look out for and record items they see over a short period of time (up to 24 hours). These will lead up to a larger raising awareness event in the Wellmeadow in summer 2024 to further engage the community.
Community greenspace is important. It contributes to our mental well-being and helps us keep fit. It can help us provide locally sourced, excellent quality food. And it can help nature. More and more species, many of them once common, are threatened as habitats are degraded. Britain has lost 97% of its flower-rich meadows, and garden birds, bumblebees and butterflies are in serious decline.
BiodiversityBlair seeks to increase the variety of life in the area to the benefit of the natural world and the people who live here.
Costs include:
National trust kits: 15 x nestbox (£13.99) and 5 x butterfly hibernation house (£18.99). Total £305
Rattray Common - solar panelled battery operated wifi system for bird box camera - 2 x £219.99 = £440
8 x birdboxes = £240 1 x Insect tower = £40 1 x Insect Hotel = £30 Feeders £50.
Supply of bird food £200
Running event - £400
Admin & finance - £170
Total = £1,705

Kirkmichael Community Garden
2023-12-13 • 1 comment • • Eastern Perthshire
Quick Summary
Kirkmichael Community Garden are a charity, just starting out, and are looking for support to help fund the development of our garden. This money would go towards building raised beds, our welfare shed and potting/ tool sheds. We are hoping to get cracking with this work and the growing this spring, so we have produce to share with the whole community in the summer time. We have 23 volunteers lined up and the primary schools kids will have thier own space in the garden to learn about growing.
Description
is a SCIO established in November 2022, following around 1.5 years of work by our association to source land and consult with the community. We took ownership of 0.8 acres of land in June 2023, donated to the charity by a local land owner. We have a professional design, which includes community growing plots, 15m polytunnel, area of the primary school and scouts, wild flower area, sensory area and a large welfare shed, with potting/ tool shed.
We carried out a survey through our local newsgroup in Mid 2021 with 17 positive responses of local people, since then we held a community meeting in Summer 2023, to give a project update and carry out consultation on what the community would like to see in the garden. We currently operate a volunteer WhatsApp group which has 23 members, from this around 10 have volunteered so far with some of the initial development work. Once the garden is developed and ready for planting we plan to hold weekly volunteer session.
When we acquired the land we immediately dug a small plot with the school kids, so they could get started this season. They sowed seeds and harvested the first produce in October for their harvest assembly. Longer term, we plan to have raised beds and a small polytunnel for them to learn from, we have agreed with the Craig Loudon that the kids will work towards the RHS School Gardener Award next term, which the charity plan to support as much as possible.
We also eventually plan to deliver workshops for local to come and learn, not just for the community garden but to increase their skills for tending their own garden.
We have just been grant planning permission for the design and are hoping to get started with the main development this Spring.
Resilience
The heart of this project is about creating space so the community can grow food. Investment in this project will have an amazing, positive impact on the village now and for generations to come. Not only will the garden provide space for this it will also facilitate learning and spark interest in growing your own. We plan to have a large polytunnel also to optimise the growing season.
Within the garden there will also be wild flower areas to attract pollinators and to improve biodiversity, this work is already underway. The kids will also have a bug hotel. Kirkmichael does not have any significant outdoor space for the community, except a small seating area in front of the village shop. The garden will provide a space for outdoor community gatherings. There will also be space set aside for people to come and spend time, reflect and relax.
The garden produce will be given to our volunteer group for free, with the rest being offered to the community for an optional donation, through our own veg shack and through the village shop. Those who are adversely effected by the cost of living crisis can directly benefit from getting his healthy food from the garden. In addition, having the food available in the village could mean there is less need to travel to Blairgowrie and Pitlochry to food.
Engagement
The community garden will provide a space for local people to come together to enjoy being outside in nature, while starting new or strengthen friendships, helping to address social isolation particularly for those who live alone in this rural area. Many people who live alone can lack the confidence to connect with others in a social setting, the garden creates a great opportunity for people to come and engage a little bit or a lot, just helping with odd jobs, so they can gradually develop stronger relationships in this setting.
We plan to hold 2 volunteering sessions per week, where locals can come and help with the garden up keep. This will be a great opportunity for people again to connect and learn where guidance can be given on experience can be shared. We have already had a lot of interest in this, people with all level of experience and skills. We will offer the fresh, organic produce to the community as well as cooking workshops. Gathering to share recipes and good food will create a nice sense of community, health and well-being.
Community Action Plan
The best expression of local priorities can be found in the recently updated Mount Blair Community Action Plan (CAP). Amongst the issues highlighted by the CAP that align with the Community Garden project include the need to build better community involvement, spirit and resilience, better local facilities (particularly for children), the desire to tackle areas of abandoned or undeveloped land and the encouragement of projects that help establish, nurture or protect natural habitats and eco-systems.
The community survey activity that informs the CAP outcomes was undertaken in early 2022, so one huge issue it does not reflect are the effects of the tanking of the UK economy in September 2022, the war in Ukraine and the corresponding crises in inflation and the cost-of-living. These events bought the issue of increasing numbers of local households falling into food and fuel poverty into sharp focus. This has cast a new light on the ambitions of Garden which provides people with the opportunity and means to grow their own food.

Greener Glenfarg group
2023-12-12 • No comments • • Kinross-shire
Greener Glenfarg is an informal organisation, formed in February 2023 with the aim of informing and supporting Glenfarg to become a greener community. Our activities are designed to increase awareness of the climate crisis and provide verified information on the ways an individual can help to tackle climate change.
We looked at what issues were already being addressed in the village, such as the Community Transport initiative, identified gaps, asked the residents what extra could be done and set about putting plans into action.
In the last nine months we have arranged a trip to the V&A plastics exhibition, held two cinema events on the climate crisis, organised clothes swaps and tool shares, carried out litter picking, visited rewilding and flood mitigation projects, and held a Sustainable Transport workshop which led to the creation of the village's e-bike loan scheme "Freewheelers". These free events have been funded through the Community Council's access to windfarm funds.
We are now seeking funding to support our activities in early 2024. These will include an Energy Fair, cinema events, clothes swaps, tool shares and a talk /discussion led by an applied environmentalist with knowledge of the Binn Eco Park. We have just started a Glenfarg Grow Club to share skills, seeds and produce. The first meeting was so successful, with a room full of participants, that we are now seeking funds to support this new club for its first year. All these activities will help us to be part of the work to tackle climate change, but will also assist individuals with the cost of living crisis, as they will -
- increase public awareness and engage our community in tackling climate change
- discourage purchasing and reduce waste by sharing items within the community
- inform residents on how to reduce energy consumption, make use of green energy and save on energy costs
- explore ways in which the community can move forward with the new recycling technologies and community energy projects
- explore possibilities for rewilding and flood mitigation

Reducing Surplus Food Waste and making it available to all
2023-12-13 • No comments • • Eastern Perthshire
Our project collects surplus food from the Blairgowrie Tesco, Sainsburys, Lidl and 2 Co-op supermarkets and utilises it in several ways:
Saturday & Wednesday lunch clubs, Home cooked frozen meals, Surplus food store and Community larders
Over the past 2 years we have saved over 100 tonnes of food from going to waste. The store is open to all and offers surplus food for free or a donation to help with running costs and hance has a major impact on reducing waste as well as dramatically redcuing food purchase bills for locals.
We are applying for funding to help with the running costs of the BaRI Building which houses our store but also is a base for local mental health support provided by service providers as well as a meeting place for community groups etc. Running the building costs:
£12,500 rent £7,400 electricity
The store is open 4 times per week with people in the building to setup, run and close totalling 12 hours per week hence around 1/3 of working week. We are applying for £3,000 to help cover the rent and utilities to allow us to continue to reduce surplus food.
Glenfarg Connectivity
2023-11-22 • No comments • • Kinross-shire
Glenfarg Community Transport Group is a registered charity regulated by OSCR. We registered as a charity just over twelve months ago and in that time have increased bus travel from Glenfarg to Kinross from 150 to 400 passengers per week.
We would like to expand our offering in the form of an houlry servcie to Perth which will offer the residence of Glenfarg and surrounding areas a means to travel without the need of a car.
Our service is aimed at the passanger and provides a complete service including social interaction and connectivity. We have funding in place to oppperate a service but could enhance the delivery of this project with additional funding which would assist us in obtaining licences for a passenger app, additional insurance premiums and other oncosts.
Crieff In Leaf
2023-12-04 • No comments • • Strathearn & Strathallan
Crieff In Leaf has operated as a successful environmental group which will be celebrating its 30th Anniversary in 2024. The group is comprised purely of volunteers who enhance the environment of this historic tourist centre. Their operating base is at Alichmore Road, where there is presently a limited resource for composting. The group are required to purchase compost which is costly in terms of monetary value and environmental impact. Given their environmental credentials and conscience, they use peat free compost which commands a higher price/cost. Whilst they endeavour to compost some of the downtakings, it has been necessary to make up to 4 trips per week to the Crieff Recycling Centre on Broich Road, using their Great Wall Stead vehicle which has a relatively high emission rating of 200 g /km. The distance from Crieff to the recycling centre is approximately 3km. The distance fron Crieff to the Alichmore Road site is significatly less. The needs of the group are to relocate all composting to the Alichmore site and to become self sufficient in compost. There is also a drive to more sustainable planting and to use the current polytunnels to overwinter plants etc; both polytunnels require re skinning.
Should this application be successful, this will allow the group to purchase the following
4 x 189 litre rotating composting bins
1 x Hyundai Chipper/Shredder
4 x Standard Composting Bins
Reskinning of Polytunnels and Associated Sundries