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Posts in community development
Seeking your ideas

One of the nicest things about the programs run at a neighbourhood house is that they typically emerge from the local community.

We love helping people in the neighbourhood incubate their workshop idea, share their hobby or even share their professional talent with their neighbours, and it’s rewarding to think that our house has helped many people kick off their small business.

Currently Matthew is running regular guitar lessons and Manu recently ran the Chai Tea Workshop, the first of many cultural cooking experiences she hopes to share. Louisa is sharing her talents through the Art in the Shed classes and even the sewing machine workshops run by Gordon this term were a recommendation from another local, Louise, who told us how great he was.

And, now is the time of the year we ask you to put your thinking caps on, as we embark on program planning for second semester.

If you have a workshop or short course you’d like to run yourself for the community please email or call us on 9499 7227 and talk to Leanne. If you have any recommendations for a great workshop or activity you’ve been part of elsewhere and can send us the contact details for who ran it please also let us know. Or any other ideas of things we should do … we’re fans of new ideas here at ACC!

We’ll be working on the program early June, with a plan to have our brochure out and ready for letterboxing by the time school holidays roll around.

We’re looking forward to your input.

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A fancy new trophy

Kalimna, Jenny and I went along to the NHVic lunch on Tuesday and came back with the Fiona Richardson Gender Equity Award for 2021, for Women in the Shed.

It has been a collective effort to get this program up and running, and we thank all the women in the community who suggested that we needed a dedicated women’s shed program and then joined in, and also Jen Dentoom who taught the program in its infancy. Her relaxed kindness and inclusive can-do attitude really set the tone.

We’re super pleased that it has been so popular in our community, and it is lovely to be recognised by our industry peak body.

We’re just a little neighbourhood house in the scheme of things and it’s great that we can get interesting programs like this off the ground and also get the story out.

We’ll be looking forward to welcoming more women to the program in terms 3 and 4. We now run it three days a week, with two tutors (Jen and Maylei).

An invitation

“Hello earth” - Kate Bush*

Leanne here again … You know that when Melbourne was settled, our little pocket, nestled in the fertile banks of 3 rivers - the Yarra, Darebin Creek and Merri Creek was the food bowl of Melbourne as it emerged right? Fulham Grange (hello Fulham Road, hello Grange Road) was the farm owned by the Perry family (hello Perry Street) that was a flourishing orchard and became a massive agricultural business - the biggest orchard, tree nursery and cannery in Melbourne. And the flood plains of Darebin Creek were Chinese market gardens … an agricultural paradise …

But obviously the Perry brothers and the Chinese immigrants who arrived with the gold rush weren’t the first people hanging out here right? And so we can presume, assume and see (from the scar trees etc. along the river and creeks for example) that this was also a pretty attractive place to live well for the First Nations people that were here before us, the Wurrundjeri woiwurrung, our pre-invasion predecessors proudly living life on the north side (that’s right, specifically not the south side) of the Yarra.

Reconciliation week is fast approaching and this year we are going to do the spiritual healing trail through Darebin Parklands with our friends at Jika Jika Community Centre as an active process to contemplate National Reconciliation. You can join us at 11am on Tuesday 1 June. We’ll start at ACC, do the walk and come back here to share lunch together.

On the walk I suspect I will be thinking about:

  1. This episode of The First Australians series that was shown on SBS quite a few years ago now. I watched it at the time and I often think about it. If you don’t know about what happened to our former landowners, the Wurrundjeri people, post-colonisation, watch it as your crash course. It is so eye-opening, and sad, and then temporarily hopeful and tragically sad again.

  2. Lydia Thorpe. She is now one of our Federal senators. And no matter your politics I find it so interesting to see her targeted focus, her passion and the clarity of her voice as a young, unapologetic and uncompromising First Nations advocate. I am sure Fitzroy High would be pretty proud to have participated in her education. I follow her on Twitter.

  3. My time in State government. I worked in the environment department, where it was soon clear that ‘the cultural load’ of being a First Nations spokesperson or representative for all the consultation processes and welcomes etc. - for anyone who put their hand up - became quickly overwhelming. But at the same time it’s so important to have First Nations voices right? Oh it’s not simple.

  4. My time at University. In particular I took ‘Aboriginal History’ the very first year it ran at Melbourne University. It was an amazing course because a). it seemed every First Nations political activist in Melbourne was there to robustly participate, heckle and correct each lecture, and b). Patrick, the lecturer who conceived of the course had previously taught Irish History, and had himself been the colonised … and it was quite a turn of the tables for him to set up this course and then be lumped in with the other British folk - and be treated as the coloniser.

Hopefully you’ll have your own experiences and thoughts to consider as we wander together through our collective backyard. Or perhaps you’d just like to recognise the importance of doing something (a thoughtful walk is as good a place to start as any) and/or show support. We’d love you to join us. Register here and we’ll see you on Tuesday 1 June at 11am!

*love

In the shed…

Hi Leanne here. This week I got to escape the paperwork and spend a day in the Community Shed with the Thursday Women in the Shed group. How fun!

It was just their second class and they were finishing off their first project, a gorgeous cherrywood chopping board. To make these they’ve used a variety of handsaws along with jigsaws for cutting, and planers, rasps and files for shaping. Then they’ve practised hand sanding, explored the orbital sander and the mouse sander, and also checked out all the grades of sandpaper.

This week in the morning we looked at finishes - beeswax was our go-to as a food safe option, but we also talked about estapol and danish/other oil, and had a practical intro to shellac and French polishing.

In the afternoon we briefly used the drop saw and looked at screws and nails, practised countersinking both, had a crack with the electric drill and all the bits … and started to think about putty for filling etc.

The women also started to think about and plan for the next project they will be self-selecting.

ACC is pretty pleased to let you know that this program that has been so popular has just been announced as a State finalist for the Fiona Richardson Gender Equity Award 2021, by our peak body NHVic. We’re proud to have pioneered it. Lots of other houses are running similar programs now - and we’re sharing our model and hoping that heaps of women can build skills and confidence - and local friendships - from participating in the locally adapted versions of this course that are popping up in metro and rural areas all across Victoria!

Nails and screws … and why you’d take the time to countersink

Nails and screws … and why you’d take the time to countersink

Shellac … and the bits and bobs

Shellac … and the bits and bobs

Find out more about all the amazing and cool things that are incubated in neighbourhood houses here!

Find out more about all the amazing and cool things that have recently been incubated in neighbourhood houses here!