Spoon carving workshop at NWT Sweet Briar Marshes (Wild Youth Action)

Spoon carving workshop at NWT Sweet Briar Marshes (Wild Youth Action)

By Norfolk Wildlife Trust

Join us for a free spoon carving workshop for ages 16-25 at NWT Sweet Briar Marshes

Date and time

Location

BMX track, Sloughbottom Park

Sloughbottom Park Norwich NR3 2EN United Kingdom

Good to know

Highlights

  • 3 hours
  • In person

About this event

Join us to learn the basics of spoon carving, led by NWT Reserve Assistant Laurie Stearn, and create your own hard-carved spoon to take home with you. We'll provide necessary materials and guide you through the craft process.

This creative workshop is suitable for young people aged 16-25 and will take place at NWT Sweet Briar Marshes.

Before you attend the workshop, you will be sent a document with useful information and if you are under 18 you will be sent a parental consent and personal risk assessment form, which we will need you to fill out and return to us in readiness for the session.

Please wear appropriate clothing and footwear for being outside in the cold and the wet. All other equipment will be provided.

Please note the exact start point will be shared with you a few days before the event.

A portaloo is available and Changing Places toilets are located at Sloughbottom Park.

Wild Youth Action and Building Foundations for the Future is funded thanks to support from National Lottery players and The National Lottery Heritage Fund.

Accessibility

Please contact us at youthaction@norfolkwildlifetrust.org.uk if you have any specific needs or requirements in order to make your experience of this event more enjoyable.

Image credit: Wiki commons

Organised by

Norfolk Wildlife Trust is the oldest Wildlife Trust in the country. The purchase of 400 acres of marsh at Cley on the north Norfolk coast in 1926 to be held ‘in perpetuity as a bird breeding sanctuary’ provided a blueprint for nature conservation which has now been replicated across the UK. Our vision for Norfolk: where the future of wildlife is protected and enhanced through sympathetic management and people are connected with and inspired by Norfolk’s wildlife and wild spaces.

Free
Oct 17 · 13:00 GMT+1