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Cash granted for North Pennine dry stone-wall training

BBC Published Jun 13, 2010 Reviewed Jul 1, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
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The North Pennines AONB Partnership received £109,500 from the Heritage Lottery Fund to fund dry-stone walling training and graduate posts.
109500 GBP · funding
North Pennines AONB Partnership
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The funding will support four apprentices in dry-stone walling and two year-long graduate trainee posts.
4 · apprentices in dry-stone walling2 · year-long graduate trainee posts
North Pennines AONB Partnership
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The apprentices will undergo a 10-month training programme.
10 months · training programme duration
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The project will run over a four-year life.
4 years · project duration
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Chris Woodley-Stewart, Director of the North Pennines AONB Partnership, stated that the number of dry-stone wallers has been dwindling.
more than 0 · dry-stone wallers
Chris Woodley-Stewart, Director
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Funding has been granted to teach people the art of dry-stone walling in the North of England.

The North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) Partnership has won funding of £109,500 from the Heritage Lottery Fund.

It will fund four apprentices in dry-stone walling and two year-long graduate trainee posts.

The graduate posts will specialise in the North Pennines and the Northumberland Coast.

The graduates will learn biological recording techniques, how to produce farm environment plans, specialist species survey work, habitat restoration, interpretation and environmental education.

The four trainees will learn skills in the traditional craft of dry-stone walling.

The region's top dry-stone wallers will pass on their expertise to the apprentices, working on real walling jobs during their 10-month training programme.

Once they have passed their Dry Stone Walling Association tests the apprentices will be fully qualified dry-stone wallers and able to set up in business.

The Partnership said apprentices would learn skills to help conserve some of the region's "most beautiful landscapes for generations to come".

The first trainees are expected to be taken on in the autumn and the others will follow on over the four-year life of the project.

Chris Woodley-Stewart, the North Pennines AONB Partnership's Director. said dry-stone walls were an important feature of North Pennines landscape.

He said: "They need regular maintenance by skilled professionals to stay in good condition, but the numbers of dry-stone wallers have been dwindling.

"This funding will enable us to help prevent those skills from dying out and ensure that the North Pennines AONB continues to look loved and cared for.

"Equally valuable are the two graduate training places for the North Pennines and Northumberland Coast AONBs, which means there will be a new generation of people learning about our natural environment and passing their knowledge on to others."

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