About Di
Creative, Geek & Entrepreneur
Di Winn: Redefining Work since 2011
Hi, my name is Di Winn and I am a disabled, lesbian creative, geek and entrepreneur. Until 2011 I worked as a professional driver, at first on my ordinary car licence and then as an HGV driver, licenced for all classes of wagon.
In September 2011 I had an accient at work that changed my life forever and, just like Bethany Hamilton (Soul Survivor), I had to learn to do things differently. This happened big time for me in December 2013, when I purchased land in Cornwall to change from Field to Farm, and that was what I classed as my rehabilitation.
This accident at work sent me on an incredible journey and the Yorkshire Grit in me saw me always strive for recovery, rather than to simply accept my fate. I continue that way to this day, but as I age, the battle is getting harder.

How my recovery Began: The Axe Head Project
This project had been a lifetime’s dream to buy land, make it in to a smallholding and get to build on it. Lots! In December 2013, the opportunity to take ownership of just under 13 acres of agricultural land came about and the dream and the project was on, From Field to Farm.

The land was near Helston, Cornwall and we named it Axe Head Farm. The name because as you can see in the photo that shows the land that stands out as ploughed, the land looked just like an Axe. The view of the sea was from the blade of the axe. For Cornwall, it was relatively flat too.
The purchase came about when I received some compensation following an accident at work as an HGV driver, that nearly saw me losing my right leg from just below the knee. The doctor told me that 76% of people with this sort of injury, never make a full recovery. I wasn’t OK with that.
When the land was purchased in 2013, I wasn’t long since off crutches, having spent the first 6 months after my accident in 2011 in a wheelchair. I was a long way off fit and strong. That was the point of the project. Rehabilitation. I was determined that I was going to be in the 24% of people that made some sort of recovery, not the 76% that didn’t.
When I first arrived at the land in January 2014, I struggled to walk around the first field (the one that makes the base of the axe’s handle) once. I kept going, building up to walking around the first field 5 times, before walking around the first two fields, adding more and more on, until by May 2014 I could walk around all three fields 5 times. The land, and my rehabilitation pup, Bob, aided my recovery at a speed I’d never have achieved without such strong incentive.
Other than the first set of gates at the entrance and the fence and gate beyond that, all of the work was either done by me on my own, or with the help of some very brave and willing friends and family. My arms where aided by an ever-growing collection of clamps of varying types and sizes! The groundworks were all done by me, sometimes with a digger and dumper, sometimes by the use of a wheelbarrow and shovel, depending on the amount of money I had that month.
I am adding in to the project write up a multitude of pictures, and as much as possible, I have put them in some sort of order of the works as they were undertaken.




















The plan for the produce was to sell it from the Axe Head Street Food catering trailer up the lane from the farm. Selling the eggs for 50p each rather than 6 for a £1, and the pigs by the sausage or the slice. It was a great plan, but again had to all be done by me and that was just not possible. So much so, it was easy to finally agree to selling up.









It won’t surprise anyone who knows me to know that I am now a vegan. I only support high welfare farming. I’m not the type of vegan who thinks they should lecture anyone for their lifestyle choices, but the experience of keeping livestock was enough for me to know 1000% that even high welfare was not high enough by far.

I can build pretty much anything out of wood, can make roads, car parks, put up fencing, gates, stock fencing, build a smallholding, refit a catering trailer, start up a catering business from scratch, and all of that on top of the skills I’d brought to the project in the first place.
Selling up gave me the opportunity to move back up north and my next project was to be a house renovation in Chesterfield. The breakdown of my marriage brought that project to an end also, but the experience was priceless and further bolsters the skills I have to set up as The Yorkshire Handy Woman.
I could add more photos. I could tell you more tales about the experience of building Axe Head Farm. I could literally carry on for hours, but this is a website to promote my future, not to commemorate my past.


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Di Winn
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(07950) 774717