Activities at Oulton Park Care Home

We have a wonderful team here at Oulton Park and we all work together to provide a stimulating, active environment for our residents that live here. We are always looking for new and innovative ideas for our residents to be part of here, and our activities coordinator works very hard on planning and providing a stimulating busy schedule of activities, as well as assisting the residents with their daily living preferences. We have regular meetings with our families and residents to make sure we are providing things to suit their preferences. We as a home are registered with the National Activity Providers Association and strive to provide a person-centred approach for our residents here.

Enriching life
Watch our video on life enrichment in our homes.

Louise Hunter-Hall

Life Enrichment & Activities Coordinator

Hello my name is Louise, I am the life enrichment and activities coordinator at Oulton park care centre.

I joined Oulton Park late 2023 but I have worked in the care industry for over 20 years and I have a compassion for my role and work. During the 20years I have supported many different adults with different care needs including, nursing care, physical disabilities, learning disabilities, independent living and 1:1 needs. I have both my level 2&3 in care and level 2 in sign language.

At Oulton my role is to create and organise a range of engaging and meaningful activities. My role brings me a great deal of comfort and joy.

If I can just make 1 persons life better during my working day at Oulton Park then the day has been a success. I feel honoured, fortunate and blessed to do the job I do.

Life-encriching activities booklet

Read our brochure 'Life-enriching activities' for more information about life in our care homes.
Read our brochure

Activities and Events Partnerships

As part of our bespoke life-enrichment programmes, we host a number of live virtual events in the home on a regular basis through a number of partnerships with places of interest and world class performance companies

Life at Oulton Park Care Home

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Happy Birthday Elvis!

Here at Oulton Park we have been celebrating Elvis's birthday and our residents certainly enjoyed Elvis’s performance - along with a glass of Sherry or two! 

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Pizza Baking

Today here at Oulton Park Care Centre our residents have been very busy with bake off Tuesday - featuring Cheese and Tomato Pizza and it sure was delicious!

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Lowestoft Shopping Trip

Today our residents enjoyed a trip out on our home Minibus to explore our home town. We saw some lovely sights on our way to a Cafe where we enjoyed a spot of lunch and did a bit of shopping afterwards too! When we reached home there was a nice cup of Tea and some freshly made Cake to enjoy too! What a super day! 

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Happy New Year!

Happy New Year from all of us here at Oulton Park Care Centre. Our residents have certainly been very busy seeing the New Year in! We have been having lots of fun making Milk Fireworks alongside some sensory Arts and Crafts. And creating our own unique 2023 Tiles too!

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One of a kind - Jimmy!

Born and bred in Lowestoft, James Cole - or Jimmy as he was known - survived his family home being partly demolished in April 1944 by the last German bombing raid on the town during the Second World War.

Up until he moved into Oulton Park, the 94-year-old had lived in the same house on Normanston Drive all his life apart from National Service in the army in the Middle East.

His former home was badly damaged on April 21, 1944 by a German bomb that blasted the back doorstep 100 yards away.

Jimmy was sleeping in the bedroom immediately above where the bomb fell, while his mother was taken to hospital after suffering shock.

This proved to be the last of 105 attacks by piloted German aircraft on Lowestoft in the Second World War and aviation historian Bob Collis described the raid as "historically quite significant".

Mr Collis had spoken to Jimmy late in 2013 as he researched bomb damaged houses in Lowestoft.

Jimmy's nephew, David Broom, said that when the war ended Jimmy would drive a lorry of POWs to work on local farms.

He would later become an HGV driver, until finally retiring aged 65.

Mr Broom said: "An unassuming man, Jimmy lived a simple life with no central heating only his coal fire - which was always on as it was used to heat his water. Jimmy never married but always had a cat and a chicken also made an appearance too. He was renowned for his fresh vegetables and fruit from his own garden and his own homemade horseradish was a staple in many of his relatives’ homes which he gifted them when visiting - usually arriving before 9am – having missed the traffic."

Mr Broom added: "Jimmy generally had two breakfasts – one at 5am when he woke up and another at 8am. After all, he had to keep his strength up as he towered at over 6ft tall with size 13 feet. He was affectionately known as the BFG or Big Friendly Giant amongst his niece and nephew’s young children as they grew up."

After a spell in the James Paget University Hospital he moved to Oulton Park Care Centre to be supported in the home’s state-of-the-art Memory Lane Community for those living with dementia until he passed away at the end of 2022.

Mr Broom added: "After living such a simple, frugal life and having worked so hard I know I speak for the whole family when I say that Uncle Jim was cared for amazingly.

"The home’s General Manager, Sarah - who helped move Uncle to Oulton Park - and her team have been absolutely fantastic over the last five years."
 
*Jimmy even featured in The Lowestoft Journal's former 'Turning Back the Clock' section in an article in 2014, after he had recognised an image of his bomb damaged house.

Local historian Bob Collis recalled: "I had a number of pictures of Second World War bomb damaged houses in Lowestoft which I was unable to identify and in 2013 The Journal published several with an appeal for information.

"We visited Jimmy and he gave us a detailed account of that night. He told us that his father had just left for work as a signalman for the LNER when the bomb - one of eight dropped from a German Me 410 aircraft - exploded in the garden near the south west corner of the house, blasting a hole through the wall and catapulting the back doorstep across Normanston Drive to a spot where Jimmy later recovered it using a wheelbarrow. The other bombs, all 50kg (110 lb) landed between Chestnut Avenue and the LNER Sleeper Depot at Lake Lothing, causing very little damage. The raid took place at 1.25am on April 21, 1944 and was the last of 105 attacks by piloted German aircraft in the Second World War on Lowestoft and therefore historically quite significant."

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Boxing Day Fun

Today our residents and staff here at Oulton Park celebrated Boxing Day with an assortment of festivities. We had a morning of glitzy Arts and Crafts and a Boxing Day Quiz with a glass of Sherry! 

Afterwards, followed a delicious dinner cooked by our amazing Chefs. And we finished the afternoon off with a festive fun singalong and a good old game of Scrabble!