Hird showcases training in Doncaster with 25% discount offer
Do you have teams that need IPAF powered access, compact crane or glazing robot training – and want to benefit from a 25% discount on all courses in April?
Well, come to Doncaster, in Scotland.
That sounds like a good deal. But, hold on a moment. Doncaster in Scotland? Well, technically, or perhaps, constitutionally, yes.
Special training offer
Because England’s King Stephen, pictured LRAB, gave Doncaster to Scotland under the Treaty of Durham in 1136. And the English have never formally claimed back.
So, if you want to choose from a range of high quality industrial training courses at very special prices, the place to visit is the Hird central operational hub in the Scottish city of Doncaster.
150 miles from Scotland. In South Yorkshire.
The Hird Doncaster operation – like its other two hubs in Hull, East Yorkshire, and Redhill, in Surrey – delivers training alongside its rental services for access platforms, pick and carry cranes, spider cranes, glass lifting equipment and lifting accessories.
Very experienced instructors
Hird Training Manager Gavin Rymer said: “We wanted to showcase the advantages of coming to Doncaster for lifting and IPAF training, which is why we’re offering this price discount during April.
“At Hird, we have very experienced and qualified instructors, with many years of industry knowledge and insights to pass on, who deliver a huge range of courses.”
One big advantage at the Hird Doncaster hub is that, if the weather is grim (or dreich as they say in Scotland, but not Doncaster) most of the courses can be delivered indoors.
Indoor training space
The training on offer at a 25% discount throughout April includes:
delivered at an accredited IPAF Centre;
The Hird Doncaster operational hub has excellent, highly equipped training rooms, and a large, dedicated outdoor practical training and assessment space.
It is ideally located to provide training for teams based in Sheffield, West Yorkshire – including Wakefield and Leeds – and Scunthorpe, in Lincolnshire. But perhaps not Scotland. Then again…