🪚 Joiner in Tarbolton, South Ayrshire
This one’s up for grabs.
About Joiners
A joiner works with timber - fitting doors, windows, staircases, skirting boards, and built-in furniture.
In Scotland the term joiner covers much of what English tradespeople would call a carpenter.
Look for someone who can show previous work and comes recommended locally - quality joinery is obvious, and so is poor joinery.
About Tarbolton
Tarbolton is a village in South Ayrshire, sitting about seven miles north-east of Ayr in open farmland on the edge of the Carrick hills. It has a population of around 1,700 and a history closely bound up with Robert Burns, who lived in the surrounding area during his late teens and twenties.
Burns attended dancing lessons in Tarbolton in 1779 — much against his father's wishes — and in 1780 helped to found the Bachelors' Club, a debating society that met in a thatched house on Sandgate Street. Burns was elected the club's first president, and the building, now a National Trust for Scotland museum, still stands as a remarkably intact example of a late 18th-century working-class interior. Burns was also initiated into Freemasonry in Tarbolton in 1781.
The village was made a burgh of barony in 1671 and the nearby Fail Monastery, founded by the Trinitarian order in the 13th century, was an important institution before the Reformation. Agriculture and handloom weaving were the main occupations through the 18th and 19th centuries, and the village retains something of that older rural character today.
Tarbolton is a quiet residential village with a church, a primary school, and a handful of local amenities. It is within easy commuting distance of Ayr and Kilmarnock and forms part of the wider Burns Country trail that draws visitors to the Ayrshire countryside.
About South Ayrshire
South Ayrshire is a council area in south-west Scotland, stretching from the outskirts of Ayr south along the Firth of Clyde coastline to Ballantrae and inland across the hills of Carrick to the fringes of Galloway. It covers 472 square miles and had a population of around 112,000 at the 2021 census.
The region divides broadly into two historic districts: Kyle in the north, centred on Ayr and the fertile lowland farms between the coast and the Carrick hills, and Carrick to the south — a wilder, more sparsely populated landscape of river valleys, moorland, and coastal cliffs dominated for centuries by the powerful Kennedy family, who styled themselves Kings of Carrick. The boundary between the two runs roughly through Maybole.
South Ayrshire is inseparable from the life and work of Robert Burns, Scotland's national poet, who was born at Alloway in 1759 and spent his formative years in the villages and farms of the surrounding area. Alloway, Tarbolton, Kirkoswald, Maybole, and Ayr itself all carry tangible connections to Burns and together form what is known as Burns Country — one of Scotland's most visited literary landscapes.
The economy is built around public services, retail, tourism, and agriculture, with aerospace engineering and freight handling at Glasgow Prestwick Airport adding a significant industrial component. Ayr racecourse, Royal Troon golf course, and the coastline bring considerable visitor numbers throughout the year. Culzean Castle — the National Trust for Scotland's most visited property — draws visitors to the clifftop estate south of Maybole.
Transport connections run north–south along the coast: the A77 trunk road and the electrified Ayrshire Coast railway line link Ayr and Prestwick to Glasgow in under an hour, while services continue south to Girvan and Stranraer. Glasgow Prestwick Airport, located between Ayr and Prestwick, is the region's international gateway and a significant employer.
Nearby: Dumfries and Galloway, East Ayrshire
About Top Banana
Top Banana lists one trusted local business per trade, per area. One spot, one business — no paid rankings, no clutter. If the spot in your area is available, it could be yours.