Telehandler Training for Distillery & Cooperage Operators
360° and fixed-mast telehandler operation with real load geometry. Delivered on-site around Speyside & Formartine, typically ~25 miles from our Aboyne (AB34) base.
Audit finding we design out
"Non-EX-rated FLTs found operating inside the DSEAR-zoned filling store on a peak-season audit."
Delivered to Speyside distilleries with mixed cooperage, cask-yard and visitor-flow requirements.
Why telehandler training looks different on a distillery site
Cask-move season collides with peak visitor tours — operators need tickets that cover both vapour-zone rules and pedestrian discipline in one cohort.
Typical structures & spaces: still houses, filling stores, cask yards, dunnage warehouses, cooperage sheds.
Anchor operators in Speyside & Formartine: Glen Garioch (Oldmeldrum), GlenDronach (Huntly), Strathisla (Keith), Aberlour-side cooperages.
Regulations we reference
- DSEAR 2002 (alcohol vapour zoning)
- PUWER 1998
- LOLER 1998
- GMP for spirit areas
Hazards we design the cohort around
- ATEX-zoned filling halls where any non-EX plant is off-limits
- Visitor-tour foot traffic crossing live cask yards
- Wet, sloped filling-store floors around vat rooms
- Overhead pipework restricting telehandler mast height
What the telehandler cohort covers
- Load charts, ground bearing and outrigger use
- Attachments — forks, bucket, muck-grab, jib
- LOLER thorough-examination awareness for operators
Outcome: CPCS / NPORS-aligned telehandler competence, evidenced with your on-site loads.
When we typically run cohorts
Refreshers landed in the shoulder weeks between visitor season and the mash-season ramp-up.
Coverage from Aboyne
Speyside & Formartine sits roughly 25 road miles from our Aboyne (AB34) base — well inside our normal same-week mobilisation radius across North-East Scotland.
FAQ — Distillery & Cooperage operators
Can you deliver telehandler training on a working distillery site?
Yes. We mobilise onto operating distillery sites across Speyside & Formartine — typically ~25 road miles from our Aboyne (AB34) base — and run the cohort around your live programme. Book a pre-mash-season cohort — we mobilise on your cask-yard between visitor tours.
Which regulations does the course reference for distillery operations?
We reference DSEAR 2002 (alcohol vapour zoning), PUWER 1998, LOLER 1998, GMP for spirit areas. Evidence and paperwork are prepared to satisfy client and insurer audits typical of Speyside & Formartine.
What distillery-specific hazards does the course cover?
The cohort works through hazards we see repeatedly on distillery sites: ATEX-zoned filling halls where any non-EX plant is off-limits; Visitor-tour foot traffic crossing live cask yards; Wet, sloped filling-store floors around vat rooms.
How often should telehandler refreshers run on a distillery?
Refreshers landed in the shoulder weeks between visitor season and the mash-season ramp-up. We schedule cohorts to avoid your peak windows and land refreshers before the audit or insurance review that would flag them.
What does the operator leave with?
CPCS / NPORS-aligned telehandler competence, evidenced with your on-site loads. We also hand over the paperwork you'll need for a client or HSE audit — the recurring finding we design out is: "Non-EX-rated FLTs found operating inside the DSEAR-zoned filling store on a peak-season audit."
How does the course handle attachment competence and LOLER-linked operator responsibilities?
That's built into the distillery-specific delivery — we adapt the content to your site's actual conditions rather than run a generic classroom cohort.
Book a pre-mash-season cohort — we mobilise on your cask-yard between visitor tours.
Call Chris directly or request a quote — most Speyside & Formartine bookings mobilise inside a week.
