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‘Absolute hell’: The story behind The Ferry Selkie

After a difficult 14 months, Ferry Selkie owner Kelly Fairweather shares the story behind her restaurants, the Exchange Street break-in and why she will never, ever call someone a “junkie”.

The Ferry Selkie owner Kelly-Anne Fairweather and husband Paul. Image: Kim Cessford/DC Thomson
The Ferry Selkie owner Kelly-Anne Fairweather and husband Paul. Image: Kim Cessford/DC Thomson

After 14 long months getting The Ferry Selkie ready, owner Kelly-Anne Fairweather can finally open her new restaurant.

A few lucky diners have already had The Ferry Selkie experience, as a small soft launch was held the day after the restaurant got its completion certificate from Dundee City Council.

There will be two other chances to get a sneak peek, as it will be open on Saturdays ahead of the official opening date on Thursday June 1.

Just like the original Selkie on Exchange Street, the Brook Street venue will offer small plates with a Scottish and Mediterranean twist. It will also branch into offering lunch and breakfast once the staff have settled in to the new space.

The outside of 335 Brook Street, Broughty Ferry, a restaurant with large windows and a sign saying The Ferry Selkie on a blue background.
The Ferry Selkie is finally ready to open. Image: Kim Cessford/DC Thomson

Since getting the keys in April 2022, it’s been a long and costly road to get The Ferry Selkie to where it is today. Kelly’s original budget was £35,000, but she has now spent around £170,000.

“It’s been absolute hell,” she says.

“Once a month I’ve wanted to stop. But when you’re in business on your own you need to have resilience.

“We’ve had 18 complaints about this building, from the colour of the outside to working without a permit.

“We’ve also been paying rent, standing charges and our contracted staff – that runs up.”

The Selkie break-in ‘not personal’

Adding to the stress of working on the new restaurant, the Exchange Street venue was broken into on May 5.

Kelly shared the news herself on social media the same morning, and support from customers and local business owners poured in.

“When I got to the shop after the break-in I was raging,” she says.

“When it’s your own little shop it feels almost like your house. The Selkie is my happy place with all my little quirky bits.”

The smashed door after the break-in. Image: The Selkie

Police quickly charged a 34-year-old man with more than 60 previous convictions who later admitted to the break-in.

Once again, comments on Facebook poured in on The Selkie’s and Evening Telegraph’s pages. But this time Kelly was not happy about what she saw.

She put up her own post in response, asking people to stop calling the man who broke in a “junkie”.

Kelly says: “Nobody chooses to become a drug addict. When I realised who he was, I thought ‘I’m so lucky that I don’t have to crawl through windows at 5am to get a hit’.

“I genuinely believe it’s not personal, it’s just that we were there.

“My aunt died after a 21 year long battle with heroin. Where I grew up, that was quite normal.

“Nicola was my best friend and the best auntie in the world. She never stole or broke windows.

“When people saw her in the street, did they think she was that horrible word? I want people making comments like that to remember, that person is somebody’s everything.”

Auntie became inspiration to do good

Kelly’s auntie Nicola was just three-and-a-half years older, so they grew up together. As well as an aunt, she was also like a sister, mum and best friend.

Before opening The Selkie, the mum of eight had a cleaning company. While cleaning houses she’d be on the phone to Nicola for hours every day.

“I feel like because I’m not chatting to her for two hours a day I’ve got so much time, but no,” Kelly laughs.

“When she died I had that crisis of, what do I do every day now. That was the worst feeling, she was everything to me.

“She was the nicest, most loving person, so honest and funny – and she couldn’t win that battle [against drugs].

“She would have been the one going ‘what are you opening now? Oh my God, do you want to sleep? No?’

“That’s why it’s so important to me that The Selkie takes a stand. I don’t want to be sanctimonious, but it’s important that we’re true to our values.”

A woman and man smiling at each other standing behind a bar counter.
Her auntie Nicola was a huge inspiration for Kelly when starting The Selkie. Image: Kim Cessford/DC Thomson

Nicola passed away on May 3 2019, and the following autumn, The Selkie opened in Dundee.

Inspired by her auntie and her childhood growing up in Whitfield, Kelly decided from the start that her new venture would have community at its heart and help those in need.

At Christmas, The Selkie delivers free food hampers, for Easter it hosted a free family dinner, and any one can come pick up a free meal when they are in need.

“When you come into The Selkie, you should never feel like you don’t matter. Of course you matter,” says Kelly.

“I believe we’re all put here to live the best we can and do the best we can by people. There’s a hymn I like called make me an instrument of your peace, I think that’s what The Selkie does.

“When we first got married and had our first couple of kids we were so skint, every Christmas Eve was a fight about whether we have enough money for shopping. I don’t want people to feel like that.

“Now we’re at a point where people feel like they belong, and that’s what’s so magical about The Selkie.”

The Ferry Selkie to carry on the kindness

In line with the reputation it has built up, The Ferry Selkie will also offer food to those in need and host free evenings for families – no questions asked.

Kelly says some people don’t think there’s a need for help in and around Broughty Ferry, but during lockdown food drives she made many deliveries in the area.

A long wooden table in front of the large window in The Ferry Selkie.
While The Ferry Selkie looks like the posh little sister of the Exchange Street eatery, everyone is welcome in. Image: Kim Cessford/DC Thomson

“My nan used to say our job isn’t to judge, our job is to love,” she says.

“I’m not here to decide that if you’re a drug addict or you have a nicer house than me I’m not feeding you.

“I’m very aware that what you see isn’t always what’s there. And some say that people will take advantage.

“That’s not my battle. That’s between them and their conscience or their maker if they believe in that.”

The kindness Kelly has put out in the world seems to have come back in droves.

The restaurant regularly gets food donations towards free meals, people help out with activities on family evenings and local tradespeople fixed the door after the break-in.

For her staff, the owner offers a real living wage and a caring working environment she plans to nurture in The Ferry Selkie also. There will be 24 staff for the new restaurant, some with experience from the first venue.

Those that have visited the Brook Street venue have commented on how different it looks from Exchange Street.

“The Selkie in town is like, when you get your first flat. We got married at 18 and had a futon and lamps from our grans, Exchange Street is like that,” Kelly laughs.

A round lamp decorated with flowers inside The Ferry Selkie.
The signature flowers have moved across from Dundee to the Ferry. Image: Kim Cessford/DC Thomson

“Brook Street is literally when you move to the Ferry and decide you’re going to have a nice house.

“The Selkie is very much a story of starting over and seeing what you can cobble together. Then when you do a bit better, you start getting nicer things.”

Selkie expansion dreams

Though the next chapter of The Selkie story is just starting with the opening of the second restaurant, Kelly has already started working on the next.

She has her sights set on St Andrews, Carnoustie, Arbroath, Giffnock, Lothian and even Shetland.

In total, the entrepreneur dreams of having 10 Selkies, all with the same values and community spirit.

A selection of small tapas plates, including gambas pil pil, chickpea salad, olives and bread.
Like the original Selkie, the Brook Street restaurant will focus on small plates. Image: Mhairi Edwards/DC Thomson

Kelly believes part of what has made the restaurant so popular already is her openness and compassion.

“I know there’s loads of other 40-something women with a wee dream who want to make it work,” she says.

“They’re the ones that have been loyal to us, they bring their hubbies and daughters, and their daughters bring their pals for brunch.

“People are so responsive to our story and for me it’s about them coming on this crazy journey with me to see what we can do. Some say I do so much work, but I don’t, I just become the catalyst.

“I don’t know what I’ve done to deserve all this, but I’m dead thankful for it.

“No small business has a lot of money to spend, and we’re not going to pretend we do. Every penny is blood, sweat and tears, but happy tears a lot of the time.

“I don’t know how far we’re going to get, but we’re going to have a laugh.”

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