Posts Tagged ‘Fruit Share’

Check out the article in the Winnipeg Metro today!  Click here for link –  Fruit Share in Metro June 8

A great article about Fruit Share and well, yes me!  http://www.wrha.mb.ca/wave/2011/05/getty-stewart.php

Novel idea bears fruit

Riverview woman’s food sharing plan helps build community

Getty Stewart

BY BOB ARMSTRONG
Winnipeg Health Region
Wave Magazine, May / June 2011

A carpet of rotting apples beneath a fruit tree is more than just an unsightly magnet for wasps to Getty Stewart.

It’s a waste of food and a lost opportunity to bring neighbours and communities together.

That feeling is what prompted the Riverview mother, home economist, activist and blogger to launch Fruit Share, a volunteer program that connects people who own fruit trees with volunteer pickers and social agencies.

Her work with Fruit Share, combined with her popular gardening blog and the initiatives she’s spearheaded as president of the Manitoba Association of Home Economists, earned her a Healthy Living Award at a ceremony in April sponsored by the Reh-Fit Centre Foundation.

Living in the Riverview area, where many homes have apple trees, she knew that a lot of delicious fruit goes to waste every year because owners of trees don’t have the ability, time or energy to pick their apples, or don’t know what to do with the fruit. When she read of a program in Edmonton called Operation Fruit Rescue that connects pickers with unused fruit, she wondered if it would work in Winnipeg. After connecting with the South Osborne Urban Community Co-op, she decided to give it a try last May.

The results in the first year were beyond her expectations. She and her 10 volunteers picked nearly 1,700 pounds of apples, as well as rhubarb and Evans cherries (a large, sweet, bright-red kind of sour cherry). She stresses that the apples were in most cases full size and sweet, noting “We didn’t pick any crab apples at all.”

The program is all about sharing nature’s bounty. Owners of the trees and the volunteer pickers each receive one third of the fruit. The other third is shared with social agencies, including the nearby Fred Tipping Place seniors’ housing complex. Agape Table, Siloam Mission and other agencies also reaped sweet rewards.

Last year, the program focused just on the Riverview/Osborne area. This year, with approximately 40 volunteers already signed up by late April, Stewart is expanding Fruit Share to Wolseley, West Broadway, St. Vital, Daniel McIntyre, St. Mathews, Spence and North End neighbourhoods, where the program will partner with local community development organizations.

She hopes to harvest 7,000 pounds of fruit this year.

Stewart sees sharing food as a unique way to build community. She recalls how a trip last year to drop off apples at Siloam Mission was a profound experience for her whole family and relishes the connections she made with residents at Fred Tipping Place. “They started recognizing me as The Fruit Lady.”

Using the fruit that would otherwise go to waste is also a way of rediscovering knowledge about the environment and food that many of us have lost. She notes that many people with cherry trees in their yard aren’t even aware that the fruit is edible. “It takes me back to when we used to go to the Souris Riverbend and pick chokecherries,” she says, recalling her childhood on a farm family in the Wawanesa area.

Her formative experiences as a farm girl are also part of what prompted her to create her Manitoba Veggie Delight blog about gardening.

“I wanted to get the kids to experience gardening and have that appreciation of where food comes from,” she says. “That’s the farm girl in me. I just love to have dirt under my fingers.”

After gardening a community plot near Churchill Drive for the last four or five years, last year she began blogging about what she was planting, what weeds she was pulling, what insects were nibbling at her veggies and how the harvest was coming.

“It’s a mix of techniques, tips and advice,” she says. “As I was blogging, all the things that I learned as a kid on the farm came back to me. I remembered all the things that my parents taught me about gardening and I was thinking, ‘What will my kids learn from this?’”

And it’s not just her kids, Aidan, 10, and Melanie, 7. Last year the blog had hits from about 300 people per month.

That combination of new technology and old-school appreciation of growing food is carrying over into another project: a booklet on harvesting backyard fruits and berries. Stewart has received funding from the Manitoba Alternative Food Research Alliance and the Canadian Home Economist Foundation to prepare a booklet to show people how to identify what kinds of fruits or berries they have in their yard and give them ideas of what to do with them.

The booklet will include recipes, tips on preserving fruit, information on how to get help with harvesting and details on how to share the backyard bounty with social agencies. The last point is a significant one, she says, because not all agencies accept preserves or baked goods (though some do) and there may be a specific time and place to take donations.

The booklet will be posted on the Fruit Share website, as well as be available through Fruit Share’s partner organizations.

While Fruit Share and the gardening blog are focused on growing food, Stewart also is involved in a program that sells locally grown food.

As president of the Manitoba Association of Home Economists, she has helped to develop the Farm to School Healthy Choice Fundraiser, in partnership with Peak of the Market and the Manitoba government.

The idea is simple. Instead of selling chocolate bars to raise money for school programs – an awkward fit with the effort by schools to promote healthy eating – participating schools sell bags of Manitoba-grown vegetables from Peak of the Market. Peak of the Market, the Manitoba vegetable marketing company owned by producers, sells the veggies to the schools at cost and provides free delivery to the school.

Last year the program was piloted in 66 schools in urban, rural and northern Manitoba. Feedback was so positive that this year it’s spreading to every school in the province. And many of those schools have incorproated the veggies into lessons on food and nutrition.

During her time as president, Stewart has also worked to raise the profile of home economists – and spread the news about healthy family activities – through a monthly Home and Family segment on Breakfast Television.

Getty’s emphasis on a healthy balance between work, family, and community is something she shares with her husband, Darryl, who runs a business called Ibex Payroll that the couple founded before they had children.

At one time, she found herself juggling motherhood with work at Ibex and her own work in a public speaking business she operated for 12 years.

“It was hectic and rushed and I thought, ‘There’s got to be a better way.’”

She’s still involved with the company – she’s listed as “Head of the Home Range,” one of many quirky job titles that staff at Ibex have on their business cards – but focuses more of her energies on family and community. And she still makes sure to set aside volunteer work for healthy activity, whether taking in a fitness boot camp at the Riverview Community Centre or leading hikes as camp naturalist this summer at Camp Wasaga near Riding Mountain National Park.

It’s all part of her belief that healthy living is found in a balance of social, physical, and emotional well-being – and that healthy living requires getting involved to make it happen.

“We’ve got to create the kind of world we want for ourselves,” she says.

Bob Armstrong is a Winnipeg writer.

 

Funding Proposal Successful!

Just got off the phone with the Winnipeg Foundation and am thrilled to announce that they have accepted our proposal for expanding Fruit Share!

Funding will be coming via the Community Grants Program with a portion also coming from the Moffat Family Fund and the Mauro Family Fund.  Thank you!

What a thrill to know that others share our vision and plans for harvesting, sharing and enjoying fruit growing throughout the city.

The Fruit Share Advisory Team will be getting together this Monday to discuss our next steps.  Stay tuned as we put our dreams into action.

Fruit Share in Food Matters Newsletter

Fruit Share was featured in the latest edition of Food Matters Manitoba’s e-newsletter.

Food Matters Manitoba is a registered charity dedicated to healthy, sustainable food for all.  If you’re interested in the latest and greatest events and activities related to local food, you gotta check it out.  You might even want to consider signing up for their e-newsletter or visiting their facebook page.   Here’s the May/June newsletter.

 

 

Spotlight on Resource Assistance for Youth

Here’s yet another option for you to consider when trying to decide what to do with extra fruit.

Resource Assistance for Youth

Resource Assistance for Youth (RaY) is a non-profit street-level agency working with street-entrenched and homeless youth up to the age of 29. It provides youth with what they need, on their terms, to better their lives by being the crucial link between street-entrenched youth and much-needed support services.

RaY uses donated fruit to prepare meals and fill food hampers.

Contact Information

Street Address: 125 Sherbrook Street

Phone: 204-783-5617

Website: www.rayinc.ca

Donations Accepted

Fruit

Apples, apricots, berries, crab apples, grapes, rhubarb, sour cherries, plums

Other Food Items

Homemade preserves (dated & labelled with ingredient list), frozen fruit (dated & labelled), homebaked products (dated & labelled with ingredient list), garden vegetables.

Non-Food Items

new toothbrushes, toothpaste, deodorant, new soap, other toiletries (razors, shaving cream, sewing kits, etc.), used clothes, backpacks, sleeping bags

Donation Logistics

When

Monday to Thursday 10:00 am to noon (flexible, please call for other times)

Where

- 125 Sherbrook Street

- use front door next to a colourful elevator

- parking lot available

Special Notes

Please phone ahead to 783-5617.

 

Spotlight on Teen Challenge

Here’s another worthwhile organization to consider for making food donations.
Teen Challenge

Teen Challenge is a 12-month, faith-based, residential drug and alcohol rehabilitation program. The program has a strong faith-based approach and offers spiritual, academic and vocational training that helps equip individuals to return to society as responsible citizens.

Teen Challenge uses donated fruit to prepare meals, fill food hampers, share with other organizations, and process for future use.

Contact Information:
Street Address: 414 Edmonton
Phone: 949-9484 ext. 2011
Website: www.teenchallenge.mb.ca

Donations Accepted
Fruit
Apples, apricots, berries, crab apples, grapes, rhubarb, sour cherries, plums
Other Food Items
Homemade preserves (labeled & dated), frozen fruit (labeled & dated), homebaked products (labeled & dated) garden vegetables, fresh or frozen meat (labeled & dated).
Non-Food Items
Men’s clothing and personal hygiene products, bedding, towels, mugs and cutlery

Donation Logistics

When
Monday to Saturday 7:00 am to 9:00 pm
Where
- back door of 414 Edmonton Street
- park in back lane by door while unloading
- ring buzzer (high on a silver pad on the red brick wall)
Special Notes
Please phone ahead to 949-9484 ext. 2011 or try Mike at 232-2905 or Jane at 688-7605.

Cannot accept heavily bruised fruit.

Teen Challenge has a freezer and refrigerator for storing perishable food.

Spotlight on Forward House Ministries

Consider Forward House Ministries as a place to donate any extra fruits or veggies you might have available. And, if you’re thinking about all those extra preserves from last summer that you need to move to make room for this year’s harvest, Forward House will gladly take those too.
Here’s the description of Forward House Ministries that will be included in the new
“Guide to Backyard Fruit”.

Forward House Ministries

Forward House is a Christian home for men and children who are trying to get their lives back on track.  Forward House operates five houses in a row and uses donated food to prepare meals for 40 people three times a day, every day.

Contact Information
Street Address: 407 Chalmers Avenue (main house)
Phone: 204-471-1244

Website: www.forwardhouse.ca

Donations Accepted
Fruit 
Apples, apricots, berries, grapes, plums

Other Food Items
Homemade preserves (labeled & dated), frozen fruit (labeled & dated), homebaked products (labeled & dated) garden vegetables and any other food items.
Non-Food Items
Men’s personal hygiene products

Donation Logistics
When

Monday to Sunday from 7:00 am to 11:00 pm
Where
 - Back door of 407 Chalmers Avenue
 - Parking available at the back
 - Knock on the back door
Special Notes
 - Forward House has walk-in freezers and coolers that always have space for donated perishables.
 - Fresh fruits and vegetables are always welcome.

New Logo and URL

I’m so excited to share our new logo and URL with you.  Check it out and tell everyone that it’s easier than ever to find us online….
www.FruitShare.ca

Thanks to MAFRA for believing in us and supporting us with funding.  Thanks to 6P Marketing for turning our ideas into reality.

Guide to Backyard Fruit – Coming Soon!

It’s official!  Fruit Share received funding through the Manitoba Alternative Food Research Alliance (MAFRA) to develop an online Guide to Backyard Fruit. Thank you, thank you, thank you!!!

I’m thrilled they chose to fund the guide.  Here’s what’s going to be included in the guide:

Identifying Manitoba Fruit
o   pictures, descriptions and illustrations to help homeowners identify what’s in their backyard
o   particularly useful to new homeowners and new Manitobans
Recipes for Manitoba Fruit
o   recipes for enjoying local fruit
o   a minimum of 2 recipes for using for backyard Manitoba fruit (eg. Rhubarb, cherries, apples, crab apples, and grapes – not including U-Pick type fruits which are already well described by the Prairie Fruit Growers Association)
o   links to other organizations and sources of recipes (e.g. PFGA)
Preserving Manitoba Fruit
o   complete how-to instructions for preserving backyard Manitoba fruit
o   a minimum of 2 preserving techniques for backyard Manitoba fruit
o   links to other organizations and sources of preserving techniques
Harvesting Options
o   complete listing of organizations/groups who help harvesting fruit ( eg.Fruit Share, neighbourhood associations, Hutterite colonies, etc.)
Sharing Options
o   complete listing of organizations that will accept fruit and any specific criteria that must be met (eg. Agape Table, Siloam Mission, Winnipeg Harvest, Teen Challenge, etc.)
If you have recipes, preserving techniques, contact names or any other information that would be useful for the guide, please let email me at [email protected]
We’re still waiting to see if we get funding for a printed edition of the guide book as well.  We’ll keep you posted.


WANTED – Food Charities

We’re looking for organizations that accept perishable food donations to share our fruit with and to feature in our “Guide to Backyard Fruit”.


Fruit Share is expanding into six new neighbourhoods this summer.  That means we’re going to have a lot more fruit to share.  It also means we can help provide fresh, local, nutritious food to some of the 58,000 Manitobans that use food banks each month. 

But, no matter how big Fruit Share gets, we know Fruit Share volunteers will never be able to pick it all.  We also know that Winnipeg homeowners hate to see their fruit go to waste.  So, we’re also producing a “Guide to Backyard Fruit” that will help homeowners identify what’s growing in their backyards, how to use it and what to do with any left over fruit.  This guide will include a listing of as many organizations in Winnipeg that accept fresh fruit as possible.  Hence, the call for Food Charities.

Our goal is to avoid this…

33 bags of apples headed to the landfill
And do much more of this…
Dropping rhubarb at Siloam Mission

Please help us build our database of food charities.  We’ve already approached the organizations we donated to last year (Agape, Siloam, Wpg Harvest, Teen Challenge, and Sisters of Charity) but are interested in hearing about others.  All organizations have to do is complete this Food Charity Registration Form.

Thanks for spreading the word.