By Carol O'Meara, Boulder County Extension
Lingering impacts from a disrupted world are hitting our community, with hunger a growing problem. Last year, gardeners responded to the crisis by reviving the Victory Garden movement, growing and donating over 23 tons of produce to food banks and pantries across Colorado through the Grow & Give project.
Victory Gardens have been cultivated throughout our history
as a country, popping up when events take a toll on our collective wellbeing.
During economic crashes, depression, and war, people sow, grow, and share. As
spring warms the soil and the itch to plant consumes us, gardeners are being
asked to plant extra to help combat a rise in hunger. The numbers from this
aspect of our shared catastrophe are grim.
Hunger Free Colorado conducted
quarterly surveys in 2020, mapping the increase in hunger due to heightened
effects from the pandemic. Their third statewide survey, conducted in December,
found almost 38-percent of Coloradans are food insecure, lacking reliable
access to nutritious food. This is more than two times what Colorado
experienced during the Great Recession.
The survey found that more than half of households with
children are struggling to have regular access to nutritious food, while 19-percent
of children are not getting adequate nutrition because there is not enough
money for food. Twenty-five-percent of
adults reported having to cut back or skip meals because there wasn’t enough
money to buy food.
Gardeners, we give advice, seeds, and plant divisions freely to anyone who’ll take them. We joke about too many zucchini or the year cherry tomatoes buried us. Let’s plan for that bounty this year in order for others to eat, and plant an extra hill or two of zucchini or pop another cherry tomato vine in the ground. Let’s sow for our community as well as ourselves.
Want to grow food but need a bit of advice? Check out the
new Grow & Give website to find short how-to videos, longer webinars, or information sheets on growing fruits and vegetables
in your garden. You’ll find information added weekly, but if there’s a topic
you’d like to see covered, send me an email with your suggestion.
Sign the pledge to donate part of your harvest and join a
community of concerned gardeners who want to make a difference. The website has
a map of food pantries and locations for drop off, along with information on
days and times they’re accepting donations.
You can help. Plant extra and donate it to pantries, to your
neighbors who need it, or friends who have seen a decrease in income. Whether
it’s a dozen carrots or a hundred tomatoes, it doesn’t matter. Grow, and give.
No comments:
Post a Comment