Zucchini, beets, crab apples: Sask. food bank welcomes excess garden produce
Saskatoon Food Bank and Learning Centre official says record need driven by high cost of living
Not sure what to do with all those extra garden beans andpotatoesyou just harvested? Neighbours rejecting your offers of zucchini and squash?
Officials at the Saskatoon Food Bank and Learning Centre have your answer: bring it allto them.
"We have lots of avid gardeners in the city and surrounding areas. Everybody has an abundance of zucchini, or is wondering what to do with their crab apples. We take everything,"Deborah Hamp, Food Bank director of operations andengagement,saidas staff and volunteers sorted through bags and boxes of donated fruits and vegetables.
"Having access to that type of nutrition is such a gift. So we encourage everyone who has an abundance of vegetables and fruit to bring it on down to the food bank. That will be distributed, oftentimesthe same day."
Hamp saidsome people think food banks don't accepts garden produce. She wants to spread the word that they definitely do.
She saidthe price of groceries and housing has skyrocketed, creating record demand at the food bank, and thatany donated produce can make a big difference.