RFDA Summer Days program teaches Thunder Bay, Ontario kids about food - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 11:50 PM | Calgary | -7.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Thunder Bay

RFDA Summer Days program teaches Thunder Bay, Ontario kids about food

The Regional Food Distribution Association in Thunder Bay, Ont., wants to help kids build a healthy relationship with food, and that's why Kitchen Manager Kelsey Agnew started the Summer Days program for kids.

Unique theme days allow kids to explore where food comes from

Kelsey Agnew, the kitchen manager at Regional Food Distribution Association in Thunder Bay, Ont., hopes the RFDA's Summer Days program gives kids a sense of appreciation for where their food comes from. (Charnel Anderson/CBC)

The Regional Food Distribution Association in Thunder Bay, Ont., wants to help kids understand and appreciate the journey that food takes before it ends up on their plate, and so they started the Summer Days program.

The aim of the program is for childrentocreate happy memories associated with food, "whether it's in the kitchen, whether it's outside growing it, or if it's just sitting down and sharing a meal together," says Kelsey Agnew, the kitchen manager for the RFDA.

Each week the kids learn about food through a unique theme such as "garden tea party", "farm-to-table" and "fairies and forest magic", she said.

RFDA Summer days program (Charnel Anderson/CBC)

For the "bees and butterflies" theme day, Agnew invited a bee-keeper to come in and teach the kids about the role these pollinators play in food production.

"It's important to educate people about their food sources, the fact that one out of three mouthfuls of food today come from the pollination of the honeybeesthey're very important," said bee-keeper Don Kamula.

Agnew wants the kids to understand the connection between the ecosystem and the food on their dinner table.

"Without the honeybees we wouldn't have our food," saidAgnew, adding it's important to make "those links from the garden, from the weather, andthe insects that are required to grow our food."

Bee-keeper Don Kamula was invited to give kinds some food for thought about nature's pollinators.

She hopes that some of that knowledge will trickle into the kids'daily lives "to hopefully give them an appreciation for food and where it comes from, and how it gets to their table."

On top of exploring where food comes from, the kids are also introduced to practical skills such asgardening and cooking, with the goal of helping young peoeple build a healthy relationship with food.

The RFDASummer Days program runs every Thursday through July and August.

For more information visit www.foodbanksnorthwest.ca.

Kids learned 'that bees are more scared of you than you are of them' as part of the RFDA's bees and butterflies day. (Charnel Anderson/CBC)