Calgary

Calgary volunteer-run gardens struggle to meet demand for fresh produce

​Organizations that provide fresh food to low-income Calgarians are seeing their bountiful harvests swallowed up by a huge demand right now. They say it's largely due to the slumping economy and they're finding it tough to keep up with the need.

Calgary Food Bank has nearly doubled its monthly hampers

Volunteers who grow and harvest fresh food for low-income Calgarians say this year's bountiful harvest is being swallowed up by a huge demand. (Colleen Underwood/CBC)

​It's harvest time and volunteers who grow food for low-income Calgarians are seeing their produce disappearing as fast as they can pull it out of the ground, largely due to the slumping economy.

Grow Calgary started three years ago, producing fresh produce for the Calgary Food Bank. Now it offers free carrots, potatoes, beets and other vegetables to more than 20 different agencies, including Inn from the Cold and the Calgary Drop-In Centre.

"We'd rather people had access to superior nutrition, not because of a downturn in the economy, but because they genuinely wanted access. Now they absolutely need it," says Paul Hughes, executive director of Grow Calgary.

Children helped dig potatoes at Grow Calgary's garden in a transportation utility corridor in southwest Calgary along the Trans-Canada Highway. (Colleen Underwood/CBC)

This year the Calgary Food Bank has nearly doubled the number of monthly hampers it provides to people. It went from about 2,500 to more than 5,000, with that number only expected to grow.

"When we track the reasons for coming to the food bank, the majority of our clients are saying they haven't had an income in 30 days, they have lost their job, their (employment insurance) has run out. People are using up every resource they can," says spokesperson Shawna Ogston.

Between January 2015 and this January, the Calgary Drop-in Centre saw a 50 per cent increase in the cost of the food it buys.

"So this relationship with Grow Calgary is really helping us to bring down our food costs, and also to be able deliver delicious and nutritious food, which for us is so important," says Jordan Hamilton, spokesman for the Calgary Drop-In Centre.

The Calgary Food Bank gets fresh produce from a number of different gardens, including one on a plot of land owned by Altalink in the southeast. This year it was a record harvest at the garden, with volunteers digging up 44,000 lbs of food, which translates into 44,000 meals through the food bank's emergency hamper program.

Brent Saulnier helped harvest vegetables at a garden on Altalink property off Glenmore Trail in southeast Calgary. (Colleen Underwood/CBC)

"It's really awesome actually how much food we're pulling off the field that's going to the Calgary Food Bank. It's just phenomenal that way" says Brent Saulnier, a volunteer at the garden.

Hughes says the 11 acres of land set aside for Grow Calgary's garden is along the transportation utility corridor, which the organization leases from the municipal and  provincial governments.

He continues to push for even more unused green space to be set aside and used to grow food for those in need.