'It's healing': Residents of Labrador women's centre to take care of garden

It's hoped the garden will help give residents relief from difficult circumstances

Some residents of the women's centre in Happy Valley-Goose Bay will be getting their hands dirty this summer.
They will be looking after vegetables and flowers that have been planted in a new garden, located in a sunny spot at the Mokami Status of Women Council building.
The 9 by 1.5-metre plot is a first for the council, and residents will be responsible for tending it, said finance manager Faye Goudie.
Goudie says women are full of smiles after wanting a garden to be put in for some time. She joined the Community Food Hub as a board member a year ago, and was able to get some help to make the raised garden happen.
It's just one of the gardens the Community Food Hub — a local group that promotes food security — is supporting in the area.

Image | Faye Goudie and Ed Mesher

Caption: Faye Goudie and Edward Mesher say they hope the garden will give residents some relief from life's troubles. (John Gaudi/CBC)

Ed Mesher, who co-ordinates the organization's outdoor projects, constructed the raised beds, as well as planted vegetables and seeds at the women's centre.
Cabbage, radish, rhubarb, potatoes and broccoli are just some of them.
Mesher hopes the garden will be a relief for residents who face difficult circumstances in life.
"I know they're in a kind of rough spot. Like growing up, I wish there was something like this for my mother. That's why I really try to do a good job of it, to help lighten their thoughts whatever they're into," he said in a Labrador Morning interview.
Gardening helps, Goudie agrees.
"I guess it's soothing for them. It takes away from the issues that they deal with, gives them something else to think about. It's healing. Anything outdoors, I believe, is healing," she said.

Image | Vegetables and flowers at women's centre garden

Caption: This is the first time the Mokami Status of Women Council has a garden project for its residents in Happy Valley-Goose Bay. (John Gaudi/CBC)

"There's loads of benefits [that] come with this garden," she said, noting the high cost of food in Labrador.
The region produces less than one per cent of the food that people there consume, Mesher adds, and learning how to garden is beneficial.
Residents at the women's centre who already have a green thumb will be teaching others how to do it, said Mesher
"The more we can do stuff like this, and the more people learn about it and realize they can do it, the better, I think, and healthier fresher food too."

Image | Faye Goudie and Edward Mesher

Caption: Goudie and Mesher say learning how to garden is a good thing when less than one per cent of food consumed in Labrador is grown locally. (John Gaudi/CBC Radio)

The women will be responsible for taking care of the plants over the summer after Mesher shows them how it's done.
Goudie hopes residents and staff of the centre will have a meal with fresh veggies from the garden come harvest time.
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