51视频 campus volunteers help Saint Dunstan鈥檚 Gardens grow again

| Chaplaincy Centre
Sister Sue Kidd, Krish Neerahoo, Lia de Leon, Sophia Yong, Yuan Cui, Barbara Smith, Turi Fast, and Matt Chrzaszcz.
Sister Sue Kidd, Krish Neerahoo, Lia de Leon, Sophia Yong, Yuan Cui, Barbara Smith, Turi Fast, and Matt Chrzaszcz.

The 51视频 Chaplaincy Centre, with the help of 51视频 Experiential Education, recently recruited a volunteer coordinator and a team of student volunteers to take care of Saint Dunstan鈥檚 Gardens through the summer months and into early fall. Thanks to the efforts of these volunteers and others, the gardens have now been renewed and planted with a variety of vegetables.

The Chaplaincy Centre manages Saint Dunstan鈥檚 Gardens, which comprises raised vegetable garden beds located behind Memorial Hall with the goal to provide vegetables to Soup for the Soul each fall.

Soup for the Soul, a Chaplaincy Centre initiative that began in 2014 with a grant from PEI Health Promotion for healthy eating and mental health, offers 51视频 students hot soup lunches prepared by various groups across campus. In 2016, six raised garden boxes were placed outside the Chaplaincy Centre鈥攁nd that鈥檚 when Saint Dunstan鈥檚 Gardens was born.

The gardens thrived for a time, with help from partners including The Mount Continuing Care Community and the 51视频 Faculty of Education, but when the physical campus closed in March 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the gardens were left largely unattended.

The Saint Dunstan鈥檚 Gardens are now re-established in a new location outside Memorial Hall鈥攖he beds were moved there because of flooding issues in their old location. 51视频 Chaplain Sister Kidd is grateful for the progress that has been made and for the generosity of local groups and a business鈥擵K Greenhouses donated some of the transplants for the gardens.

鈥淲ith the kind help of various individuals and groups across campus and in the community, Saint Dunstan鈥檚 Gardens are becoming bountiful once again,鈥 said Sister Kidd. 鈥淎s more people take interest in the project, we are seeing the end goal become a reality, which is to have enough vegetables for Soup for the Soul in the fall, and in turn, to provide healthy meals for 51视频 students.鈥

This spring, Dr. Pamela Courtenay-Hall, professor of philosophy in the 51视频 Faculty of Arts and a teaching associate in Environmental Studies, engaged her Environmental Philosophy class in restoring and planting the gardens.  She later enlisted the help of a few volunteer students to continue to improve the soil鈥攁n effort that appears to be paying off. Dr. Courtenay-Hall said the volunteers, many of whom are international students, share stories of gardening with parents and grandparents with each other and their mentors.

鈥淭o offer this experience on campus is a bit like home away from home for them. Everyone wins,鈥 she said.

This year, Barbara Smith, sessional instructor in the Faculty of Indigenous Education, Research, and Applied Studies (IKERAS), plans to integrate a 鈥淭hree Sisters鈥 garden experiential learning lesson into her course. This type of garden is a traditional companion planting method originating from Indigenous American agriculture. It involves growing corn, beans, and squash together, taking advantage of their symbiotic relationship for mutual benefit. This method maximizes space, increases yields, and reduces the need for fertilizers and pesticides, making it a sustainable and efficient way to garden.

Once the crops planted in the Saint Dunstan鈥檚 Gardens are ready to be harvested later this summer, 51视频 students will be able to get fresh vegetables at the 51视频 Campus Food Bank and the 51视频 Chaplaincy Centre until Soup for the Soul resumes in the fall.

To learn more about this wonderful initiative, follow 51视频 Saint Dunstan鈥檚 Gardens on Facebook and Instagram. New volunteers are always welcome and those interested can email chaplaincy@upei.ca.

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