
At dinner tonight with my friend, the Renaissance Woman, I confirmed the beneficiary for the proceeds of my eat local challenge.
Since I first met RW she's volunteered at the
Sophia Project, which serves, and I'm quoting here, children and families who are at risk of recurring homelessness and its effects. In my own words, they have two houses, interns and a bunch of young kids they feed, entertain, educate and love all day while their parent(s) work. After the last kid goes home on Friday they provide respite care for the weekend for another group of children. And I'm not doing justice to all the support they provide. Inspired people, I think.
RW showed me and the cute guy the quilts she finished for the respite program, "Tv blankets," she said wrapping one around herself in a mock demonstration. I was ready to turn on the set and make popcorn.
And then we talked about the Sophia Project gardens. There are raised beds for vegetables, apple and pear trees and sweet peas on the fence along the sidewalk. A young girl asked, "How do you get all those flowers on there?"
There are also sunflower giants growing in front of the houses. "The kids think they are impressive," RW said.
"I think they're impressive!" I replied and then said I wanted to make a donation specifically for the vegetable and sunflower gardens.
"O-kay." RW said because that's what I always say and it makes her smile.
There's a story that Barbara Kingsolver's husband Steven Hopps writes in Animal, Vegetable, Miracle about a teenager that couldn't believe a carrot grew in the ground and then wouldn't eat it because it had been in the dirt.
That's not going to be the case for the kids that spend time at the Sophia Project. Kids, dirt, carrots, education and some sunflowers thrown in for good measure; it's food that matters.
Eat Local Challenge Proceeds to Date are $95.