Saskatoon's Asky Project teaches interns how to grow food in the city and share it with others - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Saskatoon's Asky Project teaches interns how to grow food in the city and share it with others

A community agriculture program in the heart of Saskatoon is helping youth close the gap between the (urban) farm and the table.

Project, now in its 7th year, got major boost with acquisition of new parcel of land

The new garden site (formerly the home of the Riversdale Lawn Bowling Club) is named the ketayak community kistikana, which means Elders Community Garden in the northern Michif language. (Kendall Latimer/CBC)

A community agriculture program in the heart of Saskatoon is helping youth close the gap between the (urban) farm to the table.

Each summer, theAskyProject (Asky means the Earth in Cree) gives a batch ofinterns the opportunity to learnhowto plant, maintain, harvest and sell food usingsustainable techniques.

The project has grown during the last seven years, but it took a big step forward after it acquired a newplot of land at theoldRiversdale Lawn Bowling Club sitelast summer.

The additional land meant the interns could now offer food in a new way.

"This year we decided to try a community shared agriculture model (CSA),"said Terri Lynn Paulson, an urban agriculture co-ordinator with CHEP Good Food the community organization that runs the asky internship program.

Previously, interns were limited to growing food incontainers on a "brownfield site," meaning seeds couldn't be sowed directly into the ground. Now, they can use an expansive, in-ground plot.

"Because we have this in-ground space, we have irrigation and it makes it a lot easier to grow more food and have more predictable yields."

Terri Lynn Paulson is the urban agriculture co-ordinator with CHEP Good Food, the community organization that co-ordinates the Asky Project. (Kendall Latimer/CBC)

Through the CSA model, people pay into the program at the beginning of the season, becoming subscribersin exchange for a share of what's harvested.

"Folks sign up at the beginning of the year and become members," Paulson said, noting the model relies on trust. "Our members are saying: 'Yes, we'll support you for the whole season.'"

In turn, Asky interns supply members with biweekly boxes of seasonal vegetables, fruit, flowers and herbs throughout the summer and fall.

Asky is a Cree word meaning 'the Earth.' The Asky Project is described as an 'urban agriculture internship that engages both Indigenous and non-Indigenous youth to learn together about growing, harvesting, and selling food through an innovative model.' (Kendall Latimer/CBC)

Paulson said CSAs can build relationships and provide a stronger purpose for the people growing the food, because they have to deliver.

"It makes a connection between the people growing your food and the people eating your food, and that's really important to me,and I think it's been really essential to our interns, as well."

The interns include a newsletter with each CSA box, sharing the joys and challenges ofurban gardening with the people receiving the food.

Matthew Recollet says the biggest challenge is learning to handle pests and also the heartbreak of plant loss, saying 'you get over it eventually.' (Kendall Latimer/CBC)

"It definitely warms the heart, knowing that I could help out the community and just be a part of this," said Matthew Recollet,an intern with the project.

The program aims to create a more sustainable food economy in the city. In addition to the CSA, they sell food Monday through Friday at an outdoor market and also donate to the free community fridge.

"By supporting the local farmers and a project like this, you're supporting local people,"Recolletsaid.

Recollet is studying education at university, and hewants to use the skills learned through this internship as part of land-based teaching for his future students.Knowing where your food comes fromand how it's grownis part of that, he says.

The interns describe the garden plot as a unique and rewarding office space. (Kendall Latimer/CBC)

Olaf Olson, another intern, saystransforming a mostly empty piece of land into a thriving, full plot with dozens of different plants is inspiring.The cultural teachings, such as understanding how plants typically viewed asweeds can be used as medicine or ingredients, and connections with the land have also been a key experience for Olson.

"It's really important to have that connectedness with the land, and knowing how that food can be grown and how to build sustainability,especially in the middle of the city, right?" he said. "A lot of Indigenous people, like myself I kind of lose that connection here in the city."

Olaf Olson is studying nutrition at university and hopes to one day become a dietician bringing the knowledge gained through the Asky Program along with him. (Kendall Latimer/CBC)

There are five pillars of the internship program:

  • Enhancingcultural connections interns learn growing practices from elders and knowledge keepers.
  • Building social enterprise.
  • Learning food growing skills.
  • Engaging youth.
  • Promoting environmental sustainability.

Olson is going into his second year of nutrition at the University of Saskatchewan. Like Recollet, he also hopes to carry knowledge from this experience tohis future career.

But for now, he and his fellowinterns plan to enjoy their final weeks sharing food with the community and tending to the plants.

"It's like a little slice of heaven," Recollet said.