换妻探花 is welcoming students back to school this week and offering a helping hand to those in need during the pandemic.
换妻探花
Weekly care hampers, featuring an abundance of nutritious fresh produce, tasty prepared meals, essential hygiene products, and even easy-to-follow recipes, are available to any student who requests them鈥攐n a first-come, while hampers last basis.
Every Thursday since Aug. 13, volunteers from Camosun (wearing masks and physically distancing), pick up 30 hampers at a volunteer hub location in their neighborhood and deliver them directly to students at their homes, putting both safety and the needs of students first. The many Camosun volunteer drivers make this seamless, COVID-19-conscious process possible and see the drop offs as a chance to connect with students and to show support.
The program has been a huge success so far.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been brilliant, absolutely brilliant,鈥 explains Steve Walker-Duncan, Camosun鈥檚 Culinary Arts Chair, whose students in the training kitchens at Interurban campus have been busy preparing meals, soups, and baked goods for the hampers each week. 鈥淭he students are really taking care of it so it was all packed and ready to go before I even arrived this week. They are quite excited to be part of something like this, because they鈥檙e helping their peers.鈥
Camosun care hampers are made possible by a generous donation from the 换妻探花 Student Society (CCSS) and the collaborative partnership between Culinary Arts and Camosun International, with in-kind donations from Co-operative Education and Career Services (CECS), the Print Shop and Camosun Bookstore.
Generous community partners include B&C Foods, South Island Farm Hub, and The Mustard Seed Food Security Distribution Centre, all supplying fresh food each week. In addition, the Culinary Federation Victoria has donated hot sauces and jellies made in the Culinary Arts kitchen.聽 The 换妻探花 Student Society Food Bank and Government House of British Columbia have both supplied enormous amounts of dry goods and other products. The South Island Farm Hub and Mustard Seed are supplying the fresh produce, including eggs, meat, fish, a whole range of fruits and vegetables and even herbs and spices, with a different selection each week depending on availability. Students from Culinary Arts are assisting in the coordination and preparation of baked goods and hearty soups that can be frozen and reheated.
One of the first recipients was international student Maria Thomaz from Brazil. Thomaz, her husband, and their two young children arrived in Canada only two months ago, in the midst of the pandemic, after a number of COVID-19-related logistical and flight challenges pushed back her original arrival date in April. She starts her post-degree diploma in business administration (marketing) at Camosun this week.
Thomaz was delighted to receive the hamper and to taste some vegetables neither she nor her family ever had before.
鈥淚t was my first time trying squash,鈥 she says. 鈥淭here were other vegetables I had never tasted before or didn鈥檛 know the name in English. It was a good experience, not just for me, but for my family because we opened Google lens to try to figure out the names of these things before we started to cook. We wrote the new names and put them on the fridge so we would remember and learn these new words.鈥
The program is a 鈥渨in-win鈥 for both students who receive the hampers, and the Culinary Arts students in training who prepare the meals each week. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e getting their professional cook training in the time of COVID, when we don鈥檛 have an active cafeteria and we鈥檝e limited access to customers for utilising our food services,鈥 explains Walker-Duncan. 鈥淲e鈥檙e really trying to consciously create simple and very adaptable recipes, for coleslaw or pasta for example, and then suggesting adding things like cheese and fruits and different vegetables. It鈥檚 about creating ideas that they can play around with and learn to cook with what they鈥檝e got on hand.鈥
Included in Thomaz鈥 hamper was a recipe for Ratatouille, which she and her family made and enjoyed together. 鈥淚t was good, very good and healthy,鈥 she says, expressing enthusiasm for trying a dish that was completely new for her family.
Thomaz appreciates the support of Camosun at a time when she and her family are adjusting to a new life in Canada. 鈥淭he support we are receiving made me remember how hard it was getting here, but reminds us too that it鈥檚 working,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 feel like I have support, and that I鈥檓 not alone. My daughter was so happy too, and she had this idea to make a little drawing to say thank you to the volunteer who came here with the hamper.鈥
Currently, the initiative will run until Sept. 24, for a total of seven weeks and 210 hampers. With the continued support of Camosun volunteers and community partners, and the generosity of public donors, the Camosun volunteer team hopes to extend the hamper program in the coming weeks to reach as many students as possible.
To financially support the care hamper program (a donation of $45 will cover the cost of each hamper), please contribute online through the聽.
For students, please apply using our聽. The first 30 applicants each week will receive a hamper and be contacted in advance to confirm delivery times and details. Please apply only once (or wait at least a couple of weeks before applying again) as Camosun would like to ensure as many students as possible benefit from the program.
For potential Camosun volunteer delivery drivers, if you鈥檙e willing to lend a (physically distanced) hand, then please send your name, a copy of your driver's licence, and desired delivery neighborhood to聽cicarehamper@camosun.ca聽and sign up for volunteer shifts.
Established in 1971, Camosun is one of the largest colleges in British Columbia with campuses on the Traditional Territories of the Lekwungen and W瘫S脕NE膯听辫别辞辫濒别蝉.
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COVID-19 has put many of our students in challenging situations and we want to continue to show them how much we care.
Contact information
Ivan Watson
Communications & Marketing Strategist换妻探花