2010 Holiday Drive: House of Hope (Plus Giveaway)

UPDATE (December 4): Wow!!! We’ve exceeded the goal in just a few days. The original goal was an arbitrary number and does not reflect House of Hope’s actual need. I simply chose a number that I felt was reachable. Turns out I underestimated you!

While we’ve exceeded the initial target number, the drive will continue as planned until December 18, 2010. Donations are still accepted and I will continue to give out raffle tickets until then.

THANKS SO MUCH!

Hello Friends,

Over the years the community here has participated in Holiday Drives. This year I wanted to do something not close to home but close to my heart. As you may know, I travelled to the West Indies last year to visit the places my family is from. The place I felt the closest connection to was (and still is) Dominica, my grandmother’s birthplace.

The Commonwealth of Dominica is a little island in the Lesser Antilles that few people have heard of. I’ve written fairly extensive about Dominica over the last year and if you’d like to get a glimpse of the island, please begin here. What I haven’t mentioned is the need that is there. Because it is a small place that few people have heard of, they don’t draw much international support. I won’t go into every way in which there is need, but in 1979 Hurricane David ravaged the island, I mean tore it to shreds, wiping everything in its path. In many ways, the island is still recovering from that loss as well as the loss of the more recent loss of the Banana Industry, which provided a reasonable living to a lot of people.

While need is great, especially during the Holidays, I decided to focus on one organization that I am really impressed by.

The House of Hope in Delices, Dominica, is a home that provides loving, 24 hour care to persons with severe physical and mental disabilities. It was started by a small group of women in the village of Delices when 2 severely disabled women in their community lost their elderly mother. Without her to provide care they were stranded without anyone to help them, or any kind of facility to take them in. Since then, the House of Hope have raised the funds to build a larger facility with a garden and they now have six female residents including the original two women. They are ages: 6, 8, 14, 38, 40 and 52 years old. The facility gets some money from the government, but the rest comes from donations. They are in constant need of supplies.

I think what struck me about this endevor was that it was started by a group of women who wanted to help other women in their community who were in desperate, life or death need. This sort of effort speaks to the generosity of community spirit that still thrives in the smaller villages. Self-sufficiency is a way of life, but it is backed by the understanding that you can’t make it without the help of your neighbor.

You can read more about the House of Hope on their site, or see several photos of the home and the reconstruction on the Flickr site.

Anyone who donates $5 to this drive will be entered into a raffle to win a prize pack that I have put together. If you donate $10 you will be given 2 entries; $20 = 4 entries, and so on…. You can expect an email containing your “ticket/s” within a day of making a donation. I will draw a winner on December 18, 2010.

Every $5 = 1 ticket.

THE PRIZE: 1 signed copy of each of my books: You Grow Girl and Grow Great Grub + 1 tshirt of your choosing (sorry they’re not re-listed yet but you choose from 4 styles) + one of every single style of our garden buttons (there are several) + seeds, magnets and whatever miscellany I throw in.

UPDATE: I’ve noticed that new donations are slow to show on the widget but I assure you that the email updates are reaching me. If you don’t receive a response within 24 hours, please email me with your notification.

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Rex Begonia Flower

Once again my attempt at Wordless Wednesdays is a complete failure. As I was prepping this image, I realized I could not post it without saying something about these fascinating flowers.

Begonia plants have male and female flowers that carry the reproductive organs on individual flowers. This flower is the female, aka pistillate flower. The yellow part in the center that looks like a twisted up pipe cleaner is called the stigma. It’s the part that receives the pollen. The entire female reproductive system is known as the pistal. In this photo, you can just see the ovaries peaking out from behind the flower.

And so concludes today’s mini botany lesson.

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Painted Leaves

Behold, the beautiful leaves of this Rex Begonia I bought last winter. It’s flowering!

The trick to growing this particular begonia is shade and humidity. My time hiking through forests in Dominica really drove that point home in a clear way. I often found begonias growing in surprisingly dim spots underneath thick tree canopy and near to a water source where the humidity was high. Rex Begonias are known for demanding more of both.

When I first bought this plant I had a difficult time finding that balance. I got the humidity part right but gave it too much light. Rexs without enough humidity end up with crispy leaf edges. And when the light is too bright, they lose their vibrant color.
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Headless Woman Standing Among the Palms

From the moment I first laid eyes on an Oxalis palmifrons I knew I wanted to take a picture of it with a tiny model train figure standing underneath the leaves as if she/he was a tourist posing among a bank of palm trees.

This photo isn’t quite what I had in mind.
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The Big Slugs Are Here

First there was a fat lump of a thing found in the Yardshare Garden here in the west end while planting squashes. And then a few weeks ago we found Leopard Slugs (Limax maximus) in our friend David’s plot at the Leslie Street Allotment Garden on the east side of Toronto.

Prior to these two sightings I had never seen slugs of this size in Toronto, or this part of Canada for that matter. Our slugs are tiny little things called Gray Garden Slugs (Agriolimax reticulatus). Tiny, but pervasive! Until recently I could always ease my mind with the knowledge that while their numbers are legion, at least we don’t have the massive banana-type monsters.

And now we do.

These new slugs are European introductions, although there is speculation that they could have come from British Columbia. There is a scientist in Toronto who is currently tracking their occurrence, and while it looks like the Leopard Slug hasn’t really reached my part of town, it will soon enough.

And I thought I had my hands full with the four neighbour cats that have made our quiet yard their hang out. I feel like I’m in a horror movie, waiting for the giant insect army to invade.

- More on another giant slug found in Etobicoke, the suburb west of my home. It’s very pretty, but no thanks.

- A video (narrated by David Attenborough) of Leopard Slugs mating. Very fascinating, but again, not in my backyard!

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