Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Turning trash into flowers blooming nice idea for charity
TREVOR HAGAN / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Enlarge Image
Getty Stewart holds a bouquet of flowers made out of recycled materials. Monies raised will go to Habitat for Humanity.
Mark your calendars: on March 20, 1,000 flowers will bloom in Winnipeg.
No, it's not global warming making a bold opening move. In fact, the pretty flowers, which will sprout at The Forks on the banks of the Assiniboine River, aren't even the work of nature. These blossoms will be made from margarine tubs. Fast-food wrappers. Old record sleeves. Scrap metal. You know, trash.
And you can help -- and help charity -- by getting your hands dirty. On Feb. 20, the Lord Roberts Community Centre will host a public flower-crafting workshop from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. for kids and adults. More petal-pushing drives are scheduled at plantitforward.ca.
"Part of our thing is making this a great place to live and sprucing it up," said Getty Stewart, one of the leaders of the Plant It Forward project, which will benefit Habitat for Humanity. "So we thought, how can we make that impact and get everyone involved?" The idea for Plant It Forward germinated in early 2009 when, to cheer up a winter-weary Winnipeg, IBEX Payroll co-owner Stewart stuck a sign near the Osborne Street overpass. She decorated the sign with five Styrofoam tulips.
"Winnipeg, do not fear, SPRING is near!" the banner read. The jaunty result -- incongruous against the gritty roadside snow -- sparked an idea. "I looked at it and said, 'Can you imagine if we had 1,000 of these?' " Stewart said. Soon, she will. Thanks to crafty helpers at spots including Luxton School, Art City and Ecole Riverview, Stewart and Co. have already collected 325 of the colourful "flowers." Another 600 are pledged.
"We just love this project idea," says Art City director Cam Forbes. The Broadway art centre hosted 75 flower-makers, most between the ages of eight and 12, last week.
"We knew it would be a big hit here because it allowed kids to experiment. Flowers can be anything and to make something that lived one life, live a second life is fun for them."
Can't craft a flower? No problem: IBEX, which launched its award-winning Clean Your Green charity initiative in 2006, is challenging other businesses to donate to Plant It Forward. Stewart hopes the project will raise $30,000 for the charity. Members of the public will also be able to "buy" a flower by Habitat donation after the display goes up on March 20.
And don't forget, a March garden in good ol' Winterpeg begs for bragging rights. "We keep getting emails from my mother-in-law on Vancouver Island saying 'it's so lovely here!' " Stewart sighed. "Hopefully, now we can send postcards to B.C. and say 'look, Winnipeg blossomed first!' "
melissa.martin@freepress.mb.ca
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition February 18, 2010 A2
The comment period for this story has ended.
-
Breaking News Alerts
Sign up for our new Breaking News Alerts
-
Editor's Bulletin
Sign up for daily bulletins
-
Winnipeg road closures
Check if your commute is affected
-
Blogs to Watch
We pick our favourite local blogs for you to follow
-
Breaking News Widget
Create and embed a Winnipeg Free Press breaking news widget on your site or blog
-
Twitter
Follow our reporters and news feeds on Twitter
Ads by Google
- Back to Top
- Return to Life & Style
Poll
Most Popular
- One sister dead, other faces charge in stabbing
- Passerby thwarts sex assault
- Hectic night as police chase gunplay
- Body found in Red River
- Shunned after fling with daughters' friend
- Oh, Zsuzsanna
- An NDP government likely wouldn't spell a quick death for B.C.'s HST
- Foul play not suspected after body pulled from Red
- Five hurt in head-on crash
- Bombers fall 27-23 to Roughriders
- Judge embroiled in sex scandal removes self from bench
- 'Nothing short of a miracle' at how well missing woman fared
- Couple in unwanted spotlight
- Expanded weather warnings issued ahead of hurricane Earl
- Families find Manitoba's first jellyfish
- Homicide unit investigating fatal fall
- Dirty secret not so secret in city's legal community
- Shunned after fling with daughters' friend
- Ice Edge eyes Thunder Bay, looks to advise new Coyotes owner
- Angry mob beats couple with bats, sticks
- Boyfriend's porno secret discovered
- Major downpour floods streets, knocks out power
- Judge embroiled in sex scandal removes self from bench
- Woman dead after apparent fall from downtown high-rise
- Pedestrian dies after collision with truck
- Illegal channel irks cottagers
- Severe weather enters Manitoba
- Jennifer's body
- 'Nothing short of a miracle' at how well missing woman fared
- Earls on Main fined $4,000, loses liquor licence for a day
- Hectic night as police chase gunplay
- Enough for a passport, but not MPI
- Passerby thwarts sex assault
- Bombers fall 27-23 to Roughriders
- Foul play not suspected after body pulled from Red
- Five hurt in head-on crash
- Trouble waiting in on-deck circle if Goldeyes don't wise up
- The man who'll shape our skyline
- Pierce to lead Bombers in Labour Day Classic
- Lions cut Hefney loose
- Enough for a passport, but not MPI
- Swan defends himself and police, offends victim
- Ice Edge eyes Thunder Bay, looks to advise new Coyotes owner
- Shunned after fling with daughters' friend
- Wasylycia-Leis alleges Katz interference in info requests
- Hotel buyouts in core for fewer drunks?
- Man struck by transit bus
- New stretch of skywalks opens
- 'Nothing short of a miracle' at how well missing woman fared
- Five hurt in head-on crash
- Care denied after fee not paid
- RM denies permission for group home
- Just a sec, say traffic activists
- Band threatens to block access to Whiteshell
- Canopy opens can of worms
- Brian really was lyin'
- Wasylycia-Leis pledges to launch two new crime-fighting programs
- Toews says ship carrying migrants a 'test boat'
- Group home residents aren't the scary ones
- RM wrong to run New Directions out of town
- No men in the pews? Could be church's fault
- History BY THE SLICE
- Hungry in New York? Book a trip to Eataly
- Five hurt in head-on crash
- First Nation fraud case encouraging
- Man drowns as Earl yanks trees from their roots, downs power lines on East Coast
- Bug wars
- An NDP government likely wouldn't spell a quick death for B.C.'s HST
- Jean's day goes to arts
- Do MS therapy trials now, researcher urges
- Judge embroiled in sex scandal removes self from bench
- Families find Manitoba's first jellyfish
- Oh, Zsuzsanna
- Polar bear takes dip in river at Shamattawa
- Judge disclosed 'problem'
- Cute Alert! Zoo unveils panda cubs
- Airport plan grounded
- Spin on the river turns adventurous
- Bar association slams CBC over judge sex scandal coverage
- Housing bubble threat resurfaces as prices in major markets hit 30-year highs
- Judge embroiled in sex scandal removes self from bench
- Dashcam video shows car flying into overpass, being reduced to parts; driver critical
- Families find Manitoba's first jellyfish
- Tiny 10-year-old stuns judges, audience with huge voice
- Oh, Zsuzsanna
- Hands-free accidents waiting to happen
- N.D. clinic to offer controversial MS screening
- Green slime can be toxic, experts say
- Best films in Hollywood history to be shown on big screen
- True North unveils new exhibition hall
Events
September 5, 2010
9th Winnipeg Marian Eucharistic Conference
“I am with you always, until the end of the world”(Mt 28:20). Come and listen to seven dynamic, inspiring speakers (Fr.Iannuzzi, was ass’t to Fr. Amorth, chief exorcist of Rome; Susan Tassone on the ...






1 Comments
You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
Posted by: Islander
February 18, 2010 at 6:39 PM
What a wonderful idea - bringing the community together with families, children and businesses, all for a good cause. Adding a touch of spring to Winnipeg. Please do a follow up when the flowers bloom on March 20th. Need more feel good stories like this.