BIG-HEARTED residents and team members at a Salisbury care home have raised more than £800 for the city’s foodbank by staging a summer garden party open to the community.
Braemar Lodge hosted the family-friendly event after residents chose Salisbury Foodbank as their main charity to support this year.
People bought books, CDs, crafts, jewellery, greeting cards, flowers and plants on sale at a variety of stalls.
The Stratford Road home organised a raffle and laid on a cream tea with glasses of fizz available throughout the afternoon.
As partygoers mingled and shopped, they enjoyed live music courtesy of the Salisbury Pluckers ukelele band and two residents’ groups: the Braemar Singers and the Braemar Handbell Ringers.
Braemar Lodge resident Catherine Brighty manned her own table, selling books, cards and other gifts she had gathered. Catherine said: “It was a great experience and all for a good cause.”
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Maria Stevenson, manager of Salisbury Foodbank, was among the visitors and later praised the home for staging the event and raising so much in funds.
Maria said: “It was an amazing day with lots going on and we offer many thanks for such a wonderful contribution.
“The support from Braemar Lodge will help to ensure we can continue to do our best for local people in the community who are in need.
“We are delighted the home has reached out to us as their charity for this year.”
Maria explained that the foodbank currently supports around 700 people a month.
As well as providing around 6,000 meals to those in need each month, she and her team increasingly work with community partners such as Citizens’ Advice to help tackle the route causes of food poverty issues so that families have a greater chance to avoid going hungry.
Maria added: “People are often shy to come forward for help so it is great that others in the community, such as Braemar Lodge, support us and keep our profile up.
“Our work is both amazing and sad.”
Braemar Lodge home manager Jackie Cash said: “It was a pleasure and a privilege to host the garden party, enabling our residents to play an active role in supporting the foodbank and have fun with a lovely event right here in their own garden at the same time.”
Salisbury Foodbank was launched in 2000 as the first Trussell Trust foodbank in the UK.
A national foodbank network was rolled out four years later teaching churches and communities how to start their own foodbanks.
For more information on Salisbury Foodbank, visit salisbury.foodbank.org.uk.
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