Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Have Justice---Will Travel Founder Visits Laraway

Wynona Ward, Esq., founder of Have Justice—Will Travel, offered three pieces of advice for youth in Laraway’s foster care program:  “Get an education.  Establish short term and long term goals, and see the world, that’s really important, too.”
Ward grew up in rural Vermont in a family experiencing domestic violence.  She later crisscrossed America’s lower forty-eight states as a truck driver before entering law school.  She is credited with creating an innovative, mobile, multi-services program that assists victims of domestic violence through the legal process, from relief from abuse orders to self-sufficiency and independence.  Her model is particularly adept at serving clients in rural areas where geographic isolation can impede access to services.
“Wynona serves as a real inspiration to our youth,” said Becca Hemmer, Director of Laraway’s foster care program.  “She showed how personal life experiences can inform our career choices.  She helps victims of domestic violence engage the legal and social service systems to forge new and peaceful lives.” 
For more information on Have Justice—Will Travel, please visit www.havejusticewilltravel.org . 

Friday, August 16, 2013

Laraway Installs First Pieces of Its New Playground...get ready to play!


With tools in hand, Laraway staff members, with help from community volunteers, built the first pieces of a playground for their campus. Climbing structures and swings will enhance the farm site as will a basketball court that transforms into an ice rink in winter.
“Playgrounds matter for kids. Playgrounds promote healthy, active lifestyles” says Shellie West, Laraway Adventure Education Teacher. “If one of our kids needs a break, it’s great to be able to go out and shoot a few baskets or play on the playground.  It’s a positive way to alleviate stress.”
Private individuals, foundations and local businesses have contributed to our ongoing efforts to raise funds.  Laraway looks forward to hosting a community event in October to formally celebrate the playground.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

How Does Laraway's Garden Grow? Move over Iceberg, lettuce, that is!

    Red romaine lettuce found its way onto the tables of royalty for centuries.  History records the presence of this vibrantly colored vegetable in the dining halls of Persian Kings as far back as 55 B.C. 
     Laraway Farm's bountiful---if somewhat less "royal"---gardens abound this summer with herbs, potatoes, garlic and all sorts of leafy greens simmering in the sunshine, waiting to be picked.  Red romaine, with its mild flavor and vibrant hues, is a great addition to Laraway's table.
     Kids and staff were out on a recent morning plucking lettuce from our fertile, organic soil.  With a high germination rate and minimal pests, red romaine towers over iceberg lettuce with more than five times the Vitamin C.  As kids learn to garden, they also get to feast on our Farm's best pickings in Laraway's cafeteria.  It doesn't get much better---or healthier---than this!

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Going for the Garlic

     Laraway teachers Walter Wendling and Aaron McGee, with their students, planted a garlic crop at Laraway Farm last spring.  The plantings have proven resilient---not unlike the kids we serve---amid early summer's gray skies and torrential rains.
     Although the garlic bulbs won't be ready for picking until the fall, garlic scapes---the curling tops of garlic plants which are both edible and delicious---have been harvested for use in Laraway's kitchen. 
     Pictured in the photo at right are Lisa Rock, Laraway's cook, and Marcella Houghton, our Americorp volunteer.  Garlic scapes can be chopped like scallions and added to salads.  They can be pickled and sauteed.  They're also known to make a tasty green garlic pesto.  As summer progresses, we look forward to integrating more produce from our garden into the breakfasts and lunches served at Laraway.  Happy summer!

Monday, June 24, 2013

Laraway Staff Realize Milestones

     Jim Heath, Laraway's Finance Director, is a 2013 graduate of Leadership Lamoille.  This program, an initiative of the Lamoille Region Chamber of Commerce, engages emerging communty leaders in a 10-month course to explore the attributes and issues of Lamoille County.  Connections are forged among leaders within the business, educational and nonprofit sectors. For more information on Leadership Lamoille, please go to www.lamoillechamber.com
     Cornelius Murphy, Laraway's Farm Steward, was the illustrator for the newly-published book, The Resilent Farm and Homestead  by Ben Falk.  The text, issued by Chelsea Green Publishing, is described as a manual for developing beautiful, resilient and highly functional human habitat systems fit to handle an age of rapid transitions.  For more information, go to www.chelseagreen.com
     Congratulations to Jim and Cornelius!

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Ben & Jerry's Community Action Team Spends a Day at Laraway


Johnson-based Laraway Youth & Family Services’ recently hosted seventy Ben & Jerry’s volunteers for a day of service.  The Vermont super-premium ice cream makers proved most adept at tackling projects on the agency’s 39-acre site to make ready for summer programming for kids and families.
With Laraway staff as team leaders, Ben & Jerry’s folks fell into groups, each assigned a specific task for the day.  Working with diligence
and tenacity, they built a bike shed, weeded an extensive perennial garden, planted the vegetable garden, cleared brush along our walking trail, planted a vast number of trees, dug an impressive fire pit and built a bread oven.
“We are grateful for our new friends at Ben & Jerry’s and appreciate their interest in supporting our important work with kids and families,” said Greg Stefanski, Laraway’s Executive Director

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Laraway Youth Art Featured in Installation on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.

     One Million Bones is a national social arts project to raise awareness of ongoing genocide and atrocities in places like Sudan, South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Somalia and Burma.  Project participants, from across the United States, created bones to symbolize lives lost to political violence.  Youth in Substitute Care, Laraway's therapeutic foster care program, crafted clay bones to become part of the installation.
     Vermont-made bones were featured in an installation at the University of Vermont in April; they will be part of a national installation on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. on June 8-10.  For more information about the project, please visit www.onemillionbones.org.  Kudos to our Laraway activist artists!