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Gotta get your moose? Donations to a St. John's food bank make sure everyone can

A donation of moose meat and salt fish is a welcome surprise at any food bank, including at the Single Parent Association in St. John's.
A wrapped up package of moose meat.
A donation of moose meat and salt fish was made to the food bank at the Single Parent Association in St. John's on Friday. (Ted Dillon/CBC)

A donation of moose meat and salt fish is a welcome surprise at any food bank, including at the Single Parent Association in St. John's.

That food was donated to the association's food bank on Friday by Barry Fordham and Sharing the Harvest — a group that helps hunters and harvesters donate their catch to food banks in Newfoundland and Labrador.

"To us outdoors people, wild game has a very natural value to us. And we value it so highly, sometimes unfortunately we hoard it," said Fordham, the group's co-founder.

WATCH | Game meat brings joy and nostalgia to food bank recipients:

Moose meat and salt fish is a welcome surprise at this St. John’s food bank

19 days ago
Duration 1:57
Sharing the Harvest, a group that helps hunters and harvesters donate their catch to food banks in Newfoundland and Labrador, made a donation of moose meat and salt fish to the Single Parent Association in St. John’s. The food bank says its always great to get game meat, especially in times of food insecurity.

"If you have any excess food in your deep freezer, why not think about — especially in these food insecurity times — donating it to the food banks or to senior citizens."

The donation comes at a time when food banks in Newfoundland and Labrador are reporting an increase in demand for their services. 

A man wearing a black windbreaker and a woman with large-framed glasses wearing a black and white shirt stand in an office space.
Barry Fordham of Sharing the Harvest and Allison Smith-Bungay of the Single Parent Association say donations of wild game like moose and fish are a welcome surprise for the people who receive it. (Ted Dillon/CBC)

A recent report from Food Banks Canada showed that more than two million Canadians visited a food bank in March alone, including over 14,000 Newfoundlanders and Labradorians.

Allison Smith-Bungay, an employment services specialist with the Single Parent Association, said donations like Fordham's can go a long way — and are loved by the recipients.

"Hunted and foraged foods often hold a lot of nostalgia, a lot of memories of the places they grew up, their childhoods," Smith-Bungay said.

"Our main mission at the end of the day is happy bellies, full bellies, and I think we've been able to deliver on that."

Fordham said he hopes other hunters will consider donating some of their excess meats and other products from the land to help combat food insecurity.

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With files from Julia Israel