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Laurie Selpien: Planting seeds of charity

Lake in the Hills woman aims to grow garden for everyone

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Laurie Selpien poses for a portrait next to her winter garden at the wastewater treatment facility in Algonquin. (Sarah Nader – snader@shawmedia.com)

Give a struggling family groceries, they eat for a week. Teach a struggling family to garden, they eat for life.

That’s the message spread by Laurie Selpien, of Lake in the Hills, who last year headed up an effort by the Algonquin-Lake in the Hills Food Pantry to grow produce for their customers.

The effort yielded nearly 4,000 pounds of fresh fruits and vegetables, and Selpien thinks they can double that effort this year.

But her aim goes beyond feeding the hungry. She wants to teach low-income families how to cheaply feed themselves.

“There’s no excuse for hunger in the United States,” Selpien said. “We can take land that’s sitting idle and convert it into food – all it takes is a little bit of training. ... Anybody can do this.”

A lifelong gardener, Selpien eagerly agreed to take on the project last year. When she noticed that people were unsure about how to prepare some of the vegetables, Selpien printed out recipes to go with each variety.

This year, she wants to take the education a step further, having customers come in when she’s gardening so they can learn the trade.

“A lot of people are intimidated by it. They’re afraid to put the money into the gardens because they don’t know if they can do it,” Selpien said. “There’s a lot of tips and tricks we can do that make it easier.”

A couple of donations helped get the project off its feet last year. The local Rotary Club donated wood, and Greco Exterior Improvements built raised beds at the pantry, 1113 Pyott Road, Lake in the Hills.

But with 300 families to feed, the pantry decided to start an additional garden in a small space at an Algonquin wastewater treatment plant, where Selpien used a fence to grow plants vertically.

Workers at the plant maintained the garden and called Selpien when they needed help.

“We were seeing her at least once a week, many times twice or three times,” said Andy Warmus, Algonquin utilities superintendent. “It inspired me and some of the folks at the wastewater plant. ... It kind of renewed some interest to get into gardening.”

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