Some Shuswap residents had a little something extra to be thankful for this Thanksgiving weekend.
Silver Creek resident Christy Gaudin came up with an idea when she wasnât able to have a Thanksgiving dinner for herself due to hectic events in her life and realized many who had lost their homes to the Bush Creek East wildfire were likely facing the same struggle.
Gaudin watched the fire grow devastatingly large from across the lake in August and has since been trying to organize a fundraiser that prioritizes what residents might really need, she said, but with little success.
After a drive out to the Scotch Creek/Lee Creek fire hall that burned down and speaking with the owners of a torched trailer park lot behind the hall, Gaudin said her heart dropped when she heard firsthand accounts of the widespread devastation.
âOnly five people in that whole trailer park had insurance,â she said. âAnd that hit me pretty damn hard.â
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The idea for the dinner came from a gut feeling she couldnât ignore when thinking of having a Thanksgiving dinner and wondering if others were too.
âIt started with a call to Don Tingey at the downtown Askewâsâ said Gaudin. âKnowing that some of our neighbours, family and friends have lost everything that live right across the lake from us⊠I shared my dream to have a turkey dinner available for them⊠And he said, âTell me what you needâ.â
Altogether, Gaudin collected groceries with a donated $100 gift card from Tingey, turkeys, pumpkin pies and pumpkins from Save On Foods, another turkey from the Blind Bay Village Grocer, and vegetables for the dinner from Brad Demille and Demilleâs Farm Market manager Jacob, who organized the pickup in Bradâs absence. The meal was prepped and cooked in the Scotch Creek Hub kitchen amid the restaurantâs usual operations, a feat which Guadin thanked the staff for immensely.
A total of 70 dinners were prepared and 30 community members were invited to the Scotch Creek Hub to enjoy the meal.
Pumpkins were used for a crafting project Gaudin came up with after seeing a similar idea at her dentistâs office, which involved writing what each person is grateful for on a pumpkin. Gaudinâs neighbour Terri Jackson donated 10 pumpkins from her farm and Gaudin bought the rest, and the project was well-received, she said.

âSome of the pumpkins, I didnât post [to Facebook],â she said. âThere were, and are, some pretty strong feelings.â
She was talking about feelings of grief, loss and anger stemming from the North Shuswapâs wildfire experience. Many residents had told Angela Lagore, who runs the the Scotch Creek Hub, that they werenât ready to talk to or face people they didnât know so soon after that trauma. While thankful for the dinner, many opted to take an offered take-out container and sit by their property or overlook the lake and reflect alone, said Gaudin.
Lagore said the employees and volunteers at the Hub were grateful to be given the opportunity to help.
âWe appreciate all the efforts in donated supplies to help make this possible,â she said. âIt was a successful evening and the feedback was positive, families were grateful.â
âItâs just being a human being. When people are displaced, in my opinion, how I was brought up, you invite them to dinner,â said Gaudin.
She admits it was a bit of a selfish idea as well, as focusing on organizing the dinner helped her shift her focus from all the negativity she sees, even just on Shuswap social media pages.
âI like to put a little piece of good stuff in there. Sometimes people just need a smile.â
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