2020-01-01_Her_World_Singapore

(coco) #1
HERWORLD JAN 2020

KIMBERLY HOONG, 24
She's the deputy
head of Foodscaping
at Edible Garden
City. A life-changing
six-month stay in the
Indian Himalayas
made her see the
different ways of living
more consciously and
sustainably.

The idea of slow living for
Kimberly Hoong is simply taking
a step back and not getting
caught up in the daily grind. The
24-year-old once suff ered from
anxiety as a result of packing too
many activities within a day.
Kimberly, the deputy head of
Foodscaping at Edible Garden
City (EGC) in Queenstown,
says: “Being in nature makes
me realise that there is so much
more out there (in life). Slow
living translates to happiness because I live
more consciously and mindfully, thinking twice
before I buy something.”
The EGC, an urban farming social
enterprise, sells fresh produce to food and
beverage outlets, builds and maintains food
gardens in the city, and conducts farming
workshops.
She adds: “You don’t need so many clothes
or all the expensive food to be happy. You don’t

need to earn a million bucks. You can be happy
if you learn how to live simply.” The millennial
female farmer discovered her passion for
farming at 19.
She started an urban farming group in the
National University of Singapore (NUS) that
involved environmentally related activities such
as visits to community gardens and local farms.
The group also set up an edible garden in school
with composting and vermicomposting, which is
the product of the decomposition process using
various species of worms to create a mixture of
decomposing vegetable or food waste.
As fulfi lling as the work was, Kimberly often
felt tired as she overloaded herself with too
many activities. It wasn’t until a life-changing
six-month stay in the Indian Himalayas that
made her see things quite diff erently.
The trip was part of an exchange
programme during her Yale-NUS College days.
On that trip, she realised that she could live life
and take things at a much slower pace.
Of her experience, Kimberly, an

Kimberly
Hoong
tending to
the EGC
garden in
Queenstown
with pockets
of sweet
fruits, edible
flowers,
vegetables
and fragrant
herbs.

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