Barnyard therapy working for P.E.I women - Action News
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Barnyard therapy working for P.E.I women

Spending a day in the barn with horses, goats, chickens, rabbits and donkeys can be uplifting, says a social worker who's turned her private farm into a therapy ranch for women.

Cowgirls program gives women a chance to work with animals

'It helps with a lot of things,' says 16-year-old Samara Ford, one of the participants in the Cowgirls program. 'Like, anxiety and everything. School.' (Pat Martel/CBC)

Spending a day in the barnwith horses, goats, chickens, rabbits and donkeys can beuplifting, says a social worker who's turned her private farm into a therapy ranch for women.

One of the participants, 16-year-old Samara Ford, joined the Cowgirls program at Grand River Ranch on P.E.I.'s North Shore,and spendsa lot of time grooming and riding the horses.

"It helps with a lot of things," said Ford. "Likeanxiety and everything. School. So I come here and just let it all out, talk to my furry friends."

The program runs Wednesday evenings and all day Friday. The provincial government helps pay the cost forparticipantsthrough itsDisability Support Program.

"I feel very happy and like pumped to come back,"Ford said.

'You see it in the smiles'

Hearing words like those is proof to social worker Heather Blouin that she did the right thing last year when she openedup her ranch to others.

'You see it in the smiles, you see it in the change in their confidence level,' says social worker Heather Blouin, who owns Grand River Ranch. (Pat Martel/CBC)

Blouin'sday job is co-ordinating home care, but she decided she wanted to share her private ranch with Island women she thought couldbenefit from being around farm animals.

"We started out with just one or two ladies and now we have about sevenor eight that come on a regular basis and they keep coming back for more," Blouin said.

"You see it in the smiles, you see it in the change in their confidence level. We're just thrilled to see the benefits that it's providing."

Blouin is so committed to that belief she even takes time off from her full-time job to run theprogram, so others can experience the ranch.

Blouin is pleased to see "the reduced anxiety, the sense of responsibility, the confidence that's gained."

'Now I talk to everybody'

"It brings great pleasure to come here," said Karen Chapman, who has been with the program since it started last June.

'I just feel a sense of what I'm doing is the right path,' says Blouin about setting up the Cowgirls program. (Pat Martel/CBC)

"I wasn't the type of person to talk to people and now I talk to everybody I go out with my friends to different places," she said as she washed out pails.

"Because I have dyslexia, I talk backwards," Chapman explained.

"People used to make fun of me quite a bit. And I wasn't included in activities in school or nothing. But herenobody's different, everybody's the same, equal."

"I love the animals here," said Chapman. "I can't wait to get here on Wednesdays and Fridays."

'Do it until it's no longer fun'

Although most aren't yet ready to ride the horses, they enjoy hanging out with them.

Candie Gorden from Summerside, P.E.I., loves to hug the rabbits when she gets a break from her chores. (Pat Martel/CBC)

"I live with my grandmother so I don't really get out that often,' said Alex Took. "Here we have a bunch of girls to meet."

Took doesn't mind cleaning out the handful of rabbit cages. She scatters wood shavings in the cage,then gives the rabbitsfood and water.

"Gotta clean them out all the time, because if you don'tthey don't have a bed to lay in and it will get awful stinky in there."

"There's nothing really hard," Took said of the work. "Heather always says, 'We do it until it's no longer fun.'''

'More confidence'

Blouin works alongside the participants, doing her share of the chores.

Some of the women work out in the apple orchard, pruning the twigs. (Pat Martel/CBC)

"Animals need water, they need to be cleaned out, they need to have fresh water, fresh food so all of those things have to take place," Blouin said.

She spreads aroundthe choresso each participant gets to try different tasks and see what they like.

"We have one lady who although she doesn't drive a car, she really enjoys driving a tractor," Blouin said.

"She's gained a real skill set and it's hoped that because she's gotten a sense of driving a tractor, she'll now have more confidence when she applies for her driver's licence."

'That's as powerful as what I feel'

How does being around animals help people?

'Animals need water, they need to be cleaned out, they need to have fresh water, fresh food so all of those things have to take place,' says Blouin. (Pat Martel/CBC)

"I really compare it to music," Blouin said. "We see the physiological changes in the brain of people when they're listening to music or when they're around animals, the benefits that happen as a result.

"That's as powerful as what I feel when I'm working with animals."

Blouin is pleased the work she's doing with theprogram is paying off.

"When they're describing to their families and their friends how it makes them feel and the change that it's had for their entire life, I just feel a sense of what I'm doing is the right path I'm supposed to be on."

After a long morning doing barn chores, the women take a lunch break. (Pat Martel/CBC)

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