Recycling collectors make family's day by replacing stolen pumpkin - Action News
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Calgary

Recycling collectors make family's day by replacing stolen pumpkin

A Calgary mom and daughter say their day was brightened by a stranger's act of kindness after a pumpkin they'd been growing all summer was stolen from their garden.

'I'm just happy people still look out for strangers,' says Krista MacDonald

Krista MacDonald and her daughter Harper pose with pumpkins given to them by a City of Calgary employee after their pumpkin was stolen from their garden. (Helen Pike/CBC)

A Calgary mom and daughter say their day was brightened by two strangers'act of kindness after a pumpkin the family had been growing all summer was stolen from their garden.

Krista MacDonaldand her four-year-old daughter Harper had lovingly watered the plant for months, waiting for it to turn from green to orange.

"We went on vacation and came home and our pumpkin was gone," MacDonald said. "People have been picking our zucchiniall summer and we have tons of those, so I didn't mind. But we had one pumpkin. So it was pretty sad."

The mom and daughter had planned to carve the pumpkin into a jack-o'-lantern for Halloween.

MacDonald posted a strongly worded sign to her fence, calling out the thief.

"I hope it makes you happy to steal joy from a child," she wrote.

As for the rest of the sign, MacDonald said, "I probably can't repeat it on camera."

Krista MacDonald posted this sign outside her Calgary home after a pumpkin she'd been growing all summer was stolen from her garden. (Helen Pike/CBC)

On Friday, she heard a knock on the door.

It was two City of Calgary employees, who had collected recycling from the street on Tuesday that's when theyspotted the sign and theyhad two pumpkins for the little girl and her mom.

"Maybe put them back in the box and throw some dirt on it and tell a little story of your own! Sorry you had to deal with bad people at that time, but there's some kind ones left," a note accompanying the gift read.

MacDonald said shewas touched by the strangers'actions.

"I'm just happy people still look out for strangers."

With files from Helen Pike