Java junkies

Suburban Lesbian Coffee Club a hit


Coffee and lesbians are proving to be a successful mix in the Ottawa suburbs.

The Suburban Lesbian Coffee Club (SLCC) has taken off, says the club’s mastermind, Kim Meechan – and membership is growing weekly.

“There’s some regulars that are going now,” says Meechan. “It’s established, in just two short months.”

Meechan’s coffee club offers a casual way for lesbians in the west end to hook up and meet new women. There are no membership dues, no rules and, most of all, no pressure.

Lesbians of all ages – married, single or taken – are welcome.

“We’ve basically got a Sunday night coffee club going. People drink coffee and talk,” says Meechan of the club that began early August. “It’s a non-threatening place to meet other women. It’s a non-bar atmosphere so there isn’t a problem with not being able to hear people speak.”

Meechan says the club began when she and her partner, Sharman Potechin, realized that short of trekking downtown, west-end lesbians had nothing to do.

The SLCC is filing a gap, she says, whether women are looking for new friends, old friends – or even Ms Right.

“Any lesbian can come,” explains Meechan. “Just show up. People just order their own coffee and come into our corner. Every week we had at least one woman who was new.”

The casual atmosphere they’ve created has drawn women from as far as Kanata, Manotick, Richmond and Ottawa. She says the club has seen close to 25 different women join them and is friendly toward newcomers.

“They love it, they’re just thrilled that there’s something like that and they’re just glad there’s something happening,”

Meechan says the SLCC has marked its territory at Steamers and received great support from the owner.

“Now the owner reserves the spot at the back with nice chairs and a fireplace for us,” she says. “We used to put a little rainbow flag on the table, but now the numbers are so large it doesn’t matter. It’s obvious.”

As many as 14 women have met at one time, and Meechan adds that the coffee sippers are at various levels of “outness.” She’s impressed with the coffee club’s success and says more like it should crop up around town.

“I think anyone can start one up in their community if they know enough people,” encourages Meechan. “I think the more we do things like that the better it is for women in our community.”

Meechan and Potechin, who operate Out Stuff, say they started the club by advertising in community papers and on websites.

“Other people could do it, anybody could start it themselves,” she says. “If it takes off, it takes off.”

 

SUBURBAN LESBIAN COFFEE CLUB.

7pm. Every Sunday.

Steamers Coffee House.

12-3570 Strandherd Rd, Barrhaven.

Info: 276-8117.

Read More About:
Culture, Ottawa

Keep Reading

Signs and buildings of queer archives; hands playing a game

Among the archives, you can find love, community and history

Queer and trans archives preserve our past—they also offer community space that is essential to our future
Collage with an image of the Book Boudoir's interior, which features candles on a wooden park bench that is suspended by metal chains, bookshelves, a ladder and a counter in front of a shop sign

How BookTok inspired this real-life romance bookstore

Edmonton’s Book Boudoir is building queer-inclusive community one page at a time
Collage with photos of rows of theatre seats, a "Buddies in Bad Times Theatre" sign, a person in a wheelchair lawn bowling, and masked people sitting in a theatre

Disabled queer organizers refuse to leave anyone behind

From low-sensory spaces to masked events, expanding the menu of options can help make queer spaces accessible to everyone
The cover of Cannon by Lee Lai; a self-portrait by Lee Lai

‘Cannon’ shows the cost of keeping in your feelings

Lee Lai’s latest graphic novel follows a woman on the verge of exploding