Category Archives: School garden

Taking the long view on Garden Club kids

One regular in our after-school Garden Club is really squeamish about little critters that growers regularly encounter. That is to say that she shrieks with real dismay when something flies near her. And don’t even suggest that she touch the soil.

Another regular declines every opportunity to taste things that we grow. He says with great certainty, “I don’t like to eat things that are green.”

So what should we make of these students? We could indignantly tell the first, “Clearly, you’re not cut out to be a gardener. Maybe you should join some other club.” We might similarly scold the second about his eating ways.

We don’t say any such thing, however. We welcome these great kids and think that a positive experience is the best way to bring them around to the pleasures of getting hands dirty and eating greens. These kids are a long-term investment.

—Bill Stoneman

Albany schools gardeners making summer plans

The Garden Club at Myers Middle School continues to dig in the dirt all summer long.  And Myers won’t be the only Albany district school where school gardeners have a chance to get together. Organizers of a new garden at Albany High School will meet weekly and, as at Myers, welcome friends – both those who have met and those who have not yet met – to stop by and pick up a tool.

The Myers Garden Club: the Summer Edition will meet Tuesday evenings, Continue reading

Fresh from the garden, salad is a lunchtime hit

Jahiaire Byrd digs into salad greens grown in the garden at Myers Middle School.

Jahiaire Byrd digs into salad greens grown in the garden at Myers Middle School.

 

Fresh greens went quickly on Friday.

Fresh greens went quickly on Friday.

We hit an important milestone on Friday: The school lunch program served our produce in the cafeteria. We harvested quite a load of leafy greens and radishes on Thursday afternoon. The food services folks made a salad with it.  And the students at Myers Middle School scarfed it up!

We will definitely do this again. In Continue reading

Summertime Garden Club extends the season

The school calendar does not synch up well with the growing season around these parts. So that is a challenge for project that seeks to create learning opportunities with plants. We address the challenge in a couple of ways.

We start seeds and grow plants under lights indoors. We equip one classroom at Continue reading

Friends’ support nurtures growth in garden initiative

As we continue to expand our garden, learn more boxtops logo2about nurturing plants through the cold months, reach out to classroom teachers and reach out to sixth-, seventh- and eighth-grade students, I want to note how much your support means to our effort and suggest a couple of specific says that you can help.

First, would you consider joining our summer garden watering crew? In the best of possible worlds, friends of the Vegetable Project will commit to watering the Continue reading

Family Day in the Garden on Saturday

DiggingWe invite folks to Family Days in the Garden twice each spring and once each fall. And the second spring date is coming right up – Saturday, May 17, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Please join us if you can and even for just a short while.

Please also note, however, that although we really value the building skills and Continue reading

Opportunities abound for getting hands dirty

The past week was an exciting one for Albany schools folks who see great learning opportunities in getting hands dirty. And it is a pleasure to know some of the people at a couple of the schools and have a chance to compare notes with them.

You may have read in the Times Union  a couple of days ago about a wonderful vegetable garden project at Arbor Hill Elementary School that is led by Yusef Continue reading

School gardens growing all over Albany

This Saturday, April 26, is shaping up to be a big day for gardens at Albany schools.

It’s the first of two spring Family Days in the Garden at Myers Middle School. We’ll be getting ready for the coming growing season from 9 to 11 a.m. Kids and adults alike are more than welcome to join in.  We have some carpentry plans, would like to get some compost turned and no doubt will come up with a dozen more good reasons to get our hands dirty.

But Myers is hardly the only Albany school where gardeners and educators are eager to get planting. Our good friend Susan Fowler is inviting friends to Family Day in the Friendship Garden at Delaware Community School from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the same day.  And a fledgling garden group at Albany High, led by sophomore Liz John, is planning to build several raised beds to get growing going there from noon until 3 p.m.  A big thanks go to the master gardeners of the Cornell Cooperative Extension Service of Albany County, who have donated lumber for the project.

Have some time on the 26th and want to make a difference for students in Albany schools? Please lend a hand to one of these great projects.

—Bill Stoneman

Contributing to teaching in our community

It was a great pleasure to be a part of a Project Learning Tree workshop for Albany teachers and College of Saint Rose teaching students two weeks ago. The workshop was on school gardening and we hosted it at Myers Middle School. Great partners in the day-long program were the College of Saint Rose, the Albany Fund for Education and the state Department of Environmental Conservation.

Some of the response to our part in the workshop is enough to make us think we Continue reading

Spring and summer’s garden is taking shape

We avoid a number of outdoor issues when we start seeds and nurture small plants indoors: Heavy rain and lashing winds don’t bother as at all. And no one walks off with almost-ready-to-harvest watermelons.

We face other hazards, however, such as occasional inability to visit our plants. Continue reading