Welcome to Guilford County Cooperative Extension School Garden Network team blog! We hope this can be a space for everyone involved in school gardening in Guilford County to share their experiences. Lets let each other know about what works, and troubleshoot what doesn't!

Saturday, August 17, 2013

SCHOOL GARDEN NETWORK AND THE GIVING SEED AT CITY MARKET!


Kelly Misiak of The Giving Seed nonprofit put the children through their paces in an environmental animal movement challenge course! 
Many of the adults decided it looked fun and joined in!




Cynthia Nielsen talked school gardens and gave away seeds to interested families. 
We look forward to the next City Market, 3rd Thursday of every month through October! Downtown off Elm St.

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Lindley Elementary Farmer's Market

Lindley Elementary Farmer's Market this morning was delightful! There was not only a selection of garden fresh veggies and herbs but also locally made crafts for sale made by parents and other community members.

Lindley's garden looks great in spite of all the rain! Let us hear about your summer garden experiences...

Lindley will hold their next market the first Saturday of September, 9am to 1pm.Sept. 8th 9am-1pm.

We hope to see you there!







Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Garden Synergy at General Greene Elementary!


I want to share some happy news about gardening at General Greene Elementary. For the past couple years, gardening activities have run independently on parallel tracks with little communication between projects. After various conversations with parent volunteers, teachers, and NCA&T project coordinator and director; everyone is now in touch and working well together to meet common goals.


Dr. Manuel Reyes and his graduate student Le Ngoc Kieu  are using garden beds at General Greene to study conservation techniques as they effect soil conservation and fertility. Ms Kieu has been working with Science Specialist Dana Apple’s students in the garden planting various vegetable plants.


Holly Bell and Kelly Sham are parent volunteers who have been using the wonderful Greenhouse to grow seedlings for various projects at the school. Master Garden Volunteer Barbara Culpepper is also lending her services to the school’s efforts to develop its gardening program. Kelly will be offering his labor watering this summer for the conservation beds and looks forward to working with the folk from A&T and including students in gardening plans for next school year.
The following photos and description are from Kelly, he has some very important information to share! 

We have been working to get the pond back in shape.  It had sort of turned into something more like a swamp.  One set of pics shows how it looked shortly after we started cleaning it and how it looks today. 






One set of pics shows the waterfall before and after I shut everything down, pulled the pump and cleaned it, cleaned all the filters and back flushed the system this weekend.



And the other set just has some general pics of stuff around the green house.  Please notice the black widow spider and egg sac.  This one was under the filter and pump lid for the pond.  I have seen four different ones around the green house, garden and pond!  Please tell everyone to be careful when they are reaching into places.  I've been opening compost bins, lids, etc. and then I stand back and look for a minute before I reach in.



Thursday, May 16, 2013

Sumner Elementary has got it's garden going!


Shared by Katina Peace Perry, Sumner Counselor with support from Sumner's principal, Thyais Maxwell.

We are excited to finally get our gardens started.  We did purchase some mature plants as recommended by the Tarheel gardening ladies.

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Kimberly Smith, ACES director, Sharon Funderburk, Jessica Cassell, Martina Holt, ACES teachers, assisted students in the after-school program in planting herbs  and vegetables in the raised beds. These students also planted flowers in the main courtyard.  These activities culminated their Earth Day unit of study.
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The ACES students conducted a community survey which concluded that schools need to keep their campuses clean and orderly. They used campus beautification and clean up in response to the data from the survey to decide how to design their gardens.
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Sunday, May 5, 2013

Gillespie Park Elementary school is up and Gardening!

Deborah Blackwood, resource teacher, Nancy Straghan, kindergarten teacher, and Silvana Mazo, media specialist, along with support from Principal Joseph Stone have begun the first vegetable plantings this past week in their newly constructed raised beds! they've come a long way since our initial discussions in the fall!


If you've started up or made additions to your school garden, let us know through pictures!
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Sunday, April 28, 2013

FoodCorps tour of HIgh Point school gardens!

A number of us toured three of the nine school gardens in High Point where the FoodCorps service members Leah Klaproth and Eliza Hudson have really made a positive difference for students. It was a beautiful blue sky day as much of our spring has been this year. I've included a few pictures with students when school was in session.







Schools toured were Parkview, Johnston St. and Kirkman Park.

Thank you Leah and Eliza for all that you do!











Thursday, April 25, 2013

Smith High School Science Students Celebrate Earth Week with garden science experiments


Mr. Abraha, chemistry teacher, and Cynthia Nielsen, School Garden Network Coordinator, joined Mrs. Connie Mitchell's Environmental Science class in Smith High School's raised bed garden plots to set up their experiments to determine the effect of different variables on plant growth.



 "Plants and food are a big part of our lives here on planet earth" said one freshman in explaining why what they are studying in the garden relates to Earth Week.




Students varied one of the following factors in 1/2 of each of the 4'x8' beds while leaving the other half as a control: water, fertilizer, plant spacing and plant type. Students will measure and compare plant growth outcomes over the next six weeks.




They will share the results with us and other high school's science classes. Funding from an enrichment grant and plant donations from Home Depot to Mr. Abraha helped underwrite this research.





 Mr. Abraha says their next project will be to work with a Biology teacher and students on other plant growth factors. 









We will follow their progress and report back to you!