Thursday, September 13, 2012

Revving our green thumbs...


Yeah for school being back in session! It was a lovely surprise for many to come check out the garden and see all of these big, gorgeous pumpkins, apples, zucchinis as big as tree trunks, monster Kale, and tomatoes plants that would not stop. Oh and bees.. and we like bees, they make our plants happy! We are really excited for our gardening program this year...

We are asking every class to have at least one Garden Liaisons  (Parent) to help weave garden-related activities and lessons into their classroom core curriculum. In plain words, get in the garden with the kids, observe, write, draw, graph, plant, harvest... Without you amazing parents, we don't have a program!

We ask that children only pick when they are with their teachers. We will be officially kicking off the program once we get all of our Garden Liaisons for each class. We can't wait to reconnect and meet new faces..look for a garden work day to kick it all off!

In the Garden with the class
MONSTER Zucchini 

Bees Collecting Pollin!
Stump play


WE rescued our Redbud from the Native Garden and it's ALIVE!
Super Sweet Cherry Tomatoes!
Recess exploration

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

HARVEST SEASON

Welcome back to school Montclair Elementary! As summer starts to fade harvest season is upon us in the Friendship garden. There has been a bounty of greens and tomatoes this summer, along with some mammoth carrots and a stunning pumpkin crop. Chamomile is growing wildly and there are 4+ foot celery stalks.
We are thinking about having a harvest festival this fall, or perhaps some sort of a pumpkin event in which each class would do something fun/creative/educational with a pumpkin and compare results at the end. Let us know what you think. We love to hear your ideas.
This year there will be an emphasis on getting kids out into the garden and integrating all the garden has to teach into classroom curriculums. Pilar has spent  a tremendous amount of time developing garden lesson plans for each grade. The garden can be used as a platform to teach biology, nutrition, health, cooking, life science, diversity, ecosystems, reading, writing, math......... the possibilities are endless.
We are very excited about getting teachers and students more engaged in the garden as we begin to plan for the garden that will take shape with the new construction.
 A joyful moment as we ate the larger than life celery. 

 Never too young to start gardening

 Holy pumpkins Batman!!


We ask all of you gardeners (and nongardeners) to join us in the effort. Our kids thrive in green-space. Get involved! Talk to us, talk to your child's teacher or just stroll around the garden and wonder at the marvel of all of that edible greenery sprouting from the earth.