Thanks to Cheryl Reiss, one of our
dedicated Children's Garden promoters, the SF Chronicle published an article on
our garden in yesterday's paper. See article below.
As a reminder, this Sunday, October 26
from 1 - 4 pm we will have our Fall Harvest Festival in the garden. Join us if you can. We could still use some volunteers
so let me know (sstetler@earthlink.net) if you want to help out. Thanks.
School gardens have
something for everybody
Joe Eaton, Ron Sullivan
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Call it zeitgeist, or a social leveler: Long before the unpleasantness on
Wall Street, we heard talk about "food security" from school-garden
mavens in places as disparate as Mill Valley and Richmond's Iron Triangle.
Visiting two this month, we saw live examples of another leveler - pocket
gophers.
In both gardens, they popped out of the ground like sock puppets. In both
gardens, excited kids crowded around the holes in hope of an encore appearance.
Everybody's planting butterfly gardens, and hooray for that, but for maximum
student involvement, schools ought to consider gopher gardens - not,
apparently, that there's any alternative.
Edna Maguire School in Mill Valley and Lincoln School in Richmond have a few
things in common. They're public elementary schools, both in warm, sunny
microclimates - "banana belts." Both have the spontaneous, always
artistic, sometimes wobbly decor that happens when young kids are handed
paintbrushes and not ordered to stay inside the lines.
And, of course, those gophers.
18-year-old garden
Edna Maguire School's garden was started 18 years ago, when the school was
closed. Skip Kimura of Green Gulch Gardens at the Zen Center's Marin County
retreat laid the foundations and planted the orchard's first trees, some of
them heirloom apples, some of now-unknown lineage.
When Mill Valley's demographics called for it, Maguire School was reopened
and its 11 acres of land reverted to the use of its 430 kindergarten through
fifth-grade students.
Since then, the garden's been run by parent volunteers. Its current honcho
is Saor Stetler, an engaging young guy who must put in lots of time there; his
daughter sailed blithely past us amid her kindergarten gaggle without so much
as a "Daddy's here!" double take.
Through their garden, she and her schoolmates will learn math, science, art
and immediately practical matters like nutrition.
Principal Lisa Zimmer sums up: "Which would kids rather eat: a packaged
snack or a tomato they just picked, that they grew themselves?" (Some of
us think the first step in this lesson would be to lose that distancing word
"nutrition" and talk about tasting glorious food.)
New trees are being planted along with vines and veggies. From one, the kids
pick subtly sweet purple mulberries, rarely available commercially; most people
have never tasted them. They follow their produce from soil to table - or to
sale, at their own stand in the Mill Valley farmers' market, along with
pastries and sauces made from their harvest by parent volunteers.
Maguire School's garden art includes a striking mosaic spiral labyrinth that
includes a map of our solar system. Teachers bring random classes out to this
spot just to enjoy the fresh air while learning.
Lincoln School in Richmond has a garden that has expanded beyond the
school's modest lot into a part of the Richmond Greenway thanks to teacher Park
Guthrie and Urban Tilth, the Five Percent Project and lots of volunteers.
When we visited in February, there were enthusiastic 8- to 10-year-olds picking
and weeding and sharing their greens and herbs. That's another thing we've seen
in every school garden over the past decade - enthusiastic kids. Even the ones
who work at being bored get caught up in something, authorized or not, and
start asking interesting questions.
This project's funding is as iffy as that of any other public goods, so we
were gratified to see that it had not only survived summer vacation but even
expanded and joined forces with a community garden run by neighbor Doria
Robinson. There are more beds, more trees, more berry bushes in the associated
Berryland, on the Greenway just across Sixth Street.
Sense of ownership
Clearly there's a sense of community ownership of this parkway. An
unprepossessing man wheeling a tall blue trash cart down the path asked if we
knew where to get another, as he'd clearly filled his with "garbage I've
been picking up all along here. Just tryin' to keep busy, man." He added a
paint-stiffened jacket to his collection, heading toward a Dumpster a few blocks
away.
Jeff Lee, who owns the corrugated-metal building facing the garden, funded a
new mural: puzzle pieces individually painted by high school students.
The school's planting beds are tagged with photos and biographies of the
students assigned to them this semester. Several of the adjacent community beds
sport "pick me/recogas me!" placards urging path users to
help themselves to surplus tomatoes and other veggies.
Both gardens flourish with community support: Lincoln gets mulch dropped off
by city of Richmond tree-chip trucks; Maguire gets manure from the horses on
Horse Hill next to Route 101. Both draw in volunteers and can always use more.
Both offer education of the sort we both envy, remembering our own school days.
Joe Eaton and Ron Sullivan are naturalists and freelance
garden writers in Berkeley. Check out their Web site at www.selbornesurveys.com or e-mail
them at home@sfchronicle.com.
Located in Mill Valley, California, at Edna Maguire Public Elementary School, the Mill Valley Children's Garden is a 1/3 acre outdoor classroom laboratory. The garden is a hands-on treasure for both curriculum-based teaching and exploratory creative experimentation - it is a "textbook come to life." Through the Children's Garden, children learn botany, ecology, math, science, language arts, creative arts, stewardship of the land, community service, and much more.
The Children's Garden is a grassroots, volunteer effort by the parents, faculty and community of Mill Valley. The garden operates through private funds and donations and is supported by the Edna Maguire PTA - a 501 3 (c).
Are you a parent of an Edna Maguire student interested in volunteering to help with the Mill Valley Children's Garden? Click here for more information, or contact Saor Stetler. Green thumbs are not required - all that is needed is a desire to have fun with the children in the garden while observing the cycles of nature.