#VirtualEvent - Best Crops for #SchoolGardens & Orchards

Thursday, January 22, 2026 at 6:00 pm

"January is a key time for dreaming up a bountiful garden space! Join #SeedStLouis staff for a virtual presentation on our top recommendations for edible school and youth garden spaces. This presentation will detail various options for vegetables, perennials, and orchard plants that consider safety, youth interest, curriculum connections, the academic calendar, attainable maintenance, and reliable crop varieties accessible through Seed St. Louis."

https://zoom.us/webinar/register/5817653854468/WN_pj2m8kB5QHm9S6EUc1H5kA#/registration

#SolarPunkSunday #SeedSaintLouis #GrowYourOwn #GrowYourOwnFood #SchoolGarden #SchoolOrchards #SpendTimeInNature #NatureBasedLearning #MoreGreenTimeLessScreenTime

Welcome! You are invited to join a webinar: Best Crops for School Gardens & Orchards. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the webinar.

January is a key time for dreaming up a bountiful garden space! Join Seed St. Louis staff for a virtual presentation on our top recommendations for edible school and youth garden spaces. This presentation will detail various options for vegetables, perennials, and orchard plants that consider safety, youth interest, curriculum connections, the academic calendar, attainable maintenance, and reliable crop varieties accessible through Seed St. Louis.

Zoom

How to Start a #SchoolGarden: Your Complete Guide

Excerpt: "Benefits of school gardens

1. School gardens help children learn.

Gardening is the study of life. The simple act of caring for living soil and plants gives children a foundation for understanding the principles of birth, growth, maturity, death, competition, cooperation and many other lessons that transfer to human lives. In a school garden, children experience these lessons ‘hands on’ through a learning method that is rich and inclusive to varied learning abilities. The results teachers see every day are now supported by science: school gardens can help our children learn better, both academically and emotionally. For more information, read School Gardens: Can They Make Our Children Smarter?

2. Gardening together strengthens ties between school and community.

School gardening programs offer opportunities for community members to get involved, reducing the social isolation of seniors with skills to share and connecting children to older generations. They also help connect schools to local businesses and groups when they request sponsorship or volunteer assistance.

3. Getting their hands dirty helps connect children with nature.

Children who garden get a close-up look at natural processes and the living organisms that thrive in these environments. By learning to care for a living, breathing #ecosystem, children develop an understanding of nature’s importance in their lives and the lives of other beings. This fosters a culture of #EnvironmentalStewardship.

4. Gardening strengthens children’s immune systems.

There’s more and more evidence that getting #dirty exposes us to a variety of #microbes that can fortify our health and balance our immune systems against our overly sterilized world. This is particularly true for children who benefit from reduced allergies and asthma when exposed early in life to #dirt and the outdoors. The #VitaminD they absorb when gardening doesn’t hurt, either!

5. Working in a school garden helps children stay active, reducing obesity.

Teachers across the country agree: when children garden, they move their bodies more than when passively listening in a classroom. Jumping, bending, lifting, and stretching all take place during a typical gardening session. This is one of the objectives of gardening in school that most can agree is necessary given our increasingly sedentary way of life.

6. Gardening moderates moods and eases anxiety.

There’s some evidence that exposure to the beneficial microbes in soil can help regulate the neurotransmitters affecting our brain’s emotional state. A whole practice involving exposing yourself to green spaces to lift the mood has even emerged globally, with convincing results. But gardens are more than just another green space: they’re hands-on, outdoor classrooms that teach children self-regulation and mindfulness—both of which have been shown to decrease anxiety and depression.

7. Children who garden at school develop empathy and practice risk.

Teachers who garden with their students notice increased empathy towards other students and the organisms living in their school patch. That’s because tending to a ‘bug hotel’ or watching birds and earthworms thrive in the garden helps children understand the interdependency of nature. A garden also provides the perfect place for children to learn about boundaries and responsibility by practicing new activities in a safe space. Using a paring knife, trying out a hammer, or balancing on the edge of a raised bed are all ways for children to test their edges and learn new skills in a supportive environment.

8. Teaching and food gardens improve children’s diets.

Academics and journalists agree: children who garden eat more fresh vegetables. This extends beyond what they nibble on during classroom gardening time. Apparently just having a garden at school increases their intake of vegetables at home. And that’s good news for parents, teachers, and kids."

Learn more:
https://learn.eartheasy.com/guides/how-to-start-a-school-garden-your-complete-guide/

#SolarPunkSunday #SchoolGardens #FoodSecurity #NatureBasedLearning #MoreGreenTimeLessScreenTime #GrowYourOwn #GrowYourOwnFood

How to Start a School Garden: Your Complete Guide – Eartheasy

From striking your garden committee to hosting a school-wide ‘dig day’, learn how to start a school garden for education, eating, and fun.

Eartheasy – Solutions for Sustainable Living

Nevada County kids are learning more than ABCs—they're learning how to save the planet.

Through a rare Leah’s Pantry “Food Smarts: Waste Reduction” pilot, students compost, cook, garden, and run a food pantry—all while prepping for curbside food scrap collection.

Read on below!

#NevadaCounty #FoodWasteEducation #CalFreshHealthyLiving #SchoolGarden #Community

http://ittybitty4life.com/2025/06/27/to-waste-or-not-to-waste-nevada-county-schools-teach-kids-about-food-waste/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=jetpack_social

To Waste Or Not To Waste: Nevada County Schools Teach Kids About Food Waste

In Nevada County, we’re not just tossing food scraps into bins—we’re teaching kids why that matters. A pilot program at Ready Springs School is one of only two in California (along with a San Diego…

IttyBitty4life
Absolutely let's have kitchens in every school - and where there's land, a vegetable garden too - and let their use be part of the curriculum https://www.irishtimes.com/life-style/people/2025/04/21/lets-put-a-real-kitchen-in-every-school-we-could-use-some-of-the-apple-taxes/ #SchoolKitchen #SchoolGarden
Sarah Moss: Let’s put a real kitchen in every school. We could use some of the Apple taxes

Imagine cooking well from raw ingredients as part of the curriculum in those schools. We could have hens too

The Irish Times
Today I visited the garden of the Freinet school De Vlindertuin in Lille, where my youngest daughter goes to school. 🌸📚

Spring is clearly in full bloom – blossoms, flowers, and little signs of new life everywhere. I couldn’t resist grabbing my phone and capturing some of it. Such a beautiful, peaceful place for children to play and explore! 🌼✨

---------------

Vandaag bracht ik een bezoek aan de tuin van de Freinetschool De Vlindertuin in Lille, waar mijn jongste dochter schoolloopt. 🌸📚

De lente is duidelijk in volle bloei – overal bloesems, bloemen en kleine tekenen van nieuw leven. Ik kon het niet laten om mijn camera boven te halen en een paar beelden vast te leggen. Wat een mooie, rustige plek voor kinderen om te spelen en te ontdekken! 🌼✨

#NotMyGarden
#Spring
#Bloesems
#SchoolGarden
#DeVlindertuin
#Lille
#Freinetschool
#Photography
#Lente
#Schooltuin
#Bloemenpracht

Starting a #SchoolGarden Program: Overview

"Why plant a school garden? School gardens have entered the national spotlight as an effective way to promote life-long healthy eating habits and connect students to the natural world. Gardening provides educators with opportunities to enhance student education through practical, reality-based learning."

https://kidsgardening.org/resources/create-sustain-a-program-starting-a-school-garden-program-overview/
#FarmToSchool #NatureBasedLearning #FoodSecurity #Gardening #ConnectWithNature #SolarPunkSunday

Starting a School Garden Program: Overview - KidsGardening

The school garden offers a place to enrich teaching efforts with powerful hands-on experiences that make learning come alive.

KidsGardening - Helping Young Minds Grow
Check out the free VegPlotter Schools portal! Teachers can help pupils plan their school gardens & learn to grow. Let’s inspire kids to embrace gardening. 🌱 #schoolgarden #schoolgardening #kidsgardening #gardeningwithkids #gardeneducation #outdoorlearning #outdoorclassroom #schoolgardenclub

Day one of planting down. Junior Gardeners planted potatoes, strawberries, carrots, peas, lettuce, spinach, onions, kale, and basil. "Half a finger deep and a whole hand apart" was the rule of thumb for planting. We'll soon have food to start the donation process once again! 😊 Grow a row to feed your community!

#GrowARow #CommunityGarden #SchoolGarden #science #gardening #education #volunteer #AAGV #SolarPunk #UrbanAg

🌱 Ever thought of starting a school garden club? 🍅 Get your kids excited about growing their own food! @vegplotter offers a FREE school subscription for teachers to plan & teach the fundamentals of growing sustainable, healthy veg. Dig in! #SchoolGarden

https://vegplotter.com/schools

VegPlotter | Free School Garden Planner | Use VegPlotter as part of your lessons

As a teacher your pupils can use VegPlotter to plan their school garden. With a VegPlotter teacher's account you can create an manage anonymous pupil accounts for your class to use

“This brings meaning and purpose to the lessons:”
Teachers’ and facilitators’ perspectives on the joys and challenges of school garden programs in south-eastern Ontario

Janette Haase
Elaine Power

#SchoolGarden #Food #FoodLiteracy #FarmToSchool #Sustainability #Interviews #Gardens #Ontario

https://canadianfoodstudies.uwaterloo.ca/index.php/cfs/article/view/600

“This brings meaning and purpose to the lessons:” : Teachers’ and facilitators’ perspectives on the joys and challenges of school garden programs in south-eastern Ontario | Canadian Food Studies / La Revue canadienne des études sur l'alimentation

Scholarly and community articles about food and food systems