School garden projects help students blossom
Lynne Haley Staff Writer | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 8 years, 9 months AGO
SAGLE — Sixth-graders at Sagle Elementary took delivery of a dump truck full of topsoil Monday and made short work of filling the waiting garden beds to the rim. Thus, the latest garden project in Lake Pend Oreille School District elementary schools is officially installed and waiting for the students to decide what they will grow.
"I'll come to class on Friday to talk to them about soil and soil amendments. We'll start the planning process so the kids can help decide what, when and how to plant," said Gray Henderson, official liaison between the Bonner County Garden Association and the schools.
Michele Murphree initiated the Edible Schoolyard Garden Project in 2010 and has brought a garden to a new school each year. To date, every elementary school but one, Southside, has a project garden, including Forrest M. Byrd Charter School.
Early on, she organized a garden club at each school for those interested in growing food. Now, as the success of the program has grown, the schools have embraced gardening as part of their curricula. Children learn about cultivating their own fruits and vegetables, eating healthy foods and taking care of the earth, Murphree said.
Gardening also positively affects students' self-esteem, test scores, and their attitude toward school. Such projects also help make students more social while minimizing behavioral problems, according to several Virginia Tech studies.
An annual $2,000 grant from the local Elks Lodge No. 1376 pays for materials and supplies while BCGA provides the expertise. Area merchants, including Mountain Barn and Ranch Service, Sun Rental and Sandpoint Building Supply made in-kind donations, too, Murphree said.
The Sagle Elementary project began last Friday, with volunteers from the Elks and BCGA arriving on campus to assemble and set six cedar garden boxes in place. They added an automatic watering system to ensure plants stay hydrated over the summer.
The initial phase of the project concluded on Wednesday as sixth-grade students took up shovels and wheelbarrows alongside adult volunteers to distribute soil to the boxes.
The sixth-graders of Sagle will be actively involved in the project from here on out, and if enthusiasm is any indication, this latest schoolyard garden is already on course to thrive.
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