Saturday, November 28, 2009 in Lewiston, Maine

Auburn-Lewiston:
Overcast, 42.8 °F

School garden producing more than food

BUCKFIELD — Pumpkins being harvested from the Buckfield school garden are being decorated by art students and auctioned off to benefit a local family whose mother is dealing with cancer. The effort is one more lesson from the garden that has already produced health and education benefits for the community.

About 80 of the 320 pumpkins from the plot next to the Buckfield Junior-Senior High School are being used as canvases to paint aliens, rock stars, funny faces, kittens and other creatures by Nikki Millonzi's Art II students at the school. Then, on Oct. 2, when the garden project organizers are serving a harvest supper, the pumpkins will be auctioned and the proceeds given to the family.

“Everyone needs a little help. This is a way to give back to the community and show that we care for them,” said Hailey Severy, an 11th grade art student and Buckfield resident. Her deep purple, white and gold pumpkin depicts something like a black widow spider.

Millonzi also plans to use the bright yellow, sturdy sunflowers in the garden as models for students to paint likenesses of Vincent Van Gogh's famous sunflower composition. Millonzi also teaches photography, and is holding a photo competition with the subjects being the garden's abundant flowers of every color and variety.

The idea for the garden began when Caldwell and seventh-grade language arts teacher, Gretchen Kimball, discussed how to bring fresher food to the school's lunch program, and the childhood obesity problem, with the health coordinator. From there, middle school youngsters designed, researched, planted and harvested the garden.

Since it was started in May, the one-acre of plantings has supplied vegetables for people to buy and students and staff to eat in the cafeteria.

“The kids were knee-deep in mud when they started planting in the pouring rain on May 29,” said eighth-grade science teacher Caleb McNaughton, one of the garden project organizers.

Eighth-grader Jeremy Austin and others, spent recesses picking flowers or vegetables.

“I did a lot of hoeing and helped build the garden stand,” he said. “It was fun doing stuff.”

He also was one of three dozen students who volunteered to come to school during the summer months to continue taking care of the plants and harvesting produce.

Another organizer, eighth-grade math teacher Annette Caldwell, estimated a ton of food has been harvested and given or sold, so far. That doesn't include the hundreds of squashes and pumpkins.

Kimball said she is looking into a grant possibility that would provide money to build an outside classroom next to the garden.

Caldwell said the garden project will go as far as students want it to next year.

“Maybe a greenhouse? Or composting?” she said. “They feel ownership for the garden and feel so proud of themselves. They feel like it's something special,” she said.

eadams@sunjournal.com


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