Monday, November 14, 2011
Garden Harvest Party
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Monday, October 17, 2011
Monday, October 3, 2011
Garden Observations
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| After students observed the gardens, they wrote about what amazed them the most. |
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| The plants are enormous! |
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| There are so many marigolds blooming! |
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| Let's see. I don't know whether to color or write first. |
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| Ooh! There are so many tomatoes too! |
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| Just look at the giant red tomato! |
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| I can hardly believe how much the plants have grown! |
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| Yep, our gardens are really awesome! |
Monday, September 5, 2011
Garden Harvest Party Planned
While students were away for summer vacation, amazing things were happening in the vegetable gardens. Tomato plants that were just a few inches tall when planted, are now over 4 feet tall. Lots of tomatoes are turning from green to red. Over the summer, we harvested all of the radishes, green onions, and lettuce. Recently we picked some peas, beans, tomatoes and cabbages. Our gardens are still growing tomatoes, green peppers, cucumbers, and popcorn.
If you were in the Garden Club last year, club members will begin meeting again during the week of September 26, during lunch recess. Students are invited to a Harvest Party on September 28 or 29, depending on the grade level. We will end the garden project by cleaning up the gardens for the winter, during the following week.
Often, this time of the year, people have extra produce from their own gardens. If you would like to donate extra vegetables to Community Sharing at Apollo Center, you can drop them off in the school office anytime between September 26 and October 4. I will transport all donations to Apollo Center where they will be greatly appreciated.
It has been such a pleasure to cultivate gardening interest and to teach our young Bobcat gardeners more about how to grow vegetables. Many of them have shared with me their enthusiasm for gardening at home as well. Please visit us at brooksgardenjournal.blogspot.com for news on our culminating activities.
Can You Guess Which Garden Is Yours?
The Tomato Hornworm
Bare branches on the tomato plant
Suddenly caught my eye.
Fear strikes me as I slowly
Step in closer to inspect the leafless branch,
Knowing I must find the destructive vandal.
Searching, searching, searching...
Same green as the leaves.
Fatter and longer than my thumb.
Disgustingly plump for a worm.
Slow but a ravenous eater.
Looking up from below.
Looking down from above.
Not touching the plant in case
My fingers should feel the
Soft, squishy skin...
Or the horn protruding from the head,
Or is that the tail?
Surely I should be able to see the black and white
Suddenly caught my eye.
Fear strikes me as I slowly
Step in closer to inspect the leafless branch,
Knowing I must find the destructive vandal.
Searching, searching, searching...
Same green as the leaves.
Fatter and longer than my thumb.
Disgustingly plump for a worm.
Slow but a ravenous eater.
Looking up from below.
Looking down from above.
Not touching the plant in case
My fingers should feel the
Soft, squishy skin...
Or the horn protruding from the head,
Or is that the tail?
Surely I should be able to see the black and white
spots and stripes,
Lining the body in a perfect pattern.
Looking along the bare stems,
Looking under the curled leaves.
Ahhhhhhh!
Even fatter than I remember.
Now what? I ask myself.
Save the plant, I hear a voice pleading in my head.
Courage, where's my courage?
I slowly move in to rescue the plant.
Snip went the scissors across the stem.
Plop, the tomato hornworm fell to the ground
Still munching and clinging to it's branch.
Can't leave it here!
Then where?
I slide on my garden gloves.
And pinch the stem as I slowly raise it up
To meet my wondering eyes.
I can't harm Mother Nature's hornworm!
But it can't harm our tomato plants either.
It's garden waste, I tell myself.
There will be lots for it to eat in the compost bin.
It may even burrow into the rich compost,
And pupate into a cocoon.
So carefully I walk my prisoner to the compost bin,
Open the lid and drop it in.
Someday a lucky gardener may lift the lid
And watch a beautiful hornworm moth emerge.
The moth may mate with another hornworm moth,
Then fly to another tomato plant
To lay its eggs on the leaves.
The eggs will hatch
And there will be
Many more tomato hornworms
To surprise and fascinate
Lining the body in a perfect pattern.
Looking along the bare stems,
Looking under the curled leaves.
Ahhhhhhh!
Even fatter than I remember.
Now what? I ask myself.
Save the plant, I hear a voice pleading in my head.
Courage, where's my courage?
I slowly move in to rescue the plant.
Snip went the scissors across the stem.
Plop, the tomato hornworm fell to the ground
Still munching and clinging to it's branch.
Can't leave it here!
Then where?
I slide on my garden gloves.
And pinch the stem as I slowly raise it up
To meet my wondering eyes.
I can't harm Mother Nature's hornworm!
But it can't harm our tomato plants either.
It's garden waste, I tell myself.
There will be lots for it to eat in the compost bin.
It may even burrow into the rich compost,
And pupate into a cocoon.
So carefully I walk my prisoner to the compost bin,
Open the lid and drop it in.
Someday a lucky gardener may lift the lid
And watch a beautiful hornworm moth emerge.
The moth may mate with another hornworm moth,
Then fly to another tomato plant
To lay its eggs on the leaves.
The eggs will hatch
And there will be
Many more tomato hornworms
To surprise and fascinate
Even more gardeners.
Saturday, August 20, 2011
Our Garden Super Stars
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| Let's feed the earthworms! Here's some lettuce and egg shells. |
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| I picked a cucumber. |
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| I picked some green beans. |
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| My friend's Mom helped me find some sugar snap peas. |
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| We filled our bags with fresh garden food. |
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| I picked a cucumber! |
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| I'm picking peas! |
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| I watered the plants. |
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| Then I fanned my friend. He was hot from all the gardening. |
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| Okay! Enough already! |
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| Just look at the cabbages! |
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| Then we enjoyed a picnic lunch! |
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| Our own blanket...what a treat! |
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| Hey! Just look at that flying by! |
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| We separated the worms from the castings and added them to the garden to fertilize the plants. Then we made a fresh new bedding for our earthworm friends. |
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Summertime Gardeners
Garden Poems by Mrs. Farnum's First Grade Class
Green Pepper
by Lucas Rogers
There is spicy green things in a garden
Waiting to say...crunch, crunch, crunch.
The Garden
by Tristan
I like red onions
I saw some lettuce
I like lettuce on sandwiches
There were ants and rocks and trees
The Garden
Vegetables
by Ethan
My vegetables.
Carrots are good.
Tomatoes are sweet.
Lettuce is green.
Peas are yummy.
Broccoli is like a tree.
Onions are smelly like an elephant.
Radishes are red and yummy.
Things About The Garden
by Ben Woodbeck
by Ben Woodbeck
Things are going good at the garden.
There are tomatoes,
There are carrots,
There are red onions and cucumbers.
And broccoli and cauliflower.
And really good food.
There are vegetables and fruit,
Animals, earthworms, and ants too.
Lettuce, soil, and rocks.
Things are going good in the garden.
They have lines
On them and green
On it. And it is
Puffy-like.
A fuzzy and a
Piece of food for
A bunny.
The Garden
by Camryn Zamora
Tomatoes
Apples
Corn
Carrots
Growing in our garden.
The Tomato Plant
by Carlee Munger
And looks like a mini tree
With leaves blowing in the air!
Thursday, July 7, 2011
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