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About this Event
This is a self-guided tour, so I highly recommend checking out the list of farming projects ahead of time and planning your itinerary thoroughly!
Farming Activities Include
Cooking
- Cook a seasonal recipe as a class and create a "how to" recipe book to take home.
- Make applesauce in a crockpot...with local apples, of course!
- Put local spinach and cream cheese in a blender. You just made local
edible paint. Spread it on a large cracker or piece of bread. Use bits of carrots, cucumbers, and celery. Eat it.
- Treasure hunt at the farm. Go on a hunt for a purple vegetable. Buy the vegetable. Cook it. Eat it.
- Become a chef on the farm field trip. Buy stuff from the farm. Take it home and cook use it for a chef master piece.
Taste Testing
- Taste two kinds of local apples. Which do you like more?
- Cut up a local sweet potato into lots of little sticks. Give someone a stick to taste and ask them to guess what vegetable it is.
- Hold a below-ground-veggie-growing taste test.
- Share a taste test of a local product with another class. Compare taste preferences.
- Try radishes 5 ways: whole, sliced, grated, pickled, used as crayons.
- Look at a local cucumber really closely through a magnifying glass. Then eat the cucumber.
- Get a chicken. Take care of it. Eat its eggs.
Gardening
- Make a list of all of the vegetables you can think of. Use a yellow marker to highlight the ones that grow in your region (or in the summer, or in the fall-you get the idea). Plant the seeds that suit the current season.
- Plant a garden.
- Make a worm bin and feed them scraps from snack.
- Plant a mystery seed. Can you guess what it will be?
- Package, market and sell bulk seeds as a fund raiser.
- Dig up a bit of soil from the garden. Mail it off to get it analyzed. Ask a Cooperative Extension agent to explain the results.
- Look at a seed catalog to determine which plants can be grown and harvested this year. Plant those seeds.
- Plant a sunflower house.
- Do the "Soil Test" to determine if a soil has the proper level of moisture (have three tubs of soil: one that is too dry, one that is too moist, and one that is "just right").
- Grow non-edible plants, like flowers: they are lovely, good for pollination, and can be sold to raise money.
- Make "Beanie Babies": Use a small ziploc bag, add a cotton make-up pad, a bean seed, and a few drops of water. Put on a string and have students wear them around their neck. Talk abut how body heat helps with seed germination.
Reading/Literature
- Read "Tops and Bottoms." Make a list of veggies that grow above ground and then another list for veggies that grow below ground.
- Eat some local blueberries and read "Blueberries for Sal."
- Make a scarecrow family (mom, dad, baby) for your garden. Read "Scarecrow" by Cynthia Rylant.
- Use "Cabbages and Kings" to teach point of view.
- Read "Food Rules" and discuss it.
Math
- Weigh raw greens and calculate their volume. Cook them, and remeasure.
- Chop an onion and count the rings.
- Scale up a recipe to feed the whole school.
- When you harvest something, weigh it and calculate how much money you could make if you sold it at different stores/markets.
Logic/Comparison
- Go on a color hunt in the garden. Which colors can you find in the spring? Which ones can you find in the fall?
- Compare and contrast seeds. Can you sort them by size? by color?
Science
- Compare and contrast different types of greens.
- Have each student become an expert on a fruit/vegetable
- Trace your lunch back to its sources.
- Interview a member of your group about growing food or cooking.
- Keep a log of what kinds of plant parts you eat for a day. Did you eat more leaves, roots, or stems?
- Happy cabbage day! How many types of cabbage are there? Have you ever had a stirfry with local cabbage?
Crafts/Creative Activities
- Make a paper crown. Draw or glue on pictures of vegetables to become a veggie king or queen.
- Write a garden song and teach it to another class.
- Write a garden song and teach it to another class.
- Celebrate National Poetry Month (April) by writing poems about the garden or local farms.
- Create a poem or song about your favorite local food.
- Make mobiles from recycled silverware, bile tier, and CD's to decorate your garden.
- Create promotional materials for local fruits and vegetables served in the cafeteria.
- Make up a menu for a restaurant that sells local food.
- Make up a week's menu for your school's cafeteria, highlighting the locally grown products.
Farmer Connection
- Visit the farm and pick fruits and vegetables.
- Visit the farm and pet the animals.
- Visit the farm and learn about bees.
- Invite a farmer to come talk to your class.
- Interview our farmer. Ask about his or her business, favorite vegetables, favorite aspect of farming, etc.
- Visit the farm and help with a farm chore.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
1828 Stephenson Rd, 1828 Stephenson Road, Lithonia, United States
USD 28.52