Sunday, October 10, 2010

Bringing Gardens into schools













If you've been to our website, you know what GreenerSLC is all about. We not only love plants, but we care for our environment and our community as well. We emphasize local and global conscious gardening and building practices and try to provide our customers with as much knowledge about creating a sustainable environment within their yard as we possibly can. We only use organic methods, and we always push our customers to grow their own vegetable gardens. (Admittedly I get super excited when I walk into a new backyard and find a thriving vegetable garden, see herbs in pots or am asked to design a xeriscaped garden.)

Even though these practices were once the ONLY way of life, modern practices have completely negated these basic gardening and ecological concepts from our daily lives. Thanks to inexpensive irrigation and chemical fertilizers we have emerald green lawns thriving in the desert and find tropical plants growing in the mountains. Thanks to the incredible technological advancements by american farmers and grocers, we eat genetically enhanced and astronomically large veggies, eat fruits that were grown across oceans, and no longer need to worry about time of year to pick up a pack of "fresh" strawberries. For seasonal foods virtually no longer exists.















The Woolly Pockets company has created an incredible yet extremely affordable program for grades K-12 that does just that. Its called the Woolly Garden School and it provides all of the tools to bring plants into the classroom. For only $1000, you get a packet full of 50 Woolly Pocket planters, Do-it-yourself hardware and instructions, premium soil, organic seeds, compost tea, a planting chart, a gardening manual, and a nutrition and gardening curriculum lesson plan.
























What could be better? Not only that, but the Woolly Garden School makes it easy to bring this program to your school even when the funding isn't present. If you would like to donate to this fund, or would like to emphasize programs like this in your school, contact Woolly Pockets and see what you can do to bring life to your local community.

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