Sent: Wednesday, October 19, 2016 11:02:36 AM
From: Stephanie at The Kitchen Community
To: jeevacation@gmail.com
Subject: Celebrate National Farm to School Month!
The TKC Beet
October 2016
National Farm to School Month
October isn't just about the changing seasons, pumpkins, and Halloween costumes, it's also
National Farm to School Month! The National Farm to School Network spearheads this month-
long celebration that brings together thousands of schools, early care and education sites,
farms, and community organizations from all over the country to celebrate food education,
school gardens, and healthy lunch trays filled with locally sourced foods!
So how can you get involved? The Farm to School Network's theme for this month is One
Small Step, and it highlights the numerous ways that any individual, school, or organization
can get informed, get involved, and take action. Here are some ways you can get involved:
• Celebrate with small activities that focus on generating interest and excitement.
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• Plan nutrition activities that feature Learning Garden produce.
• Host a Learning Garden taste test in the classroom or in the cafeteria.
• Harvest and serve a Learning Garden salad during lunch.
• Connect your curriculum or classroom lesson to your Learning Garden.
• Organize a field trip to a local farm or farmers market.
• Send information home about your Learning Garden.
• Spread the word on social media with #farmtoschool and iff2SMonth
National Farm to School Month is a time to celebrate and continue working together to
positively impact students in their classrooms, cafeterias, and communities!
Healthy Halloween Snacks Ask Farmer Tim
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Halloween might be synonymous with candy Dear Farmer Tim,
and junk food, but this year you can make
Halloween a healthy and fun holiday! I am carving Jack-O-Lanterns this week with my
students at our fall festival. Normally we save
We've found some delicious and nutritious pumpkin seeds and roast them for a yummy
snacks to try out in your classroom as you snack. I was wondering if we could plant these
celebrate this month. seeds next year and see if they sprout more
Carrot Pumpkins. Try a little shape shifting by pumpkins? I've never tried. They look just like
carving carrots from your Learning Garden into the seeds that I buy from the nursery. Thanks
tiny pumpkins for an easy and festive snack! for your advice and expertise!
Roasted Pumpkin Seeds. Have students save
their pumpkin seeds and try roasting with - Up to My Elbows in Pumpkin
different flavors. This makes for a fun and
healthy snack that's easy to share with your
students!
Dear Up to My Elbows in Pumpkin,
Grants and Regional Updates That is a great question and the answer is that
we can't be sure! Some seeds will almost
certainly sprout the exact same crop that the
seeds grew from, such as: peas, lettuce, and
some pepper seeds. This is because those
flowers have both the male and female parts
and can 'self-pollinate' so don't rely on
pollinating insects. Pumpkins on the other
hand, along with all cucurbits - the squash plant
family - produce both male and female flowers
on separate stems. Having male and female
flowers in separate locations requires that a
pollinating insect, oftentimes a bee, pollinates
the female flower! The reason your seeds may
or may not produce a new pumpkin plant is
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that the bee that pollinated your pumpkin
plant may have visited a different but closely
related squash plant nearby. Squashes are well
known for cross-pollinating and often saved
seeds will grow a much different, although
probably interesting, fruit. We think this makes
for a very fun science experiment!
To save your pumpkin seeds, carve them out of
the pumpkin and then rinse them off so most
of the flesh is gone. Lay the the seeds evenly,
without touching too much, over some
newspaper and allow them to sit and dry for
about a week. Once dry, take seeds off the
newspaper and store them in an envelope
(don't forget to label) in a cool, dry place until
planting in the Spring. Then it's time to wait
Current Grant Opportunities: and see what grows!
Dreaming of extending your Learning Garden
or adding new programming or supplies? So, the real question is, do you know where
Apply for the Whole Kids Foundation School
your bees have been?
Garden Grant! You could be awarded $2,000 to
support existing edible garden learning spaces, Peas and Gloves,
or start new projects on your school grounds.
Apply by October 31, 2016. - Farmer Tim
Apply for the Nature Works Everywhere Grant,
and empower your students to make change in SUBMIT YOUR QUESTIONS TO
their community! $2,000 grants will help FARMER TIM BY EMAILING:
schools develop nature based, green
infrastructure solutions to environmental
challenges. Schools can design projects to
combat issues surrounding climate change,
healthy food access, storm water collection,
etc. Dream big! Apply by October 31, 2016.
Chicago Fall Workshops;
Learn how to harvest and eat fall crops while
you pick up tips to prepare your Learning
Garden for winter and garlic bulbs to plant this
fall! Visit the event pages for more information
or to register:
• October 19 - Moos Elementary
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• October zo - Ray Elementary
#RealFood News
• Michelle Obama sets her garden in stone, Politico, 10/05/2016
• Kellogg Students Plant Edible Learning Garden, DNA Info, 09/19/2016
• Gardening as a child may lead college students to eat more veggies, Science
Daily, 09/19/2016
• How Much Food Can Cities Produce?, Huffington Post, 08/24/2016
• Healthy Eaters, Strong Minds: What School Gardens Teach Kids, NPR,
08/10/2016
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