Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Welcome Back!

My school brain is slowly grinding into motion-kind of like getting my teenager out of bed!

It has been a fabulous summer season in the garden!  Summer school harvested pounds of produce and put on a fun market day.

A HUGE Thanks to family helpers that weeded, watered and harvested.  They made this summer garden season very productive.
Moery Family
Mulvaney Family
Shriver Family
Brian Newburn
Burnett Family
Mrs Ransom
Ms Biczo

Take a walk through the garden and take a look at what a little sun, rain, and Nature's systems can produce.
Be sure to taste some Ground Cherries and look for the pumpkin :)
Summer students refreshing their flower part knowledge.

A day in July.


Sunday, June 29, 2014

Summer time chores :)

Summer work in the gardens has begun! Please sign up to help me water and harvest some of the yummy- local, organic-produce! All it will cost is a little relaxing time spent in the garden pulling some weeds and watering You set your own hours!

Please sign up for Summer Gardens - here's how it works in 3 easy steps:
   1. Click this link to go to our invitation page on VolunteerSpot: http://vols.pt/dbyfkU
   2. Enter your email address: (You will NOT need to register an account on VolunteerSpot) 
   3. Sign up! Choose your spots - VolunteerSpot will send you an automated confirmation and reminders. Easy!
Note: VolunteerSpot does not share your email address with anyone. If you prefer not to use your email address, please contact me and I can sign you up manually.


Thursday, June 5, 2014

Fairfax Times Article by Kate Yanchulis

Published: Thursday, May 29, 2014Hollin Meadows plants the seeds for education by Kate Yanchulis
Staff Writer

Jen Finnegan walks through one of many garden areas at Hollin Meadows Elementary.

The school’s outdoor education coordinator, who students and teachers alike call “Farmer Finnegan,” checks on peas, tomatoes and strawberry plants as she walks. She stops and crouches to check the first green leaves of a new potato plant poking through the soil.

“This is my favorite time of the year, when stuff just starts to poke out,” Finnegan said. “There’s always a moment of doubt when you have 25 first-graders throwing seeds in the ground.”

Finnegan manages the more than 14,000 square feet of gardens that cover the campus of the Alexandria school. As a Science and Math Focus school in the Fairfax County school system, Hollin Meadows makes outdoor learning a key part of education for the more than 600 students it serves.

But four years ago, the school almost lost its leafy green centerpiece.

The school district made plans to cut its funding of focus programs starting with the 2011-12 school year. For Hollin Meadows, that included everything under the umbrella of its Science and Math Focus program, including its science and math resource teachers, its outdoor education coordinator and the money to maintain its gardens.

“Parents really didn’t want to see this go away,” Finnegan said. “If this goes away, we become just like any other school.”

When Finnegan first came to Hollin Meadows as a parent when her family moved to Fairfax County in 2009, she said she did not realize what she was getting in Hollin Meadows.

“Coming in as a new parent, you don’t even realize what’s going on,” Finnegan said. “Then slowly you see what this community has built.”

The school’s principal, Jon Gates, worked closely with parents in establishing the garden in 2004. The school was searching for a touchstone to set its science programs apart, and parents took ownership of the initiative. One parent even stepped up to serve as the outdoor education coordinator, which started as a volunteer post before becoming a part-time staff position in 2007.

A naturalist and nature educator, Finnegan quickly got caught up in the gardens herself. She started by volunteering for the former outdoor education coordinator, then applied for the job herself when her predecessor made plans to leave. But as she was applying for the job in 2011, the program’s fate remained up in the air.

The school community came together to start the Hollin Meadows Partnership for Science and Math Education in the fall of 2010, when their program went on the chopping block. Parents furiously raised money throughout the year, trying to raise the $170,000 needed to keep the science programs and the gardens intact.

The effort succeeded, and it has continued each year since then, as the Partnership continues to support the Science and Math Focus program. The money is donated to the school as a lump sum and cannot be earmarked for a particular purpose, but it is this money that allows the programs to continue, Gates said.

This year, the Partnership is hosting its fourth annual “Seeds of Today” fundraiser gala Saturday at 7 p.m., featuring a live and silent auction. Tickets for the gala cost $75 and can be purchased through the partnership’s website.

That the fundraising effort has not fizzled out is a tribute to the close relationship of the school and the community, Gates said.

“With schools, you always have a turnover and a transition of families,” Gates said. “To see that this keeps going, it shows that this effort wasn’t dependent on one group of families. This will continue. It’s now our identity.”

The school’s goal is not only to teach students through the garden, but also to inspire other schools to follow their lead.

“We try to establish ourselves as a replicable model,” Finnegan said. “Gardens can provide a real-world connection for so many subjects - science, social studies, math. Just start small, and you can really see it grow.”

kyanchulis@fairfaxtimes.com

Wednesday, April 30, 2014


Earth Day 2014

Play Hard and Work Harder!
Thank YOU for supporting our HM Garden.





Bug Habitat build by Gary Porter and Cord Luby.
-Sushi demo by Whole Foods-

-HM Grown Seedling Sale-
-Chesapeake Natives Plant Sale Vendor-

Working hard! Eric, Mary and Sue

Craft area- Plant a Seed and Send an Earth Day Message!  Look for our bags hanging in the Whole Foods on Duke Street.

   
Maple Avenue Market brought our Chicks to visit!

Guitar Music provided by Austin Loan and Dustin Chapman from WPHS.
Our new Little Free Library-check it out and donate a book!

So much mulch- so little time :)

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

HM Earth Day 2014

April 26th 2014
10am-2pm


Earth Day 2014 promises to be a fun-filled day!  We have some partners coming to visit to make our day special.  Chris Guerre:  http://www.mapleavenuemarket.com/  will be bringing a few of our chickens back to visit!  Whole Foods will be doing a healthy food demo.  Arcadia's Mobile Market:  http://arcadiafood.org/programs/mobile-market will be parked out front showing off their amazing program and how they bring fresh food to our area food deserts.  Chesapeake Natives:  http://www.chesapeakenatives.org/Chesapeake_Natives/Plants_we_sell.html  will be on site and selling pots of native plants and answering your plant questions.

We have been coaxing along some very tiny seedlings in our little greenhouse and hope that they will be strong enough to be sold to a new home by April 26th!  Crafts, food and music will round out our entertainment while those that choose can do some good old calorie burning labor!

The intent behind this day at our school is to bring together our community to beautify our grounds and make any updates or improvements that require some people power! We also want to have a chance to show off our great garden program and give you all time to experience first-hand the joy of working in the garden.

Please sign up for Earth Day 2014 - here's how it works in 3 easy steps:
   1. Click this link to go to our invitation page on VolunteerSpot: http://vols.pt/6WCivz
   2. Enter your email address: (You will NOT need to register an account on VolunteerSpot) 
   3. Sign up! Choose your spots - VolunteerSpot will send you an automated confirmation and reminders. Easy!
Note: VolunteerSpot does not share your email address with anyone. If you prefer not to use your email address, please contact me and I can sign you up manually.


Sunday, March 23, 2014

Volunteer-because it IS a BIG DEAL!

I am home and showered and sliver extracted from belly (how did that happen?).  I am fresh off of another Sunday afternoon of hosting a volunteer work day in our school gardens. Today was an "extra" to make up for all the cancellations after this very snowy winter in NOVA.  Too start: I am not an exuberant hostess who can gush and stroke egos and make people feel warm and fuzzy.  Sometimes, I might go as far as to offend my volunteers with an "off comment".  Those that know me, know that I am joking and throw it back at me.  It is usually too late when I realize they don't know me as well as I have imagined. (I digress)

What I do say, when I am thinking and remembering that I am the hostess; "You all are AWESOME!"  "Thank you sooo much!"  The reply of these volunteers is most likely; "No problem."  "It was my pleasure."  "It's no big deal."  That's my favorite one.  It IS A BIG DEAL.  You all came out here on a not so warm day, on a Sunday afternoon, to do manual labor that no one else wants to do.  In particular, a job that I have procrastinated because I hate it so much!

Now the job is DONE!  In only one hour; JoAnne, Rob, Liz, Noah, Jen, Marie, Vicki, and Jaden have finished a task that I couldn't even think about because I dread it so.  I am always amazed at the amount of work a handful of motivated and hard working people can get done in a couple hours on a Sunday afternoon.  By the end of the time, I am usually making stuff up to keep them all busy!

So, my point,  VOLUNTEER!  For those things that -maybe- someone else will do and -probably- will get done without you.  But when you do show up it makes ALL the difference to that program and makes the job that much easier for everyone.

Also, we used a power tool that has made this job my new favorite task in the gardens :))

Monday, March 3, 2014

Rooster or a Hen?

We went for a visit to Chris and Sara Guerre's farm this weekend and visited the, now almost 4 week old, chicks.  They are looking spectacular and gangly with all their new feathers and gigantic feet :)  I have to say, the beaks are the most impressive to me.

They are staying warm in a special out building that has been insulated and heated with a space heater.  In just a few more weeks they will be ready to move to the "big hen" coop.  It is fun trying to guess which ones are going to be roosters and which hens. We thought we might have heard a tiny crow while we were sitting with them in their brooder.  But it was hard to think that is even possible!  With some breeds, you can tell right away by the color of the chick what gender they are.  With these Ameracaunas it is a little trickier and mainly a waiting game.  Some of chicks are already growing combs, are they the roosters?!