These are garden grown peppers, arranged in a complex design.
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Friday, September 11, 2009
Critters in our garden
One of the composters
Today in the MBA garden
Today as we weeded, we found a garter snake in a tree. Sadly, we did not have the camera. Also, we scared up a bullfrog! The students did get a good view of our some of our pest controllers. Mr. Bullington shares the frog sighting with his 2nd period Earth Science students. Also sighted was this bumble bee foraging on the Russian sage.
Making compost with 8th grade Earth Science classes.
Today we ground up weed waste and vegetable peelings (pre-consumer) from the cafeteria. This gives us a nice green base for nitrogen, but comes out gooey and may clog the chipper/shredder. So we mix in brown carbon waste in the form of wood chips (from the tree trimmers that maintain campus trees), and we get a balanced and finely ground material to put in the compost bins for rapid decomposition. This composted plant food goes onto our raised bed gardens and the cycle is complete. Our 8th grade students learn firsthand of nature's processes. See the film and pictures.
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Peppers on Display
These fruits of the raised beds are on display in the cafeteria and bring color and aroma to where all can see. Thanks to Steve, our Cafeteria Manager, for putting this display together. Pictured in the bowl are basil, rosemary, lemon verbena and sage with tomatoes and peppers.
Peppers displayed in a semicircle are (left to right): Del Diablo (tabasco type) Scotch Bonnet (habanero, Jamaica jerk pepper), Bhut Jolokia (hot jabanero, Indonesia), Red Savina (habanero type), pepperocini (Greek salad pepper), Ancho San Luis (stuffer), Chilhuacle Negro (from Mexico, mole sauce pepper, suggested by Jesse Gray), and Green Bell. We have 21 varieties of peppers in the garden this season (09')!
MBA "Big Red" homegrown salsa
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