Plant Seeds. Sing Songs.

Spring is coming! Driving down Green River Road, you can see daffodils and green blades of grass popping up. The dogwoods are blossoming and the river is roaring from spring rains. It is the beginning of the transition from the snowy, brown winter to the lively, vibrant spring landscape. It’s absolutely lovely!grpfarm

Here at GRP, the season transition has got me thinking about one thing – planting the farm with loads of delicious goodies for the upcoming summer! I am thinking… strawberries, raspberries, carrots, broccoli, summer and winter squash, snap peas, cherry tomatoes, spinach, sunflowers, onions, corn, asparagus, beets, potatoes, peppers… YUM! YUM! YUM! Things that will grow up and down and sideways to make secret paths and trellises, and more fruit trees and just veggies galore! It is going to be fabulous!

But… I will definitely need everyone’s help when they get to camp. In addition to directly seeding veggies in the garden, we have built a hoop house to help start seedlings for the summer. The hoop house enables us to succession plant throughout the season (this means more fruits and veggies for all! YUM!) and experiment with different growing temperatures throughout the year! All of the staff has been busy helping us get the farm ready and pack the hoop house with seed starts. By the time camp begins, the veggie babies will be ready to be transplanted and this is where you campers will come in! With your help we can transplant veggies from pots to the farm, start new veggies in the pots for campers later in the summer and tend to the plants we have directly seeded in the garden. It will be one big growing circle!

To keep you posted on what Stephen and I will be doing in preparation for the farm, we have started a GRP farm blog called the GRP Sweet Potato! You can check out our post at http://grpsweetpotatoes.blogspot.com

So, until next time, play in the dirt and get your fingernails dirty!

~ Anne Izard, Assistant Director and GRP Farm Manager

Sustainability, Green River Preserve, and the Educational Benefits of Summer Camp: Part III

In the last two decades, childhood has moved indoors.  The average American boy or girls spends just four to seven minutes in unstructured outdoor play each day, and more than seven hours each day in front of an electronic screen.   In a 2002 British study on children, it was found that children today can identify Pokémon characters better than they can a beetle, a tree, or an otter.  Campers at Green River Preserve daily explore the streams, mountains, and woodlands of the Preserve with trained naturalists.

Computers and TV screens only make a certain number of colors and will as time progresses promote color loss for our children.  Nature makes all colors.   Being out there improves distance vision and lowers the chance of color loss.   Exposure to environment- based educational programs significantly increases student performance on tests of their critical thinking skills and improves the minds and bodies of our children.   (National Wildlife Federation study / American Camp Association 2011 study)

The Green River Preserve Farm provides organic produce and fresh eggs for our campers.  Few camps have farm to table programs that help IMG_0195campers learn how to live a more sustainable lifestyle by growing what you eat.   According to the New York Times, the food Americans eat travels an average of 1,500 miles before reaching the table.  Eating food raised locally reduces reliance on fossil fuels, encourages outdoor exercise and reduces eating foods that contain high-fructose corn syrup and trans-fats, both of which are linked to obesity and heart disease, in studies cited by the Times.  

A daily ritual at Green River Preserve is the practice of composting ORT, organic, recyclable trash or food left on your plate.  “Ortman,” a superhero from the planet Compost and his side kick, “Scrappie,” visit each night at dinner to give an all camp “Ort Report.”   Camper tables strive to be “ort free” during camp.  Ortman’s motto, “Waste not want not” resonates throughout camp.  Un-compostable foods are given to local farmers for pig slop.  This simple, creative program in recycling food is a teachable moment in sustainability for our campers.  

(Part IV will be posted next week.)

New Staff Members

We would like welcome back to Green River Preserve, our daughter, Anne Izard, and her husband, Stephen Mead as our new directors of our education and school programs, expeditions and the farm. Both Anne and Steve come to GRP with many years of experience in environmental education and related programs.

Anne grew up in Charleston, SC and is a graduate of Ashley Hall. She earned her BS in Science from Sewanee, The University of the South in Natural Resources with an emphasis in geology and forestry. Following Sewanee, she spent a year at The Teton Science School in Wyoming as part of her graduate studies and graduated from the University of Idaho with an MS in Environmental Education and Conservation. Anne has worked at Green River over the years at summer camp and the school programs as a counselor, expedition leader, mentor and program director. She returns to us from Silverton, Colorado where she was Director of Education for the Mountain Studies Institute in Durango, Colorado.

Steve is a native of Boston and a graduate of the University of Vermont with a BS in environmental studies with an emphasis in forestry. During the time Anne was in graduate school, Steve served as the project manager for the University of Idaho’s AmeriCorps program directing a stream restoration study. For seven years, he has also served as a forest fire fighter and forester based out of Durango, Colorado.

Both Anne and Steve have a genuine love for the environment and children. They are very excited about being a part of Green River Preserve’s administrative team.

~ Missy

Kay is going to talk about worms!

Kay Campbell, the GRP farm manager, will be giving a worm talk to children on Saturday, April 10th at 1:00 pm at the Garden Gate Nursery (136 Hillview Blvd.) in Hendersonville. There will be hands-on time with worms including a worm race. Also, participants will build an example worm farm so that they can learn how to do it at home.  Kay showing campers worms.

A relic from the past found on the GRP farm

clip_image002During session one of base camp this past summer, camper Micah Pickus found something quite interesting during a mentor hike at the GRP farm and it wasn’t a zucchini.

He along with mentor, Ben Nelson, came across a Savannah River spear point. It’s dated between 6000-3000 years old from the Middle to Late Archaic period.

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The flat base suggests that it is an unfinished spear point known as an otarre. These points were often used on spears thrown by the atlatl or spear-thrower of nomadic hunters/gatherers, typical of Native Americans of the Green River Valley.

The Savannah River point is typically found in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and the deep South to the Mississippi. They can be made from other types of rock but one of chert is considered the best specimen. Most arrowheads and spear points are named after the area in which they were first located.

Great find, Micah!