Showing posts with label Southern Spring Home & Garden Show. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Southern Spring Home & Garden Show. Show all posts

Monday, February 24, 2014

See the Ultimate Schoolyard Garden. then visit this weekend!


The Catawba River District and five partner organizations have coordinated the creation of the Ultimate Schoolyard Garden display at the Southern Spring Home and Garden Show, taking place last weekend and this coming weekend at the Park Expo Center on Independence Boulevard.
The Ultimate Schoolyard Garden features a whopping 18 separate displays within a single 30-by-30-foot exhibit space. Learn about:

  • Ozone gardens
  • International gardens
  • Aquaponics (where fish AND plants share nutrients and water)
  • Incorporating bees, goats and chickens into your school's natural area. Rain barrels
  • composting
  • Inviting wildlife into your outdoor garden area.

Henry Owen with Friendship Gardens put together this video tour of our exhibit. We hope you enjoy it.
Even better, we hope you go to the show, which runs Friday-Sunday at the Park Expo Center on Independence Boulevard. There's nothing like walking through the exhibit and seeing all of this in person!

Show details

See the Ultimate Schoolyard Garden Feb. 28-March 2 at the Southern Spring Home and Garden Show. CLICK for details of the show.

Friday, October 25, 2013

Ultimate Garden takes lots of planning AND planting

The greenhouse at CPCC's Cato Campus
Putting together the Ultimate Schoolyard Garden takes many skills, thousands of hours of work, and a lot of plants – Perhaps 6,000 plus extras, just in case, estimates Annie West, a senior horticulture instructor at CPCC.
 “Stuff happens,” explains West, who with fellow horticulturalist Kaiti O’Donnell is overseeing plant production for the schoolyard garden display at next February’s Southern Spring Home & Garden Show. Visitors will see a fishpond, hydroponics, chickens, composting, bees, water reuse and thousands of plants from broccoli to sunflowers that normally don’t grow here in February.

Our goal: Planting the seeds of schoolyard gardening

The goal of the Ultimate Schoolyard Garden is to show area educators, garden enthusiasts or beginning gardeners ways to connect schoolyard gardening to curriculum from pre-K through High School and to show that every subject being taught can be enhanced through hands-on learning within the schoolyard garden.
The Ultimate Schoolyard Garden display will include plants common to local vegetable gardens and the nearly 100 schoolyard gardens that have been created in recent years to augment classroom instruction at area schools. There also will be an international area featuring plants common in Asia, Africa and Latin America.
The garden plants will be joined by native plants, trees and shrubs and be incorporated into a recycled pallet structure being assembled by CPCC Harper Campus.

Timing is almost everything

That achievement requires planning, timing and facilities that can create spring growing conditions in the winter.
It sounds complex, but it’s really a matter of doing the math and providing the right growing conditions, Annie says. “So if I can get an eggplant to grow and produce a crop for me to harvest in 60 days, I start with that and work backward.” Then you find a way to create the growing environment that eggplants prefer.

Four educational gardens helping produce the plants

Four area educational facilities with greenhouses will do the growing: the horticulture programs at North Mecklenburg High School and CPCC’s Cato Campus, plus two unique facilities that incorporate horticulture in their programs: LIFESPAN (serving children and adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities) and Holy Angels (providing specialized, round-the-clock care for children and adults with intellectual developmental disabilities and delicate medical conditions).
If all goes well, visitors to the Ultimate Schoolyard Garden will a cornucopia of food-producing plants that our children can grow and learn from at school and, for that matter, at home.
And if not – if an ice storm kills the power at one of the greenhouses, for instance, or some plants don’t mature as fast as the gardeners had hoped – then what?
“If it’s close, no one will know,” says the veteran horticulturalist. “Gardening is like Christmas: What “Santa brings is what you get.”

Can you sponsor or volunteer?

As you can tell, this project needs extensive sponsorship and many volunteer hands between now and February. To learn more about how you can help, visit our GARDEN SPONSORSHIP WEBPAGE, where you can also download a detailed packet of materials. You can also EMAIL Edna Chirico, Executive Director of the Catawba River District, or call her at 704-562-8847.

Learn more

The Southern Spring Home & Garden Show will take place Feb. 21-23 and Feb. 28-March 2 at the Park Expo and Conference Center in Charlotte.
• Learn more about the Home & Garden Show at Southernshows.com.
• Learn more about the Ultimate Schoolyard Garden at catawbariverdistrict.org.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Dream garden, store for student creations taking shape

This structure, made of old pallets, will house the Entrepreneur Pavilion.
The green spotlight will shine on schoolyard gardens and student creativity next February at the 2014 Southern Spring Home and Garden Show.
The Catawba River District has partnered with Charlotte Mecklenburg School System, Gaston County Schools, Mecklenburg Health Department, Mecklenburg Food Policy Council, Mecklenburg & Gaston Cooperative Extension, Friendship Gardens, 100 Gardens and many others to transition the 2014 Southern Spring Show into an education-focused, entrepreneur-based event supporting school-based achievements (STEM Skills) and collaborative hands-on learning (Common Core), all imbedded around and supporting schoolyard gardens.

River District's growing green thumb

The Catawba River District currently funds and coordinates STEM (science technology engineering and math) focused field trips, schoolyard gardens, a mobile chicken tractor and an annual Eco-Footprint Challenge in a regional partnership engaging approximately 10,000 economically challenged students from 11 schools.
Schoolyard gardens provide a proven platform for education, health & wellness, and career awareness. At least 84 Charlotte Mecklenburg schools are engaged in schoolyard gardening.  The Catawba River District in partnership with the Mecklenburg Health Department, Mecklenburg Food Policy Council and Friendship Gardens launched a Green Teacher Network on August 20 to support this “growing” nationwide trend.
Between 75,000 and 100,000 visitors are expected to attend the 2014 show. Our features components include:

The Ultimate Schoolyard Garden Display

This demonstration garden for teachers, students, and the general public will include numerous display gardens (raised beds, wildlife, pollinator, ozone, alphabet and others) plus an outdoor classroom, growing and art walls, greenhouse, aquaponics (hydroponics and fish farming), vermiculture (yes worms) and other composting ideas, weather, and renewable energy displays of solar and wind.  Everything being presented could be possible within the structure of a local school. Putting it all together? Well, that would be the ultimate! Learn more at CatawbaRiverDistrict.org.

Entrepreneur Pavilion

All schools within Charlotte Mecklenburg and Gaston County School Systems participating in schoolyard garden projects will be invited to become part of the Green Teacher Network and participate in the Entrepreneur Pavilion. The pavilion will allow each school’s students to develop a “product” that they then can “sell”  in our Entrepreneur Pavilion during the 2014 Southern Spring Show.
Students will get real-world career-focused learning as they develop, make and market their products. Proceeds of product sales will support participating schoolyard gardens. Learn more at CatawbaRiverDistrict.org.

Sponsors and volunteers needed

As you can tell, this project needs extensive sponsorship and many volunteer hands between now and February. To learn more about how you can help, or how your school can create products for the Entrepreneur Pavilion, email Edna Chiricoechirico@catawbariverdistrict.org, Executive Director of the Catawba River District.

Learn more

  • The Southern Spring Home & Garden Show will take place Feb. 21-23 and Feb. 28-March 2 at the Park Expo and Conference Center in Charlotte. Learn more at Southernshows.com.
  • Learn more about the Ultimate Schoolyard Garden and Entrepreneur Pavilion, at catawbariverdistrict.org.
  • CLICK to download an Ultimate Schoolyard Garden sponsorship packet.

Friday, August 23, 2013

Spring Show to feature our Ultimate Schoolyard Garden

LandDesign has come up with this garden design
Schoolyard gardens have made the Big Time, thanks to the Southern Spring Home & Garden Show and the Catawba River District.
The 2014 show next February will feature the Ultimate Schoolyard Garden – and we do mean ultimate! Imagine hanging gardens, international gardens, hydroponic plants, a greenhouse, a fish pond, farm animals, composting with worms and even more, all co-existing in a 30-by-30-foot exhibit.
River District Executive Director Edna Chirico has brought together an extensive team of partners for the project:  Charlotte Mecklenburg Schools, Gaston County Schools, Mecklenburg Health Department, Mecklenburg Food Policy Coalition, Mecklenburg & Gaston Cooperative Extension, Friendship Gardens, 100 Gardens and many others.
With interest in schoolyard gardens soaring, Chirico expects this new display to have many visitors during the show’s two-weekend run. More than 100 Gaston and Mecklenburg schools now have vegetable gardens, and another 50 say they are planning to add them.
Visitors will be able to see concepts first-hand and use smart phones and pads to tap a wealth of additional information via streaming video and websites.

Entrepreneur Pavilion 

Student entrepreneurs with products related to gardens will also get a place to shine at the Southern Spring Home & Garden Show. The Entrepreneur Pavilion, created by the River District and its partners, will serve as a mini arts and crafts gallery for products developed by both public and private schools in Gaston and Mecklenburg counties.
The goal is to encourage creativity and give students real-world experience in fields ranging from product development to marketing and sales. Proceeds from product sales will go to support schoolyard gardens at the students’ schools.

Sponsors and volunteers needed

As you can tell, this project needs extensive sponsorship and many volunteer hands between now and February. To learn more about how you can help, or how your school can create products for the Entrepreneur Pavilion, email Edna Chirico, Executive Director of the Catawba River District.

Learn more


  • The Southern Spring Home & Garden Show will take place Feb. 21-23 and Feb. 28-March 2 at the Park Expo and Conference Center in Charlotte. Learn more at Southernshows.com.
  • Learn more about the Ultimate Schoolyard Garden and Entrepreneur Pavilion, at catawbariverdistrict.org.
  • CLICK to download an Ultimate Schoolyard Garden sponsorship packet.