Children engaging in the garden as part of Agraria’s Eco Growers program.
Welcome to the October edition of the Ohio Farm to School monthly newsletter, and of course, happy National Farm to School Month! Whether you are just beginning a Farm to School initiative or been involved for a long while, this newsletter includes suggestions on how to get started, special edition highlights of Farm to School efforts around the state, and resources to help celebrate #F2SMonth!
New Farm to School Branding
As part of the USDA State Agency Farm to School Grant, branding was created for Ohio Farm to School programs. This sneak peek of the graphic will soon be available to help market, promote and celebrate Ohio Farm to School programs and initiatives.
Want to be featured in the next monthly newsletter and on Ohio’s Farm to School Websites? Share your F2S success stories with us! Submit your F2S Success Story here!
Thinking About Jumping into Farm to School? Follow These Steps:
Start small by choosing to focus on either purchasing, serving, or teaching about local foods. Don’t take on too much! Let your activities naturally integrate into current education, food purchasing, and serving practices.
Start with what you have available to you. Do you know a local producer interested in selling to the school? Do you have space to grow food in a raised bed garden outdoors? Maybe you have space in a classroom and are interested in growing seeds indoors.
Connect with your local Extension office! Find the Ohio State University Extension office or the Central State University Extension educators in your area. Extension may be able to help connect you to sources of local foods and provide nutrition education resources.
Ohio Farm to School resources. Visit the Ohio Farm to School webpage or contact the Ohio Department of Education’s Farm to School team for technical assistance in procuring, serving, marketing or educating students about local foods.
Learn from others! Join the statewide farm to school network meetings and get connected with your regional farm to school lead. Mark your calendar for the next meeting on December 8th and find more information in the events section below.
Find more information from the National Farm to School Network here and USDA here. Contact Haley Scott with farm to school network questions.
Farm to School Month Features Around the State
Lorain, Ohio Horizon Education Center’s Bill Reuter organized a field trip for children served at Horizon to enjoy his community garden. Reuter spoke about the different techniques for planting, growing and harvesting, and shared how the plots are tended to by different families from diverse cultural backgrounds which are represented in each approach to growing in the garden
Lodi, Ohio Lodi Family Center 5-18 Club and 4-H Spin Club are after-school programs serving youth up to 18 years old. They offer activities galore, including three on-site themed gardens. The main garden is pirate themed, where youth explore and hunt down veggies hiding in a treasure chest with prizes. The next is a sensory garden including a gaga ball pit, sunflower house, and tactile plants for youth to play with to decompress. These gardens also featured various types of corn: edible corn for humans, crops for livestock, and even popcorn! The 3rd garden features a volcano and archeological dig site where dinosaur bones, fossils, dinosaur eggs, and other treasures have been found! The organization benefits from partnering with Kish Family Farms for garden education classes.
In 2022 alone, youth at the site grew, harvested, and prepped 116 pounds of produce including cucumbers, zucchini, peppers, lettuce, spinach, tomatoes, and potatoes. The harvests are used in a produce bar onsite as well as in friendly competitions such as Lodi Family Center’s signature “Kids Cutting Board Challenges” and “Kids Battle Chef”. “We found that because the kids grew, harvested, then prepped it, they happily ate more veggies every day,” said Program Director Rebecca Rak.
Southeast Ohio For the eighth year in a row, Rural Action and additional partners are leading a regional Apple Crunch celebration! Rural Action is working with seven School Districts and twenty schools to distribute 7,500 local apples to students in Athens and Morgan Counties.
The apples are sourced from Wagners Fruit Farm in Waterford, Ohio, where volunteers, Americorps members, Athens County Health Department staff and students help to pick and grade them, reducing the cost while supplying needed labor to the orchard. From the orchard, the apples are taken to the Appalachian Center for Economic Networks’ (ACEnet) shared use commercial kitchen in Nelsonville for washing and counting. From the ACEnet facility they are delivered to multiple schools.
The celebration is made possible by a “Pie Day” fundraiser at the Chesterhill Produce Auction, where individuals and businesses donate pies for an auction and sampling. Proceeds from Rural Action’s local produce buying club, and some districts and PTO’s as able also support this effort. In Washington County, Fort Fry Local School District is partnering for the second year in a row with Hickerson’s Fruit Farm to host their Apple Crunch Day.
Southwest Ohio The first season of the Growing Our Teachers program was a success! Twelve teachers from the Greater Cincinnati region participated in ten sessions held over the course of the school year to learn how to strengthen their school garden programs and build a support network with each other and beyond. The next cohort, beginning on October 12, will include 14 members! Each session is facilitated by Ellie Falk of the Civic Garden Center and Nicole Gunderman of Gorman Heritage Farm, with support from the Greater Cincinnati Regional Food Policy Council and funding from a USDA Farm to School Implementation Grant.
The Greater Cincinnati Regional Food Policy Council (GCRFP) and Hamilton Co. R3Source organized an Educators Workshop at the Hamilton County Fair in Cincinnati for all educators in the Greater Cincinnati area. Participants gathered on the fairgrounds to hear from partner organizations about the pillars of a successful outdoor learning program. Based on the Greater Cincinnati Regional Farm-to-School Curriculum Guide, currently in development, presenters offered interactive opportunities for educators to engage in the essential components to promote the procurement and consumption of local food. The connections educators can make for students between garden knowledge, edible education, school meals, and career pathways is a formula for improved academic performance and better health outcomes. For additional information, contact Cynthia Walters at Green Umbrella.
West Dayton, Ohio West Dayton Food Access Collective Impact Project held a Garden Partner Tour featuring four local community gardens in the Dayton area. Community partners were invited to tour each of these community gardens and learn the operations and needs of each garden/agency. It was an eye-opening experience for all who attended and really raised the question of, “How can we increase the conversation of farming in schools and in our community?” said west central region’s Farm to School Regional Lead, Quentina Konah.
Yellow Springs, Ohio Agraria is hosting a Fall Youth program called “EcoGrowers” for children ages 6-12 to be immersed in Agraria’s food growing spaces as they connect to the natural world, each other and their community. During these sessions, kids will participate in fun weekly garden and farm themed activities, observe and explore nature through a gardener’s lens, and build green growing skills. EcoGrowers takes place in the Spring and the Fall. Stay updated on Agraria’s website here.
Fall School Garden Planting Update
Looking for tips on growing in your school garden over winter? Check out this new course on growing vegetables all winter long, linked here.
Farm to School Month Resources
1. USDA Stickers
Put in an order for your own Farm to School Stickers from USDA! See the sticker options and order here.
2. National Farm to School Network Resources
Check out NFSN’s Farm to School Month page for a list of resources to help you celebrate, including toolkits, fact sheets, and posters! Plus view the calendar to discover farm to school month events across the country. We encourage you to submit your own event to the calendar!
News & Events
1. Join the Great Apple Crunch all October long to celebrate local farmers, nutritious foods, and resilient communities! It’s simple and easy to participate. Register at https://go.wisc.edu/uzj4eq, purchase local apples, and celebrate your Crunch in October.
2. Agraria’s BIPOC Farmer Network Discussion focused on harvest time will be held October 12 7-8:30pm via zoom. Register here.
3. The National Farm to School Network is hosting the annual Movement Meeting on October 27. Join in and learn how the farm to school movement is growing from the ground up. See below for more info and register today!
4. Ohio School Garden Conference
Network and learn from other school garden enthusiasts around the state this fall! The annual School Garden Conference will be held at the 4-H Center on October 28. Find more information and register here.
5. Kids Gardening Do you want to learn more about youth garden design and help develop a new educational program? Kids Gardening is offering free registration to their new online course, “Landscape Design for Youth Gardens,” to a limited group of people in October 2022.
Beginning in January 2023, KidsGardening will launch this course as a paid offering via KidsGardening.org. Join now to get in on the FREE version of the course.
6. Ohio Farm to School Network Quarterly Meeting
Mark your calendar for the next Ohio Farm to School State Network meeting on December 8. Register for the meeting here.
State-level updates will take place from 9:30-11AM, with region-specific discussions from 11-noon. For more information on Ohio Farm to School, visit the website and Facebook page.
Job Opportunities
1. Agraria is hiring a BIPOC Farming Network Administrative Coordinator and Grants Manager. Find more information and apply
2. The Farm on Central in southwest Ohio is seeking an enthusiastic, whole food-focused Culinary Lead. Learn about the farm and apply
3. The Ohio Ecological Food and Farming Association is hiring a new Executive Director. See the announcement and apply
4. The 2023 Farm to School Grant Request for Applications is Now Open!
USDA will award up to $12 million in competitive grants to eligible entities through the Farm to School Grant Program in FY 2023. Each grant helps implement farm to school programs that increase access to local food in eligible schools, connect children with agriculture for better health, and inspire youth to consider careers in agriculture. Since the program’s inception in 2013, USDA has awarded $75 million through Farm to School Grants.
The Grant RFA can be found online here. Complete applications must be submitted on www.Grants.gov by 11:59pm ET on Friday January 6, 2023
Thank you to each site for sharing your Farm to School Month efforts!
This newsletter is written and collated by Haley Scott, Ohio State University Extension