The Fayette Citizen-News Page

Wednesday, May 30, 2001

Gardening club teaches kids community service

By SHARON OMAHEN
Special to The Citizen

A new club in town is perfect for kids who like digging in the dirt and helping others.

The Junior Master Gardener program, designed by Texas A&M University's Extension Service, has arrived in Georgia, and Fayette is one of the first counties to participate.

Chapters are sprouting up through the University of Georgia's Extension Service.

The program is modeled after the adult Master Gardener program, a volunteer training for people who love gardening and community service. In the adult program, participants complete a horticulture training program and work as volunteers at a county Extension office.

Junior Master Gardener is similar to 4-H. It stresses leadership and community service. Along the way, the students also learn about gardening.

"The curriculum can easily be adapted for use as a club, by parents who home school their children or by church groups," said Krissy Slagle, a program assistant with the Georgia Master Gardeners.

"The lessons in the manual are horticulture-based," Slagle said, "but they cover many other areas. For example, one lesson teaches math skills using fruits and vegetables."

Students get certificates for each completed chapter and must complete eight chapters to become certified Junior Master Gardeners. Each chapter includes club work, homework and a community service project.

One of the first clubs in Georgia is in Fayetteville.

Suzanne Rocus runs the Fayette County club, along with the local Extension Service program assistant and a handful of volunteers. The club started after Rocus won a program manual at a gardening conference.

"Our Master Gardeners were interested in starting the program, and our county agent supported the idea," Rocus said.

Rocus wanted to offer the program through the school system, but with 13 elementary schools, it wasn't feasible. She started one chapter and has meetings twice a month at the county extension office, averaging 18 students.

The children take the community service mission seriously. They bagged tree seedlings to be donated at the annual Christmas tree recycling event. And to show their appreciation to the county offices where they meet, the club planted flower boxes to decorate the building's exterior. And in their current project, they plan to grow vegetables for needy people.

The club recently competed in and won ribbons at the Southeastern Flower Show.

"The program's not only about gardening," Rocus said. "The manual is full of wonderful activities that cover everything from ecology to enriching reading skills. The kids recently made apple sauce from fresh apples."

Junior Master Garden clubs are each as unique as their members. "Most of the children in our club come from families that enjoy gardening, and they all love to get dirty," Rocus said.

Roemer's students, however, have the green thumbs in their families. "Parents keep telling me not to send plants home if I want them to live," she said.

Roemer, who has completed her required Master Gardener volunteer hours, plans to extend her pilot chapter. "I'm going to continue the club another eight weeks," she said. "I just love it."

Learn more about the Junior Master Gardener program at http://jmg.tamu.edu, or phone 770-460-5730, extension 5412.

Sharon Omahen is a news editor with the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.


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