Learning how to make thumbs green
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Marisa O’Neil
Newport-Mesa students have the good fortune of living by the warm,
sandy beaches of the Pacific Ocean. They can surf, swim, bike and --
thanks to a special after-school program -- get a taste of life down
on the farm.
Learning livestock care and vegetable gardening might seem more
like the curriculum at a Midwestern school. But students at the Ranch
after-school program at the Orange County Fairgrounds plant gardens,
ride horses and take care of sheep right in the middle of Costa Mesa.
The fifth-grade students from Davis Elementary, who are almost
halfway through the free, eight-week program, added some onions to
their garden plots last week. Jeanne Lepowsky, a master gardener from
a University of California extension program, taught them the
ins-and-outs about planting the weepy produce and more.
“Tell me what you know about onions,” Lepowsky asked the students.
“They make you cry,” 11-year-old Douglas Guillen said.
Onions do make you cry, she said, but they also come in different
forms. There are white onions, red onions, green onions, short-day
onions and long-day onions, she told them.
The green onions are just onions that haven’t formed a bulb yet,
she said. And long-day onions won’t make bulbs in Southern California
because of the amount of sunshine here.
“Plants grow in their own time,” she said. “You can’t force them
to go faster. All you can do is make conditions as comfortable as
possible for them.”
With that in mind, the students grabbed flats of baby green onions
and set out to plant them. Each child has an 8-foot-square plot of
land.
Jordan Fernandez, 10, took his pack of onions in one hand and a
towel in the other. He surveyed his garden, filled with zucchini,
strawberries, marigolds and eggplant, and knelt down to transplant
his onions.
“Everything’s dying in my garden,” 11-year-old Crystal Rubright
lamented as she examined her garden nearby.
Hanrry Lopez, meanwhile, showed off the flowers on his eggplant
seedling.
“They’re doing really well,” Lepowsky said as the students planted
their onions. “By the end of the session, they’ve really learned a
lot.”
As if to prove her point, 11-year-old Charles Burks presented a
small parsley plant plucked from its tiny home in a garden flat. A
thick tangle of roots surrounded a small clump of dirt at its bottom.
“It’s root-bound,” he observed.
Lepowsky showed him how to separate the plant’s roots in
preparation for its new home.
Joel Roman, too, seemed to have a green thumb. Everything in his
garden grew well, but he didn’t have any special secret.
“I just like having fun,” he said.
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot
education writer Marisa O’Neil visits a campus in the Newport-Mesa
area and writes about her experience.
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