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School Flower Gardens

  • 1.  School Flower Gardens

    Posted 12-18-2024 09:38:00 PM

    Is anyone growing cut flowers for giving as your school garden or in addition to vegetables?

    I am very passionate about adding a cut flower garden to our existing school gardens. We are a Title 1 school and these kids could stand to be surrounded by beauty and witness the transformation of plants into beauty.

    I wrote about why I think gardens and flower gardens can be impactful. I also just finished reading The Secret Garden, so I am extra hyped at the moment. 

     https://pinwheel-cottage.com/blog/we-need-more-flower-gardens



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    anne fassnacht
    public school educator, master gardener, & garden designer
    Indianapolis IN
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  • 2.  RE: School Flower Gardens

    Posted 12-19-2024 01:02:00 AM
    Hi Anne,
    Thanks for sharing. We can never have too many flowers.
    In my school garden I loved filling the space with reseeding annuals and perennial cut flowers. My goal was to find varieties for all school year harvesting. Daffodils are great for winter blooms in coastal California and Nigella and Calendula are my favorite reseeding annuals. Alstroemeria is such a great "giver" and the flower holds in our lunch room bouquets for about a week!

    Read on to learn more about
    How we harvest lunchroom bouquets https://www.lifelab.org/resources/garden-stations
    and 
    Saving annual flower seeds and the seed business we had https://www.lifelab.org/resources/seed-saving

    The Earth Laughs in Flowers
       - Ralph Waldo Emerson


    -- JOHN
    John Fisher - Director of Programs & Partnerships - 831.471.7831  
    Life Lab cultivates children's love of learning, nourishing food, and nature through garden-based education. 
    A 501(c)(3) non-profit organization with locations in Santa Cruz, CA





  • 3.  RE: School Flower Gardens

    Posted 12-19-2024 03:43:00 PM

    Yes! We have had sunflowers and marigolds for the classroom and donating in the summer months. We are expanding flowers as the students at our midschool garden love them! This spring we're adding 80 feet of dahlias as they do well in our climate and it will add a welcome project of digging and dividing tubers to our fall schedule.



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    Cindy Heath
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  • 4.  RE: School Flower Gardens

    Posted 12-27-2024 08:08:00 PM

    Dahlias are such wonderful flowers for teaching kindness and giving. They provide the flowers and the tubers every year. Unless, like me, you store them improperly and lose them all to mold :( 



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    anne fassnacht
    Indianapolis IN
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  • 5.  RE: School Flower Gardens

    Posted 12-27-2024 08:05:00 PM

    I wish we had as many things that would reseed here in Indiana as you do! I have had luck with some snapdragons, dill, and ammi. I use a lot of natives like Joe pye weed, rudbeckia, and native asters.



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    anne fassnacht
    Indianapolis IN
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  • 6.  RE: School Flower Gardens

    Posted 12-19-2024 11:56:00 AM

    Hi Anne, 

    I love this topic and thank you for sharing to start the conversation! I loved the blog you posted as well. :) I cannot speak to school gardens, but I help manage a Children's vegetable garden at our public botanical garden and we started running summer day camps for the past 2 years. We've intentionally planted more flowers as companion plants to our veggies and for color and beauty for kids to pick whenever they want. We use them for art projects, bracelets, flower crowns, cut bouquets for the classroom or to bring home to family, and campers have even smashed the petals to make their own paint! We also harvest the vegetables to donate to a local food pantry and this year we made about 20 small bouquets for the pantry and they loved it! We've planted zinnias, sunflowers, daisies, lilies, cosmos, morning glory, nasturtiums, straw flower (keep their color and texture when dried), hydrangeas, calendula, different types of celosia (bright colors and feathery texture), and marigold. 

    Through a series of unfortunate events, the campers ended up mourning the death of a small toad they named Tilly. As a group, they decided to hold a small ceremony for Tilly. We had a seemingly endless supply of marigold flowers and petals, so they took it upon themselves to harvest the marigolds and other flowers to create an altar and a marigold trail through the garden to honor Tilly. They each walked up the marigold trail and stopped at the altar to say a few sweet words to Tilly before saying goodbye. This moment was impactful not only because this loss brought them all together, but incorporated this very important flower in their ceremony. It would not have been the same without this meaningful flower! 

    Flower power is real and I appreciate you sharing this to help remind us that children deserve beauty in their lives. 



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    Ariel Christian
    School & Out-of-School Program Specialist
    Olbrich Botanical Gardens
    Madison, WI
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  • 7.  RE: School Flower Gardens

    Posted 12-19-2024 12:40:00 PM

    I'm at The Morton Arboretum in the Children's Garden. Periodically, our Horticulture staff has chosen a "Bouquet Garden" as one of our mini-display garden annual themes, but the public does not pick bouquets, it's more about the beauty, the idea of making a bouquet, and which flowers are great for a cut flower garden at home. When we did this theme, we periodically had our youth volunteers selectively harvest mini-bouquets to take home on certain shifts.

    However, this last summer, we've gone with a model of having our youth volunteers collaborate to make 5-7 small or large bouquets in random glass or plastic glass vases we have on hand, from different flowers growing all over the garden, within reason as to not over harvest, only about every 2-3 weeks. Then we deliver bouquets to various Arboretum locations (mostly staff offices, as adult volunteers make more elaborate ones for certain public areas) and one community partner location that is very close to the Arboretum and easy to pop over to make a drop off.

    Each time the youth volunteers get into a super creative zone both with cutting and then with arranging, and we learn a bit about the different flowers we harvest. We let them use their judgement in different areas about taking only here and there as not to make too much of an impact for other visitors, and we can always tell them not to take certain flowers if it is a concern. It's been great and very therapeutic!

    I've also harvested flowers for a therapeutic horticulture flower arranging program I did offsite for a special mental health community partner, supplementing with a few purchased flowers to round things out. It was amazing to see everyone there very absorbed in making their own creations, and the room smelled wonderful!

    Laura Kamedulski



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    Laura Kamedulski
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  • 8.  RE: School Flower Gardens

    Posted 12-27-2024 08:12:00 PM

    I love the idea of making bouquets as a therapeutic event. I am fascinated by the field of therapeutic horticulture! It is my hope to add that to our school to some extent. We have a variety of students that would benefit from that in speech, OT, and emotional therapy. 



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    anne fassnacht
    Indianapolis IN
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  • 9.  RE: School Flower Gardens

    Posted 12-26-2024 02:32:00 PM

    Hi Anne, we grow quite a few flowers at our 3 school gardens. While I don't specifically grow for cutting (aka making fresh bouquets) I grow partly for beauty, partly for pollinators, and a few for eating. Borage is a favorite, kids love to pinch off the blooms and eat them. It does reseed prolifically, but I find it nice to not have to replant. We have a ton of calendula too, also reseeds all over. 

    Strawflowers are something new for me this past year, they are beautiful and resilient. I will be growing them in all 3 gardens this spring. The way they dry and stay is great tool for some of our activities. 

    Flowers in my experience are a hard one to grow an abundance of, because the kids I work with are very determined to pick them. We've had mixed experience with tulips, daffodils, columbine, flowering currant, bleeding heart, etc. I am still figuring out how to get them all onboard with looking and not picking. This is something that impacts my flower planting decisions, esp single stemmed things, since that doesn't go over well with those plants. I am going to try a "wildflower meadow" this spring at one location, just really heavily seed it and see how that goes. I figure maybe if there's a lot of flowers, then some will be left alone? But it is an experiment, we'll see if they can handle all those flowers, because I'd love to establish a "butterfly garden" but as of right now I think they would all be picked. 

    Are there any specific flowers you are interested in growing? Or were you wondering about ones that are easier to grow, etc? 



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    Sable Kellison
    Rooted In Learning
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  • 10.  RE: School Flower Gardens

    Posted 12-27-2024 08:15:00 PM
    Edited by anne fassnacht 12-27-2024 08:19:44 PM

    I love zinnias, cosmos, and tall marigold varieties for how cut and come again friendly they are. I use herbs as filler because it isn't grabbed as often as some of the more flashy flowers. I use thyme, rosemary, and dill the most.

    I asked mostly to know if I was alone in this sounding like a good idea. I am still working on convincing others at school.

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    anne fassnacht
    Indianapolis IN
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  • 11.  RE: School Flower Gardens

    Posted 12-27-2024 12:44:00 PM

    Hi Anne - such a great question! I am the garden educator at 3 school gardens - 2 elementary and 1 middle school. We grow flowers for the beauty of them and for the pollinators, not specifically as a cutting garden. Although the responses to your post has given me some great ideas of planting more this year with the specific intention to cut and give away some of them and the joy it will bring the students to do that! My students absolutely love the flowers we grow and find so much joy in discovering them every time they walk into the garden. We grow sunflowers, milkweed, different kinds of zinnia, calendula, borage, of course - parsley, dill, many asters, daffodils, tulips, dahlias, and so on. Can't wait to expand our list!



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    Debbie Gries
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  • 12.  RE: School Flower Gardens

    Posted 12-27-2024 08:18:00 PM

    some cosmos varieties are great in bouquets, and the straw flowers mentioned above are also great. Amaranth is fun, too, and adds an opportunity for other lessons.



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    anne fassnacht
    Indianapolis IN
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  • 13.  RE: School Flower Gardens

    Posted 01-03-2025 05:34:00 PM

    Making flower bouquets (to take home or to give to school staff) is a favorite weekly activity for some students at our TK-8 school garden. Kids love the freedom to pick flowers and create beautiful bouquets. We use this as an opportunity to teach about re-using plastic and glass containers (e.g. Starbucks cups, spaghetti sauce & spice jars). If a student remembers to bring a container on Open Garden Wednesday, they get to make a bouquet. Every few weeks, we gather enough containers to offer bouquet making to all interested students.

    Favorite easy-care cut flowers: zinnias, sunflowers, Gerber daisies, snapdragons, calendula, purple salvia. Kids also clip flowers from lavender, rosemary, dusty miller, milkweed and broccoli. California native favorites: CA poppies, buckwheat, sticky monkey flower, hairy gumplant. Nasturtiums are used in vases, but mostly water play. 



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    Amy Cody
    Parent Volunteer / Coordinator
    Latimer Garden & Outdoor Classroom
    San Jose, CA
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