Maintaining the school garden over the summer months seems to be a universal problem. As a 4-H club leader, I understand that members would find it difficult to be motivated to weed someone else's garden in the hot summer sun. Here are a few suggestions to help with this dilemma.
1) If you are planting annual beds, clear the beds the last week of school and plant summer crops such as sweet potatoes, that can grow all summer long. When school starts, have a harvesting event and cookout to celebrate the return to school.
2) Start a 4-H or FFA club at school so students and parents can support their school garden over the summer, and harvest any produce. Sometimes access to the garden is a challenge, but a feeling of ownership is vital.
3) Adopt permaculture principles and plant more perennial vegetables rather than annual vegetables. Depending on your climate,
4) Use mulch heavily to reduce weed growth over the summer.
5) Summer is a great time to build soil using the lasagna method of layering cardboard, mulch, and horse manure. Use the hot sun to your advantage.
6) Plan major activities for the end of the school year (summer transition) and for the beginning of the school year to ease back into the garden routine. Don't expect the garden to be neatly trimmed over the summer if noone is around to maintain it. When clearing the garden of old annual vegetables, compost the waste.
Hope that helps.
Leann Barber
Made in Broward
208 NW 28th Terrace
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33311
954-303-6750