How to Grow Rice in St. Louis

by: Dean Gunderson

Do you want to grow something totally different in your garden next year?  Something that will surprise everyone who sees it? How about rice?

This year, we grew rice at our Demonstration Garden and Lucy, our School Programs Manager, grew rice at the Gateway Elementary school garden.  Would you believe that the rice did great at both places?

When most people think of growing rice, they imagine a large flooded field somewhere in the humid tropical lowlands of Asia or whole mountainsides terraced so they can hold water to grow rice.  Although rice is originally from East Asia it is grown all over the world and not just in the tropics either.  In fact, Missouri is a major rice producer and it’s grow in places as far north as Russia, Poland, and northern Vermont.


Although people assume all rice needs to be grown in flooded conditions rice is actually a remarkably adaptable crop.  In addition to being able to grow in flooded conditions it can grow where the field is alternately flooded and dry and there are even types of rice, called upland rice, that grow just off of rainfall in fields just like corn and wheat.  

Because of its adaptability, you can grow rice in your own backyard here in Missouri.  You won’t get much rice unless you’re growing in a large area, but that shouldn’t stop you because there are many reasons why you should grow rice.

Rice is particularly a great plant to grow with children; it’s really easy to grow, has virtually no weed problems because of the flooding, and matches well with the school calendar.  It’s also just fun to grow grain.

Read on to find out how we grew flooded rice and how you can too!

HOW TO GROW RICE

The first and most important step is getting the right variety.  We started with a “japonica” rice variety, which is more adaptable to our northern climates because it is triggered to produce seed by day length, not by the length of the warm season.  This ensures you will get a crop, whereas if you grow traditional varieties there is a chance that you won’t get any grain at all. The variety we grew is called Koshihikari, which we purchased from Kitizawa Seed.  We now also sell the seed ourselves and you can get it at our Carriage House on Saturday’s or at our office Monday-Friday.  

Next, decide what type of “paddy” you will grow your rice in.  Koshihikari is a flooded rice, so you will need something that will retain water.  Whatever you plant it in will need to be at least a foot deep and watertight.  You can grow in containers like 5 gallon buckets, plastic tubs, old bathtubs, whatever you have that’s deep and watertight.  If you want to make a large area, a specially-made raised bed is your best bet, which is what we decided to do.

We built a double high raised bed that was 2’ tall. You can use our construction plans for a double high raised bed which has worked great for us.  If you decide to use a different design, make sure the different layers of boards stay together.

Once we built the bed, we lined the entire inside of the raised bed with three layers of plastic.  We just used a plastic drop cloth, which you can find in the painting section of any hardware store.

After lining the bed with plastic, fill the bed with a good garden soil mix.  For our raised beds, we used a mix made up of 50% topsoil and 50% compost.  

Now that you have your paddy, you’re ready for the easy part: growing the rice!

The best way to do this is to emulate the traditional way the people of Asia have grown paddy rice for thousands of years.  Rice is traditionally grown in one paddy and then transplanted to their final spot later.  Since our season is a bit short it’s best to have your “nursery paddy” inside.  Start the rice indoors in pots around mid April just like you would any other seedling.  Plant at least a few seeds per pot and keep them well watered.  Make sure they have a strong light source and be sure to thin each pot to just one seedling once they have germinated.

In mid-May, flood your rice paddy so that there is standing water about 2” above the soil surface. The next day, reflood if needed (water may have gone down as it fully saturates the soil) and plant your rice into the flooded paddy about 6” apart in rows that are 12” apart.

How do you plant into a flooded field you ask?  It’s really easy. The soil is so saturated you just take the roots of the seedling in your hand and push it into the soil, that’s it.

It was at this point that we started adding mosquito dunks to our rice paddy so that the standing water didn’t turn into a mosquito breeding ground.  Mosquito dunks are an organic way to kill mosquito larvae and can be purchased as granuales or donut-shaped blocks online.  One donut-shaped block lasts 30 days.  They are made up of a specific strain of BT, a bacteria that is toxic to mosquito larvae (but not to people or beneficial insects).

From mid-May until about mid-September, the only maintenance needed is to make sure the paddy stays flooded.  If there are any weeds, pull them out – we had one weed all year.

By early August, you will start to see the seed heads popping up from the stalks.

In September, your seed heads will start to droop.  When they start to droop like this, stop watering your rice.  Let the soil dry out and no longer keep it flooded.

Over the next few weeks, the water level will drop and the seed will turn a golden color.  When the drooped seed heads turn a golden brown and the leaves are still green it is time to harvest.

To harvest, cut all of the stems at ground level.  Lay the plants out on a table or somewhere that has good air circulation, but is protected from birds.  If they are not protected from birds, they will eat all of your rice!

Let it lie out to dry for at least a few weeks, moving the plants around every few days so that it dries completely and doesn’t mold.  When the stems have turned to a straw color, they are ready to process!

To learn how to process the rice into edible grains check out our blog post on that subject here

Give STL Day 2018

Support the Future of St. Louis Community Gardens on St. Louis Gives Day 2018

The Power of Growing Food

 

About Give STL DayChild enthusiastically eats greens.

Give STL Day is a 24-hour day of online giving happening this year on May 2. It is an opportunity for Gateway Greening to invite the community of St. Louis to help us further the work that we do.

Gateway Greening supports more than 200 community and school gardens in the St. Louis area, that do more than provide a beautifying space in communities. They connect residents of all ages and backgrounds to their food and to each other. Gardens provide joyful spaces where people can interact and share their lives and the fresh food that they grow.

 

Ways to Participate

Visit givestlday.org/gatewaygreening on May 2, 2018 and give.  

Schedule your donation in advance using a credit card beginning April 9. You will then be charged on May 2.  

Get reminded on May 2 to give: sign up for our email newsletter.

Need a Reminder Email?

 

 

 

Giving Grove at Work

Giving Grove at Work
Old Ferguson West Community Garden orchard installation with Giving Grove, Fall 2017.

At Gateway Greening we believe St. Louis is only as strong as its communities. Our vision is a region where people are connected to the land, to their food, and to each other in deeply rooted, resilient urban communities. Since 1984, Gateway Greening has supported food-producing community projects. However, community groups want to grow more than just vegetables, they want to expand their projects to grow fruit and nut crops. In 2017, Gateway Greening partnered with the Giving Grove of Kansas City, MO to bring their community orchard program to St. Louis. This program will allow us to assist community groups in growing a broad diversity of fruit and nut crops that are naturally disease resistant, using a holistic management program that the Kansas City Giving Grove has been using successfully for five years.

 

As of fall 2017, the Giving Grove in Kansas City has provided over 2,000 fruit and nut bearing plants across Kansas City, and we hope to plant many more here in St. Louis in the years to come. Rob Reiman, the Giving Grove’s Executive Director said, “We are beyond thrilled to be able to collaborate with Gateway Greening to help bring sustainable orchards to more food insecure communities in the St. Louis area.” Small community orchards have incredible potential to produce fresh produce for many St. Louis communities. An average Giving Grove orchard in Kansas City contains 15 trees and is capable of producing over 3,500 pounds of produce each year once the plants reach maturity.

 

Giving Grove
Gateway elementary students hard at work moving compost and fresh soil for the new Giving Grove orchard installed at their school.

To date, Giving Grove orchards in St. Louis have been installed at Old Ferguson West Community Garden, Stix ECC Early Childhood Center, Gateway Elementary School, Gateway Michael Elementary School, Central Reform Congregation Community Garden, and Florissant Community Garden.

 

Who is eligible for a Giving Grove?

Over the years, we have found that community groups who complete our garden development process create long-lasting, supported, community spaces. We believe that new orchards will be similarly sustainable and locally beneficial if they are community-led projects.

Gateway Greening Network gardens will be able to request Giving Grove orchard plants and materials through the newly created Orchard Expansion Application in May and October. Non-network community groups will be asked to complete our development process. This process assists community groups in identifying local resources, engaging community members, and creating long-term management plans. Once completed, the orchard project will be considered “in-network” and eligible for all of the same benefits as community gardens, in addition to the tools and materials specific to orchards.

 

What is the Cost of an Orchard?

There is a one-time cost for materials when installing a Giving Grove, however, in order to make orcharding accessible for everyone in St. Louis, we are offering scholarships that will reduce the cost of installation by 50% or 90%.

For the one time cost, community groups will receive: the plant, support stakes or poles, soil amendments during planting, additional soil, burlap, wood chip mulch, and tree wraps. The per plant costs vary from $5-$50 depending on the size and type of plat installed.

 

Learning to Care for a Giving Grove Orchard

Proper care and maintenance is important for the long-term health and productivity for any orchard. Gateway Greening will be offering ongoing, free education for anyone who wishes to learn more about orchard care. Please visit our events calendar to learn more about upcoming orchard classes.

 

Start an Orchard with Gateway Greening

Please visit the Giving Grove page on our website or contact Community Projects Manager Dean Gunderson at [email protected] or at 314-588-9600 x108 to learn more.

 

Giving Grove at Work.
Giving Grove installation at Florissant Community Garden with garden members and volunteers from The Burning Kumquat (Washington University) and Gateway Greening.

Voice from the Tower Grove East Community Garden

Tower Grove East Community Garden, 2002.

 

Written by Mary Anne Pikrone, Tower Grove East Community Garden Leader.

 

Three and a half years ago, as my husband and I were taking a get-acquainted drive through the neighborhood we chose to live in, we came upon folks working in the Tower Grove East Community Garden. I’d given up backyard gardens in Richmond, VA., and Toledo, Ohio, and was prepared to do with just a postage stamp yard behind our new location on Louisiana Ave. So I walked into the garden, asked about available beds, and within a couple weeks, I was happily planting tomato seedlings in my new plot a half block from where we moved. It made me feel at home again.

 

Meanwhile, I kept hearing about Gateway Greening but didn’t really understand what the organization was. I did note our sign said the garden was established by GG in 1999– long before I moved here.

 

I got more involved in the Tower Grove East Community Garden, and that’s when I came to appreciate what a wonderful resource Gateway Greening is. I visited their headquarters and took the required course for garden officers. I attended their early spring conferences, where I learned community gardening techniques and met others who are just as passionate about urban gardening as I am. And, best of all, I discovered Gateway Greening’s volunteer services.

 

Tower Grove East Community Garden, Summer of 2008.

Frankly, we wouldn’t be where we are today–nor would we look as good–if it were not for the volunteers Gateway Greening has sent us. We’ve had folks from Minnesota who mightily struggled, and prevailed, in 90-degree weather under brutal sunlight; they weren’t used to such heat.

 

We’ve had seminarians and families who’ve helped us. We’ve had up to several dozen people–I call them worker bees–who have descended on our grounds, worked furiously in often very hot weather and left the place neat and clean. I must say the most impressive were the high school track team girls (can’t remember from where), who conquered deep roots that our gardeners hadn’t been able to budge. Yes, I have to say they definitely out-weeded the guys.

 

Then, late last year, Gateway Greening arrived with much-needed tools to refurbish our tool shed. What a gift! Now, of course, I hope to apply for a new arbor/trellis from them. When I have friends visit, I always give them a tour of the garden and explain about Gateway Greening, a wonderful umbrella organization of more than 200 urban community gardens.

 

Meanwhile, we’re determined to keep improving the garden. Thanks to Alderwoman Christine Ingrassia, the city installed new sidewalks and replaced ancient steps leading up to the garden this fall. We paid to have our 100-year-old plus retaining wall tuckpointed; it had been cracking and chipping.

 

It’s great to know Gateway Greening has our back.

GATEWAY GREENING – ONE DIME AT A TIME PARTNERSHIP WITH WHOLE FOODS

After Whole Foods partnered with Gateway Greening for Chefs in a Garden gala, in 2017, Whole Foods found themselves engrossed in Gateway Greening’s mission and was inspired to do more to impact food access issues in our community. Whole Foods Market decided Gateway Greening was the perfect fit for the One Dime at a Time program.

Whole Foods Market offers customers the option to donate $0.10 bag credit to Gateway Greening during the months of April, May, and June.  Donations will be provided by Whole Foods Town and Country and Whole Foods Brentwood. Whole Foods has also agreed to provide reusable bags at all upcoming Gateway Greening workshops and events, through their Better Bags program.

“Gateway Greening is excited about the partnership with Whole Foods as part of their One Dime at a Time program.  Whole Foods have been a partner with Gateway Greening over the years, and their support is greatly appreciated.” said Matt Schindler, Executive Director of Gateway Greening.

Gateway Greening, a local nonprofit organization, educates and empowers people to strengthen their communities through gardening and urban agriculture. The support from Whole Foods and the St. Louis community will continue aiding over 200 community and school gardens in the St. Louis region, that can connect people to the land, to their food, and each other.  Gateway Greening will participate in a number of in-store tabling’s and The Whole Foods Kids Club in both Brentwood on May 27th and June 3rd, and Town and Country store on April 28th, May 26th, and June 6th, from 10:00am-1:00pm.

 

# # #

About Gateway Greening

Gateway Greening is a non-profit organization that educates and empowers people to strengthen their communities through gardening and urban agriculture. Gateway Greening has been working to provide creative, grassroots solutions to urban problems since 1984. Programs include supporting more than 200 community and youth-focused gardens across the St. Louis area through educational opportunities, grants, and technical assistance; founding and providing ongoing material and educational support for community fruit and nut orchards; and Seed to STEM program which assists teachers in creating hands-on lessons in the school garden connected to federal education standards.

For more information on Gateway Greening and its programs visit www.gatewaygreening.org or call 314-588-9600.

LUCKY’S MARKET PARTNERS WITH GATEWAY GREENING

Each quarter, Lucky’s Market  partners with three organizations as the recipients of their Bags for Change program. During the quarter, guests who bring in reusable bags during their shopping are given a wooden dime (their bag credit). They can then choose to donate this dime to one of our three partner organizations. What’s more, Lucky’s Market will match each donation!

Gateway Greening has been chosen as a Lucky’s Market Bags for Change partner for the current quarter which ends on May 26, 2018. “Gateway Greening greatly appreciates being chosen for the Lucky’s Market Bags for Change program. Lucky’s Market has been a big supporter of Gateway Greening over the years, and we are grateful for this partnership,” said Matt Schindler, Executive Director of Gateway Greening.

Gateway Greening, a local nonprofit organization, educates and empowers people to strengthen their communities through gardening and urban agriculture. The support from Lucky’s Market and the St. Louis community will continue aiding over 200 community and school gardens in the St. Louis region, that can connect people to the land, to their food, and each other. Gateway Greening will be at the Rock Hill location on Sunday, March 18th, Sunday, April 15th, and Sunday, May 6th, from 1pm-4pm passing out information, and connecting to the community.

# # #

About Gateway Greening

Gateway Greening is a non-profit organization that educates and empowers people to strengthen their communities through gardening and urban agriculture. Gateway Greening has been working to provide creative, grassroots solutions to urban problems since 1984. Programs include supporting more than 200 community and youth-focused gardens across the St. Louis area through educational opportunities, grants, and technical assistance; founding and providing ongoing material and educational support for community fruit and nut orchards; and Seed to STEM program which assists teachers in creating hands-on lessons in the school garden connected to federal education standards.

For more information on Gateway Greening and its programs visit www.gatewaygreening.org or call 314-588-9600.

Planting and Planning for Pollinators

Most gardeners know that encouraging pollinators is good for their growing plants, but not everyone knows that increased diversity of pollinators can mean more vegetables to harvest.

One of the best ways to ensure that your garden thrives every year is by taking the time to plan before you plant.

While deciding which varieties of peppers to grow is an important choice, choosing which plants to encourage native pollinators can be just as vital to creating a flourishing garden.

Factors to Consider

Seasonality–When deciding what to plant to nurture native pollinators in your garden, considering when various plants will bloom is of the utmost importance. Bees and other native pollinators need sources of nectar and/or pollen during the time that they are foraging and creating nests. To provide these sources of fuel, be sure to select plants that will bloom throughout the growing season.

Gateway Greening’s Strategy: In our Demonstration Garden, there is a wide variety of native flowers. When first planted, these plants were designed to bloom throughout the growing season, but more aggressive fall flowering plants have crowded out the spring flowering. Luckily, there are other parts of the Demonstration Garden that have only spring flowering

Native Yarrow thrives near the fence of the Demonstration Garden.

plants, ensuring that pollinators always have resources to utilize.

Plant Placement–To maximize the benefit that native plants offer in your garden, placement can be an important consideration. When plants are grouped in large patches, instead of being by themselves, they can offer more resources to pollinators.

Bordering your edible plants with native flowering plants can also improve pollination of your edible plants as well as provide pollinators with even more resources to thrive, leading to more vegetables being produced.

Gateway Greening’s Strategy: In both the native pollinator area and wildlife garden in the Demonstration Garden, native plants are grouped in large patches. Gateway Greening tries to plant native plants directly into the ground in order to save space in raised beds, especially since native plants thrive in Missouri’s clay-filled soil. Otherwise unused space is also used strategically in other parts of the garden such as the small area next to the roadside fence, where ornamental plantings bloom throughout the season.

Pollinators love the purple blooms of chives.

Plant Varieties to Consider

Native Yarrow–Though some consider it to be a weed, yarrow is a native, flowering perennial that attracts butterflies with its white flowers and long bloom time.

Anise Hyssop–This herbaceous perennial is attractive to a variety of native pollinators. Its fragrant, purple blossoms stick around from June to September, making it a beautiful and edible addition to any garden.

Chives–Another edible that attracts native pollinators, chives bloom in the late spring and early summer to ensure that pollinators stick around all season.

Garlic Chives–Though similar to chives, garlic chives bloom in the late summer and early fall, which can be a time when other plants are not flowering.

Aster–In addition to having large, purple flowers, aster is notable for its late bloom time, which stretches into October.

Witch Hazel–Though you might know it from the first aid aisle, witch hazel is unique for both its interesting blooms and very early bloom time, which can begin as early as January.

Native Passionflower (Maypop)–Related to the tropical passion fruit, this unusual flower has a long bloom time and is much loved by bumblebees.

Other great choices to encourage native pollinators in your garden include perennial edibles that flower such as selvatica, oregano, thyme, chives, garlic chives, lemon balm, and mint.

Gateway Greening’s Strategy: Last year, garlic chives, chives, and thyme were planted at the ends of raised beds that contained vegetables. These pollinator attracting perennials are edible and flower beautifully.

Though many of these native plants make St. Louis gardens more efficient, they also can add beauty to their surroundings. Many of them produce gorgeous, colorful blooms that can

Witch Hazel has unique blooms.

light up a neighborhood.

To see all the strategies that Gateway Greening utilizes to encourage pollinators, come take a tour of the Demonstration Garden on Saturday, March 17, 10am – 11am or just stop by at 3841 Bell Ave, St. Louis, MO 63108 from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. on Saturdays. Check out even more opportunities to visit the space here.

For more information on which native plants thrive in Missouri, check out these resources!

http://grownative.org/

http://extension.missouri.edu/sare/documents/nativeplants.pdf

MONSANTO FUND AWARDS GRANT TO GATEWAY GREENING FOR SEED TO STEM PROGRAM

    ST. LOUIS (February 23rd, 2018)- Students in Gateway Greening’s Seed to STEM program keep growing thanks to a $205,000 grant from the Monsanto Fund for 2018-2019.

    Gateway Greening has a long history of assisting St. Louis schools to fund and support school gardens. To help teachers effectively use the garden as an outdoor classroom and learning laboratory, Gateway Greening educators developed the Seed to STEM program.

    “The Monsanto Fund grant makes it possible for Gateway Greening educators to provide weekly Seed to STEM lessons in five St. Louis Public Schools. Seed to STEM is a hands-on K-5 science curriculum that uses school gardens to reinforce Next Generation Science Standards, develop scientific inquiry skills, and inspire students to connect to their environment, food system and community,” said Lucy Herleth, Gateway Greeening’s School Program Manager. “With the Monsanto Fund grant, Gateway Greening is also able to support over 60 youth gardens as well as offer  monthly educator workshops, district professional development and site-specific trainings.

    The Seed to STEM curriculum is also available free to anyone that works with youth through the Gateway Greening website and its monthly educator email newsletter. Gateway Greening estimates that its school garden programs, along with the Seed to STEM initiative, have empowered more than 13,000 students across the St. Louis region to garden.

    Lauren Hollis, a teacher at Clay Academy, said it takes “confidence” for educators to garden successfully with their students.

    “In the beginning, I was so scared I was going to kill the plants,” said Hollis.  “Now I have the experience and someone to answer questions.  After going to the garden (for the past year), I would totally teach any lesson outside with confidence and not be worried.”

    She also said gardening helps students to understand that food doesn’t just magically appear at the grocery store.

    “Gardens help the students learn more about their environment and learn where their food is from,” she added.  “Gardens help them see a process – a plant growing or a pumpkin decomposing.”

    Clay Academy’s school garden was founded in 1993 and with the support of Gateway Greening educators and the Monsanto Fund, it has become a thriving outdoor classroom.  Additionally, continued support from the Monsanto Fund will allow Gateway Greening to expand the Seed to STEM curriculum so that more teachers and students throughout the St. Louis region will have access to the program.

    ***

    ABOUT GATEWAY GREENING

    Gateway Greening, www.gatewaygreening.org, educates and empowers people to strengthen their communities through gardening and urban agriculture. Led by Executive Director Matt Schindler, the organization supports over 200 community gardens and food projects as well as 60 school gardens in the St. Louis, Missouri metropolitan area.

    ABOUT THE MONSANTO FUND

    The Monsanto Fund, the philanthropic arm of Monsanto Company, is a nonprofit organization dedicated to strengthening the communities where farmers and Monsanto Company employees live and work. Visit the Monsanto Fund at www.monsantofund.org.

    ###

    School Program Manager Lucy Herleth visiting Ms. Hayes’ fourth grade class at Gateway Elementary to help students plan which crops to grow in their school garden.

    Fostering Student Ownership in the School Garden

     

    How do you foster a sense of student ownership and investment in their school garden? By encouraging them to be a part of the decision making process.

    Last week, Ms. Davie’s and Ms. Hayes’s 4th grade classes at Gateway Elementary decided what to plant in their school garden based on planting dates, germination rates, and factored in the days till harvest. But first, they had to learn how to read seed packets and planting calendars so that they could make informed decisions.

     

    Fostering student ownership through participation in the decision making process.
    School Program Manager Lucy Herleth visiting Ms. Hayes’ fourth grade class at Gateway Elementary to help students plan which crops to grow in their school garden.

     

    Learning to Interpret Seed Packets

    At the beginning of class Gateway Greening Educator Lucy Herleth passed out seed packets of different fruit and vegetable types to each student. Some students groaned when they ended up with packets of green beans, while one young lady cheered: “I got tomatoes!”

    For many of the fourth graders, this was their first opportunity to read a seed packet up close, so Miss Lucy gave a quick lesson. Building on previous class discussions, students connected the general plant life cycles they had learned about before to the specific information that was provided by the seed packet.

    Seed packets provide a wealth of important information: when to plant the seeds, the number of days it required to germinate (appear above ground), the number of days the plant must grow before it is ready to be harvested, and most importantly, the amount of sun and water the plant would need to grow.

    After the lesson, Lucy tested the student’s knowledge with a fun pop quiz. Each class was asked to line up in a straight line using their seed packets. Student’s whose crops would be ready for harvest quickly at the front of the line, while students with crops that had longer grow periods were towards the back – and they weren’t allowed to talk while doing it. After two minutes of chaos, the kids were lined up in order and ready to head out to the greenhouse.

    Student Crop Selection

    Gateway Elementary has a sizable greenhouse built inside the school – the perfect place to start seed crops at the end of winter. Before anything could be planted though, some decisions needed to be made.

    Each student was given a copy of Gateway Greening’s planting calendar. Regionally specific, this calendar shows the seeding, transplant, and harvest dates for many of the crops local community and backyard gardeners commonly grow in St. Louis. For this part of the lesson, each student was asked to find up to three plants that they personally would like to grow in the Gateway Elementary school garden this year.

    Next, Lucy asked each student to tape photos of their plants to the wall under the month that the crop should be planted in. With a little help from the planting calendar, students quickly created a colorful display of crops on the wall – and clearly told their teachers which crops they want to grow in the school garden this year.

    Fostering student ownership through participation.
    Fourth grade students using the information found on seed packets and a regionally specific planting calendar to make informed decisions regarding what to plant in their school garden this spring.

     

    Managing Expectations – the Fun Way

    By asking the fourth graders to share their plant choices using pictures taped to the wall, Lucy created a highly visual planting calendar specific to the students’ garden. Using their earlier lesson on reading seed packets, Miss Lucy and the kids were able to talk about which plants they would be able to grow and harvest before the students left for summer break.

    Many regional crops are harvested during June and July – a time when students aren’t in class. However, there are many crops that St. Louis students can plant in early spring and harvest before summer break begins late in May. Peas, radishes, carrots, and lettuce, to name a few. Limited growing space and time will mean that not every crop the students asked for will make it into the Gateway Elementary school garden this year, but the majority of them will.

    When the fourth graders visit the garden this spring, they will get to watch “their” plants grow and try new produce that they chose for themselves.

    It may be February in St. Louis, but the fourth grade students of Ms. Davie and Ms. Hayes classes at Gateway Elementary are already getting a head start on their school garden.

    Looking for more ways to incorporate the school garden into your lesson plan? Stop by:

    • Gateway Greening’s Workshops for Educators page to explore monthly workshops that address the challenges and opportunities represented by teaching in school gardens
    • The Gateway Greening Educators Facebook group to connect with other teachers throughout St. Louis with similar interests in school gardens
    • Check out our In the School Garden Youtube playlist for short, actionable how-to videos that are seasonally relevant.

    2018 Community Agriculture Conference Celebrates Innovative St. Louis Projects

    Gateway Greening celebrates innovative St. Louis projects with convergence of local and national urban agriculture leaders.

    ST. LOUIS, MO. (February 16, 2018) – Gateway Greening, a non-profit organization in St. Louis that educates and empowers people to strengthen their communities through gardening and urban agriculture, will host its annual Community Agriculture Conference on Sunday, February 25 from 12:00 PM-5:00 PM at St. Louis University High School, 4970 Oakland Avenue, St. Louis, MO 63110. The event is sponsored by Ameren Missouri, Fehlig Bros Box & Lumber Company, Whole Foods, and funds from the City of St. Louis’ Community Development Administration.

    “This gathering will highlight national and regional initiatives making a difference in community agriculture. Attendees have the opportunity to learn from local experts, and connect with other change-makers in St. Louis that are changing our city by growing food. Converging community gardeners, urban farmers, and regional small growers, the conference creates a platform to learn about everything from urban orchards, to building community with school gardens.” – Matt Even, Community Education Manager at Gateway Greening.

    The list to-date of local and national urban agriculture leaders participating include: Rob Reiman, Executive Director, The Giving Grove in Kansas City; Nicole Hudson, Deputy Mayor for Racial Equity and Priority Initiatives; Ryan Albritton, Sprouthood and the Progressive Strategy Coalition; Matt Lebon, Custom Foodscaping; Brigette Zettl, St. Louis Community College; Nelver Brooks, Nahed Chapman New American Academy; Petra Baker, Gateway Michael Elementary School; Hannah Reinhart, the Saint Louis Science Center GROW Exhibit; Millie Mattfeldt-Beaman, the North City Food Hub; Gibron Jones, HOSCO Foods; and Bill Anderson, St. Louis University High School.

    Gateway Greening is offering a limited number of full scholarships to selected participants. Applications are accepted, reviewed, and granted on a rolling basis until funds are depleted for this program.

    Tickets can be purchased for $20 per person. To purchase tickets, for scholarship information, for sponsorship opportunities, and to learn additional event details, please visit https://gatewaygreening.org/community-agriculture-conference/

    ***

    About Gateway Greening

    Gateway Greening is a non-profit organization that educates and empowers people to strengthen their communities through gardening and urban agriculture. Gateway Greening has been working to provide creative, grassroots solutions to urban problems since 1984. Programs include supporting more than 200 community and youth-focused gardens across the St. Louis area through educational opportunities, grants, and technical assistance; founding and providing ongoing material and educational support for community fruit and nut orchards; and Seed to STEM program which assists teachers in creating hands-on lessons in the school garden connected to federal education standards.

    For more information on Gateway Greening and its programs visit www.gatewaygreening.org or call 314-588-9600.