Author: Lois Carter
Planning Unit: Bourbon County CES
Major Program: Agriculture
Plan of Work: Educating Youth and Adults on Life Skills, safety, personal and family development
Outcome: Initial Outcome
The Bourbon County Extension Service was fortunate to receive a 2021 Agriculture Mini Grant through the Kentucky 4-H Foundation. This grant was a $1000 grant that required matching funds. The Extension Office decided to use these funds to promote gardening among youth and families. 4-H, FCS, Horticulture/Ag and SNAP/NEP partnered in this interdisciplinary program to teach gardening skills, the value of growing your own food, simple food preparation skills, nutrition, the economic impact of home gardens and the positive mental benefit of gardening. Family and youth gardening projects cultivate healthy children, families and community through educational programs and the profound act of connecting people with food from seed to table.
The goals for this program were as follows:
We hosted three (3) gardening workshops. The first workshop was held at the Extension Office and was a container workshop where each family came during a scheduled time and planted a large pot with tomatoes and peppers for the start of a salsa garden. The next two gardening workshops were raised beds. One was done at a child care facility and the other, largest of all, was at a community based out-reach center in an impoverished area of the inner city Paris with low resource youth and also in a food desert area.
All the participants were able to see start to finish gardening. They planted, cared for (watered, weeded) and harvested fresh vegetables and herbs. They learned how easy it can be to grow your own garden and prepare healthy, fresh foods. Overall, there were 25 salsa pots along with four, 4x8 raised beds. Based on the average raised bed garden yield, these combined plantings (pots and raised beds) yielded approximately 500 pounds of fresh produce. Based on combined average produce prices from Kentucky Department of Agriculture, the yield resulted in an economic benefit of approximately $2,000.00. These gardening projects reached 59 families.
Livestock and Animal Science projects continue to be the largest, most viable projects offered in Bo... Read More
Teen Conference 2022Success StoryThe 98th Annual Kentucky 4-H Teen Conference was held at the Univer... Read More
According to kentuckyhealthfacts.org, only 10% of Kentuckians eat the recommended amounts of fruits ... Read More
Charcuterie Board Art and Summer SausageArt and healthy eating come together through innovative char... Read More
Whitley County 4-H Cloverbuds met in February and learned about the importance of vegetables and how... Read More
Whitley County 4-H has added another club to its agenda. The Cloverbuds met for the first time in Fe... Read More