Success StoryRecovery garden



Recovery garden

Author: Lorin Fawns

Planning Unit: Mason County CES

Major Program: Community Gardens and Horticulture Therapy

Plan of Work: Horticulture

Outcome: Long-Term Outcome


Drug and alcohol addiction is a growing concern across America. As we look for ways to help individuals recover, the Mason County Extension Office partnered with the local outpatient recovery center. The NEP assistant has worked with the recovery center for several years, offering nutritional education; the horticulture agent asked to partner to make it an experience that included gardening. The horticulture agent applied for a grant through the recovery garden program at the University of Kentucky and received funding to build a raised bed garden. 

Now, clients are attending monthly classes held by the horticulture agent about gardening, tending to their garden, and using the produce for the NEP class. As the garden program started, it had been years since some people had gardened and brought back memories of gardening with family members. As the garden grew, so did their knowledge as they learned about disease, insect identification, and control. One participant tried radish for the first time and said, "I really like radish, and it would be good on a salad."  Several participants took home garden seed to plant at home as well.










Stories by Lorin Fawns


Grow and Learn

about 3 years ago by Lorin Fawns

The horticulture agent and nutrition education program/EFNEP assistant partnered to offer gardening ... Read More


Learn Grow Eat Go

about 3 years ago by Lorin Fawns

Mason, Meade, and Fayette Counties collaborated on a virtual Learn Grow Eat Go program. 4-H agents a... Read More


Stories by Mason County CES


Professional Meeting Virtually

about 3 years ago by Tad Campbell

Amidst structural changing of Districts to Areas and the ongoing COVID pandemic, the District 1 Agri... Read More


The Show Must Go On

about 3 years ago by Tad Campbell

With many fairs and livestock show cancelled during the COVID pandemic, the Mason County LIA decided... Read More