Success StoryPumpkin Days Continues to Offer Youth Unique Farm to Fork Experience



Pumpkin Days Continues to Offer Youth Unique Farm to Fork Experience

Author: Courtney Jenkins

Planning Unit: Agriculture and Natural Resources Programs

Major Program: Local Food Systems

Plan of Work: Promoting Sustainable, Healthy Lifestyles and Communities

Outcome: Intermediate Outcome

Children living in Breathitt and surrounding counties served by UK’s Robinson Center (RCARS) rank at the absolute bottom of the Robert Woods Johnson County Health Rankings for overall health outcomes. (Breathitt #120, Wolfe #119, Owsley #118, Leslie #117, Perry #116. 2018 data). The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention list childhood obesity as a contributing factor to many health issues. The CDC states that one way to combat childhood obesity is to consume a diet high in vegetables and fruits.  RCARS and the Magoffin County Cooperative Extension Service partnered with schools and community (Kentucky River Medical Center, Breathitt County Public Health Department, Breathitt County Public Library and others) to host a regional Farm to Preschool/School event at no cost to students aged 3 – 6. 

2018 Pumpkin Days provided many educational stations that allowed students and their families an opportunity to discover how pumpkins grow as well as opportunities to sample healthy recipes prepared with pumpkin. The event culminated with students experiencing agriculture first hand as they walked into a pumpkin patch and selected their very own pumpkin. 

Over the course of two days, 925 youth and 432 teachers and family members experienced this popular fall vegetable from seed to field to fork, at educational stations staffed by 81 employees and community partners. Of the teachers that completed post event surveys, more than 50% stated that they connected the Pumpkin Day event to other activities in their classroom, with health, agriculture, and community. Teachers also reported that 71% of their students sampled the healthy foods made with pumpkin. While there is no data available to determine if those students continued to include healthy vegetables in their diets, the event does have a lasting impact on the students. High school agriculture students also volunteered to help prep the pumpkin patch for the young visitors, and a majority of the group recalled that they had participated in the event years before.






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