Older Americans are helping teens grow their lives
By: Brad Edmondson, from: AARP Bulletin, May 30, 2011
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| Vel Scott plants chocolate mint with granddaughter Kayla Scott-Craig, a fourth-generation family gardener. — Courtesy Vel Scott |
Across the country, older Americans are reaching out to children
and teens who need extra attention — and they are doing it through gardening. From
the combination of willing and able adults, kids in need, and tough times grew inter-generational programs in Cleveland and Olympia, Wash., efforts that have
yielded not only good produce but remarkable results in those who are willing
to get their hands dirty.
Gardeners, it turns out, are a group that has the time, and
will, to help. According to a National Gardening Association (NGA) survey, two-thirds of all gardeners
are 45 or older, but only one-third of them have children living at home.
At the same time, a lousy economy has only highlighted the need
to learn how to
grow food. The number of
households raising their own food increased from 36 million in 2008 to 41
million in 2009, according to the NGA. About 1 million households raised their
food in some kind of neighborhood plot in 2009, and 5 million non-gardening
households said they would probably participate in a community garden if one started up nearby.
Vel's Purple Oasis
One day last summer, Vel Scott,
70, set up a table in her garden and chopped tomatoes, peppers, cilantro and
green onions that had just been picked by members of the environmental club of
John Hay High School. She added garlic and oil and set the bowl of salsa next
to some corn chips. The chips were the bait; the vegetables were the message.
"Sometimes I will buy a tomato at the store and put it next to one they
have just picked," she says. "I want them to see and taste the
difference."
Here in this East Cleveland
neighborhood, Vel's Purple Oasis spreads across 1.5 acres that Vel and her
husband, Don, bought when they owned a nightclub across the street. Though the
well-loved club closed in 1998, Vel still knows nearly everyone in the
neighborhood. After she lost her husband to heart disease last year, she began
to focus her energies on the Oasis.
Vel grew up near the Oasis in the 1950s, back when people
shopped at small businesses owned by locals. When she started the garden in
2008, Vel knew only a little about growing food. But the nightclub had taught
her how to grow a business, and years of cooking for Don had
taught her a lot about how to make soul food tasty without loading it up with
salt and fat. She was driven to share what she knew. The need was clearly
there. Nearby residents are mostly poor and African American. It's more than a
mile from the Oasis to the nearest grocery store that has a good produce
section, and a lot of Vel's neighbors don't have cars.
"Whole Foods isn't part of the culture of my
neighborhood," she says. "The reason people here don't eat healthy is
because they don't know any better. If you don't know about healthy food, you're not going to be comfortable
eating it."
Volunteers renovated
a small house Vel bought next to the garden last fall. The Don Scott House will
open June 30, and Vel plans to hold community events and cooking classes there.
Children and teenagers come from nearby churches, community centers and after-school
programs to work outdoors in the garden, hang out together and eat Vel's
cooking. "I will make a fennel salad with things we've grown here and
serve it to my friends in my home," she says. "The way to change
people's habits is, first make them feel comfortable."
Vel
planted the garden not only to show kids what fresh food tastes like, but also
to show them how to become entrepreneurs. "Most teenagers go out and get
jobs that pay them by the hour," she says. "But I tell them, you can
own a piece of this lot. How much you earn from it will depend on how good you
are at working it. That's a more powerful lesson."
"I believe strongly in the power of prayer,"
Vel says. And what she's doing seems to be working. Monique Russell, 19, worked
at the garden two years ago and says it opened her eyes. She is now a
second-year college student majoring in environmental science.
GRuB
Olympia-based Garden-Raised Bounty calls
itself GRuB because its staff and volunteers spend a lot of time using grub
hoes. The group installs raised bed gardens for low-income households and runs
a two-acre organic farm that is a popular destination for school groups. But it
also has acquired a reputation for turning young lives around.
About
200 students at Olympia High School are considered at risk of dropping out in
an average year, according to Principal Matt Grant, and about 40 of these will
ultimately quit. About one in eight children in the surrounding counties lives
below the poverty line.
Every
summer, GRuB volunteers meet 20 at-risk teenagers. More than 90 percent of
those who stick with the program either graduate or get a GED. Even more
impressive is that two-thirds of alumni go on to college, many becoming the
first in their families to do so.
"We
teach leadership skills a little bit at a time," says Loretta Seppanen,
64, who volunteered for GRuB as soon as she retired last year. "The
students learn how to do little things at first, and then they learn to do
more. By the time they are through here, they have gained self-confidence. What
makes it work is that everyone assumes the student can do the job. A lot of
them have never experienced that positive assumption before, and it is
powerful."
GRuB is the brainchild of Blue Peetz, 37, who
majored in community studies and ecology at Olympia's Evergreen State College.
When he was still a student, Peetz started a community garden where students
and older people worked together in an unused backyard and gave the food away.
"Then I got a job at a day care center, and one day we took a field trip
to that garden," says Peetz. "I had my revelation the first time I
saw 60 fifth-graders pulling weeds. A lot of them had no idea where their food
came from."
Peetz
helped launch GRuB and began looking for support. The mentoring and leadership
training programs began when a federal grant allowed them to offer summer jobs
to low-income high school students in 1999. "A lot of the kids we hired
knew what it was like to be hungry," he says. "So we put them in a
position where they could do something about that for someone else, and they
got inspired for the first time in their lives. You could see them
change."
Olympia
High School and GRuB will launch a collaborative project this summer allowing
students to earn school credit while spending half of each day at the farm in
their first year, then maintaining a job at the farm in their second year.
Several other schools are watching and may sign on.
"The
kids who go through the program are impressive," says Seppanen. "I
was on a raised-bed crew last year that was led by a young man who had started
in the program in 2008. His grades had improved to the point where he is in
college now."
Brad Edmondson is the former editor of American Demographics
magazine. He lives in Ithaca, N.Y.










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