妻友社区

Students, faculty pitch in to give 妻友社区 microfarm new life

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Students Brandon Seay and Lois Iddrisu joined volunteers to revitalize GGC's microfarm.

More than two dozen students and faculty members gathered on a green, grassy plot of land in the center of 妻友社区鈥檚 (GGC) campus Saturday, August 29 to bring life back to the school鈥檚 microfarm, which had gone neglected in the months since the COVID-19 pandemic forced the college to move to online instruction during the middle of the spring semester and to a hybrid format for fall semester. The volunteers rolled up their sleeves to pull weeds, clear debris, mow the tall grass and replant eight raised gardens that, if all goes well over the next few months, will overflow with fresh, healthy produce that will be donated to local families in need.

Nury Castro said the microfarm is a great volunteer opportunity for the campus community. As the assistant director of community engagement and service, Castro is the staff advisor of the Grizzlies Serve student program and said students enjoy giving back to the communities where they live and learn.

鈥淭he goal today is to clean up enough to start planting and growing again,鈥 said Castro. 鈥淭he microfarm has been a wonderful resource for our students. It gives them an opportunity to see first-hand all the things they discuss in the classroom like community service and being civically engaged, and shows them that even if you live in an urban or suburban area or a city you can live sustainably, grow your own food, give back and take care of the earth.鈥

The microfarm was the brainchild of professor of political science Paul Grant, who, along with a colleague proposed the concept to the college鈥檚 administration in 2012. Grant and a dedicated group of students have nurtured the garden which originally was established in 2013 on a 1,000 square-foot patch of ground just south of the 鈥淚鈥 building.

The project was immediately embraced by the GGC community. A steady stream of professors and students from every school volunteered to overturn and cultivate the hard earth inch-by-inch until they had a 40 X 100 foot in-ground garden teaming with tomatoes, peppers, squash, zucchini and cucumbers in the spring and broccoli, kale, spinach, and other collards in the fall. Participants improved and expanded the garden each consecutive year until, in 2019, it was moved to its current larger, more centralized space just in time for the coronavirus pandemic to shut everything down.

Grant said the potential of the microfarm is now greater than ever, with 16,000 square feet to work with, so putting that land back to good use is a great way to start the new semester.

鈥淭his is a new beginning today,鈥 he said. 鈥淪tudents will find this a wonderful opportunity to volunteer and do community service, right here on the campus, that鈥檚 really meaningful. During this time a lot of people have lost jobs and the number of people using food banks has really increased. Any food we can contribute will help now more than ever.鈥

The microfarm has proven to be the ultimate win-win for GGC and its surrounding community.
Over the years, it has yielded thousands of servings of fresh produce, which are harvested and donated to the Lawrenceville Cooperative Ministry. The rewards are perhaps even greater on the other side of the supply chain, where professors use the garden to teach everything from soil science and pollination to team-building and civic engagement, and students find a certain purpose and peace in the work.

鈥淚 just like putting seeds in soil and hoping something grows,鈥 said Lois Iddrisu, a junior studying biochemistry who got involved in the microfarm her freshman year. 鈥淚t relieves stress. School is tough, work is tough, but the ground . . . it鈥檚 just dirt, but it鈥檚 addictive.鈥

Brandon Seay, a senior majoring in environmental science, has been involved with the farm since the original groundbreaking in 2013.

鈥淥n one side, you do all the work here and you know why you鈥檙e doing it, but on the other side when you take the food to the food bank and see it going out to community members, giving them the choice to have fresh food rather than relying on canned and box goods, it鈥檚 just a great feeling,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a fresh nutrient source, no chemicals, from people who had their heart in what they were doing.鈥

Plans for the new microfarm include expansions well beyond the eight raised gardens the volunteers cleaned and replanted during the event. An open-air greenhouse will be assembled in the near future, and 20 apple trees have been purchased that will be planted by students in January 鈥 the first step to a larger fruit orchard. Seay said they eventually hope to plant wildflowers around the perimeter to attract pollinators, and he hopes to see the garden used as a meeting and reflection space, complete with a pavilion.

鈥淕rowing food is kind of a spiritual thing,鈥 said Grant. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an absolute miracle to watch a small seed grow into a large plant that then produces this beautiful, healthy food.鈥

As the semester carries on, organizers hope the word spreads and more students get involved. Seay noted that, in the past, they鈥檝e had 100 or more volunteers show up on a given day.

鈥淚 want people to know that we鈥檙e trying our hardest to make this something that the town of Lawrenceville and the community can hold dear,鈥 said Iddrisu. 鈥淲e want everyone to get involved. Whatever they can do to help, will help. Even if it鈥檚 just weeding with us on a Saturday, the reward is great.鈥

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