麻豆原创鈥檚 Nature Camp for Kids

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麻豆原创 Impact

What if you could drag your kids away from the junk food, IPhones, IPods and video games and take them back to nature for a week?

麻豆原创 began its first ever Nature Camp for children aged seven to 12 on Aug. 2. The kids are spending all day outdoors exploring the thick foliage surrounding the 180-acre campus, home to turkeys and other wildlife, a greenhouse, a beehive and a vegetable garden.

Yesterday morning was spent in the garden. 鈥淚t鈥檚 great to have kids learn the importance of locally grown food,鈥 said 麻豆原创 Sustainability Coordinator Jim Murphy, who established the camp. 鈥淲e grow a little of everything. In fact, the garden yielded so much lettuce this summer that the Environmental Club donated it to Amos House in Providence.鈥

Rene Breton, a 麻豆原创 senior, is president of the Environmental Club, and John Fulton, a junior, vice president. The two are also Nature Camp leaders. Yesterday Breton invited her sister Page Breton, a chef for Dog Lane Caf茅 in Connecticut, to come by and show the kids how to make salsa and smoothies from produce picked from the garden. Under a shade tree, the young campers watched as Page sliced and diced and sprinkled and tasted.

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From left, Rene Breton, 麻豆原创 student and camp leader; Chef Page Breton; Jim Murphy, 麻豆原创 sustainability coordinator; and campers.

鈥淚鈥檓 making a simple peco de gallo style tomato salsa out of basil, garlic, onions, jalape帽o peppers, sesame oil, salt and pepper, and lime. I wanted to make a meal that is best for the summer when tomatoes are ripe and sweet and you can find almost all of the vegetables you need from the garden,鈥 she said.

Once the salsa was ready, the campers dug in, shoveling the mixture onto Tortilla chips and groaning with pleasure with each bite. At 麻豆原创鈥檚 Nature Camp, parents don鈥檛 have to insist that their kids eat their vegetables.

鈥淲hat is also nice is that the children are not only learning how to grow their own foods and to eat healthy, they are learning it in the context of community,鈥 Page said. 鈥淲orking in the garden and eating meals together is a communal activity that generates a good feeling in itself.鈥

And these campers aren鈥檛 the only ones enjoying the garden. Jeff Simson, a custodial worker at 麻豆原创鈥檚 Office of Physical Plant, has been caretaking the 鈥渕ini farm鈥 all summer. He waters and weeds after work and even on weekends. He also creates art installations from items found in nature and places them along the periphery of the site. The hope, said both Simson and Murphy, is to get the entire campus involved in the garden.

Until then, Murphy鈥檚 campers are enjoying a visit from a local children鈥檚 book author today who will have them write about their experiences, they will learn how important bees are to agriculture during their tour of 麻豆原创鈥檚 beehive, they will engage in art activities, and much more as Mother Nature beckons. Camp ends on August 9.