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Food gardens at Cape Town area schools grow food and teach farming skills

The SEED Organic Classroom Programme at 21 South African schools teaches sustainable farming techniques while feeding students.

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Matt Styslinger
SEED is working with students and teachers to establish permaculture food gardens in 21 schools in Cape Town, South Africa.

Southeast of central Cape Town, South Africa, is a large, flat swath of land known as the Cape Flats. The area is home to around 4 million people and unemployment is around . As many as 25 percent of students in the Cape Flats are undernourished.

South African non-profit organization (SEED) has established its in 21 Cape Flat schools. The project aims to improve food security in the Cape Flats by engaging students in environmental sustainability and teaching them how to practice permaculture 鈥 a holistic agriculture system that mimics relationships found in nature. SEED鈥檚 Organic Classroom Programme is a winner of the 2010 Sustainability Awards presented by 鈥 an independent awards program for social innovations in South Africa.

鈥淧ermaculture looks at ecological habitats and applies them to human habitats,鈥 . Ms. Kruger says that sustainable food gardening is a starting place for students to learn about larger environmental sustainability issues. 鈥淚t addresses an immediate need. And it also brings biodiversity back into these schools, which are quite barren,鈥 she says.

The Cape Flats environment can be harsh on crops. Soils are sandy and high winds are prevalent. But by planting windbreaks around the perimeter of food gardens, planting in formations that channel rainwater to crops, and adding organic compost, SEED is encouraging students to take on the challenge of growing their own food.

鈥淲e learn about perennial winds and climate, and we plant thick, indigenous windbreaks, which are needed for the Cape Flats,鈥. And SEED also teaches students how to use mulch and compost to transform the soil.

SEED says the project starts as a living laboratory that offers hands-on learning opportunities for underserved schools.

鈥淸The Organic Classroom Programme] first seeks to assist education by bringing practical education into the schools,鈥 says SEED's Theophilus Oldjohn. 鈥淪econdly, it seeks to support the nutrition and feeding scheme of the school.鈥 Food grown in school gardens is used in the preparation of school lunches. The gardens are also used as a community center to teach the community about growing and selling produce locally.

鈥淲e鈥檙e opening in communities now workshops that we鈥檙e running in the schools to train communities on how to generate a small income,鈥 Mr. Oldjohn says.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a broader context to the SEED program,鈥 Kruger says. 鈥淲e enrich curriculum and are developing greener environments in schools, and looking at good nutrition. But at the same time we鈥檙e also fleshing out and setting up a process for matric [accredited] diplomas in Applied Permaculture Training so that we can set up a career path.鈥

Beyond addressing immediate needs, the organization hopes its programs will create professional careers and long-term economic opportunities for young people in permaculture farming.

By supporting a tradition of environmental sustainability in the Cape Flats, Kruger believes the community will take on even larger challenges.

鈥淎s our program develops we can start introducing green technology, natural building, and all the other facets of permaculture,鈥 she says.

According to the organization鈥檚 director, the school garden project is already engaging the community in broader social and environmental efforts.

鈥淥ther benefits of the program are climate mitigation, biodiversity, and habitat renewal. [Also] community self-reliance, community building, and job creation,鈥 Seed Director Brown says.

SEED is also working with schools in the South African provinces of Limpopo, KwaZulu-Natal, and Gauteng, and hopes to create a nationwide network of school food gardens. The organization aims to cultivate leaders among the students and teachers where they establish food gardens. After three years in each school, SEED turns over the operation of the Organic Classroom Programme to the school and the community.

originally appeared on , a blog published by the .

Matt Styslinger is a research intern with the project.

鈥 To purchase your own copy of State of the World 2011: Innovations that Nourish the Planet, please click . And to watch the one minute book trailer, click .

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