The Signal

Straight to the table

Community Gardens of Santa Clarita to host event for SCV youth

- By Crystal Duan Signal Staff Writer

Volunteers with the Community Gardens of Santa Clarita plan to hold a farmto-table event for Santa Clarita Valley youth May 5, at their location inside Central Park.

The event is set to start at 10 a.m. and cover the importance of pollinator­s in gardens and the community. Event organizers plan to discuss honeybees, monarch butterflie­s, hummingbir­ds, bluebirds and barn owls, as well as the resources they provide.

Children will get a chance to see and use the products that come from honeybees, as well as view inside an

unused beehive. They will also learn more about the migration of monarch butterflie­s while viewing butterfly gardens, and observe a bluebird nesting box and the family of bluebirds living inside.

The next farm-to-table event will be on May 19 from 10 a.m. to noon, teaching children how to make lemonade, guacamole, salsa and barbecue.

The gardens enables residents who sign up as members to rent plots to grow their own pesticide- and preservati­ve-free vegetables.

In 2015, the Community Gardens of Santa Clarita Education Committee was formed, offering free organic gardening classes to valley youth and a low-cost organic gardening course to adults.

Each year over 100 youth sign up to participat­e in the classes, workshops and events. The organizati­on offers weekend workshops and private classes for youth, as well as events, said Gisa Seeholzer-Haggin, the gardens education committee chair.

The gardens currently has a waitlist with a 6- to 12-month wait for available plots. They currently offer 131 garden plots, five Universal Access raised beds, as well as two 4’x 4’ raised beds and a U-shaped raised garden bed for children. The waitlist has 10 people on it, but can get as high as 30 throughout the year, Seeholzer-Haggin said.

SCV residents can still get involved with the Community Gardens through volunteeri­ng, attending events and workshops, or by requesting a free garden tour.

“My family and I joined the gardens in 2014, and at the time my daughter Charlotte was 4 years old,” Seeholzer-Haggin said. “I felt it was a good opportunit­y for her to learn to garden and eat healthy. Today, my daughter is nearly nine years old and can be found leading new families and children throughout the gardens. I feel the gardens has evolved from a place to plant healthy organic produce to a community that works together to provide one another with the tools to succeed in a healthy lifestyle.”

The gardens is home to a large composting area, greenhouse, chicken coop, Monarch Way station, pollinator bee garden, herbal garden, native garden and orchard. It also has a bluebird nesting box and two barn owl nesting boxes inside the gardens.

The city of Santa Clarita, along with the Community Garden Council, launched the nonprofit in 2011. For more informatio­n, go to communityg­ardensofsa­ntaclarita. org.

Central Park is located at 27150 Bouquet Canyon Road.

 ?? Eddy Martinez/The Signal ?? Anne Duffy enjoys a beautiful sunny day at the Community Gardens in Central Park on Wednesday. Volunteers plan to hold a farm-to-table event for the Santa Clarita Valley youth on May 5 at their location inside Central Park.
Eddy Martinez/The Signal Anne Duffy enjoys a beautiful sunny day at the Community Gardens in Central Park on Wednesday. Volunteers plan to hold a farm-to-table event for the Santa Clarita Valley youth on May 5 at their location inside Central Park.
 ?? Eddy Martinez/The Signal ?? (Above) Anne Duffy reaches to grab something from a tree at the Community Gardens of Santa Clarita in Central Park on Wednesday. (Below) Duffy crouches to view some flowers. The Community Gardens are planning an event on May 5 for the Santa Clarita Valley youth, in which children can learn more about the migration of monarch butterflie­s and more.
Eddy Martinez/The Signal (Above) Anne Duffy reaches to grab something from a tree at the Community Gardens of Santa Clarita in Central Park on Wednesday. (Below) Duffy crouches to view some flowers. The Community Gardens are planning an event on May 5 for the Santa Clarita Valley youth, in which children can learn more about the migration of monarch butterflie­s and more.
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