The Peterborough Examiner

Growing plants and growing community thanks to young people

Ecology Park’s Native Plant and Tree Nursery is ready for another season of spreading green

- VERN BASTABLE VERN BASTABLE IS GREENUP’S DIRECTOR OF ECOLOGY PARK AND LANDSCAPE PROGRAMS. LEARN MORE AT GREENUP.ON.CA.

Looking outside my window, the late winter browns have started changing to early spring greens. To me the waking of spring signals the opening of GreenUP Ecology Park’s Native Plant and Tree Nursery. Our team looks forward to welcoming people of all ages across the region as they venture out to the annual spring opening event. The native plants we sell may appear to the eyes of the public to pop out of nowhere.

As director of Ecology Park, this season is special. To me, the emergence of bloodroot, sensitive fern, and wild ginger coincides with the return of young people to Ecology Park, who share in their love and labour of growing the park.

Here at Ecology Park, young people come in many different varieties, just like the plants that we see blossoming.

Many elementary and high school students will visit the park this spring to take part in education programs. These learners will experience the thrill of a field trip out into a beautiful local green space.

Simultaneo­usly, they will have the opportunit­y to learn from our educators about topics ranging from pollinator­s to food systems. Learning programs in Ecology Park are a pathway for many of these individual­s to embrace natural and sustainabl­e studies wherever they end up.

Ecology Park welcomes older youth back into nature once that seed is planted during their younger years. Students from the Trent University School of Education complete a placement as part of the Learning Garden Program. Teacher candidates have the chance to arrive in our outdoor classroom and get their hands dirty while learning about native plants and outdoor education, among many other exciting topics. Many students from this program go on to become the next generation of teachers.

In fact, Parys Carr is a Trent student returning to Ecology Park for her third season as both a staff and a teacher candidate. She describes it as a beneficial opportunit­y for students to have a visual of what they are learning about in the classroom.

While participat­ing in the Learning Garden Program this year, Carr said, “The best learning I’ve done is out in nature, and bringing kids outside will allow them to do their best learning, too. As a teacher, you and your students both grow as individual­s when you learn outside.”

Michelle Michaud, another teacher candidate, said that “through the Learning Garden, we’ve been learning about how to incorporat­e nature into education, which is really crucial for students especially with the way that the world is going nowadays.”

Ecology Park brings on a handful of young people as staff each year. Many students from Trent & Fleming apply to work at Ecology Park to gain essential employment skills. Each student-staff member at Ecology Park has brought something valuable to Ecology Park.

This year, GreenUP has 3 fulltime student landscapin­g staff that you may see at the park during the annual native plant sale and working all summer in the Native Plant and Tree Nursery.

Our three 2023 summer staff, Symon Edmead, Eve Lockhart, and Abigayle Stoddart are looking forward to working at Ecology Park for many reasons.

Edmead, a Paramedic student at Trent, is gaining valuable knowledge about science and ecology. Edmead said he would, “come to Ecology Park to help out in their own time regardless of work.”

Lockhart describes how she is excited about the good experience she will gain in plant identifica­tion, which will supplement her Trent Environmen­tal Studies program and add practical knowledge to her resume. Stoddart is delighted to have a position that gives her the opportunit­y to learn more about and identify Ontario native plant species in Ontario and work with like-minded individual­s.

Finally, spring brings the Ecology Park team together with some

great students from Thomas A Stewart Secondary School (TASS). For decades, TASS students have had the chance to learn about horticultu­re from educator Michelle Chambers.

These young people have long assisted Ecology Park by planting and caring for all our spring veggies at the TASS greenhouse, located right in their high school.

Each season, I look forward to the smell of fresh basil plants, making me, and surely the students, crave pizza! I am lucky to be a part of it all as the director of Ecology Park.

I get the opportunit­y to learn so much from these young folks. I get to see how education has changed since my days and how much more environmen­tal education youth receive today. I also look forward to learning about all the new fads and music, as well as how students today see their future in an everchangi­ng environmen­t.

The youthful spirit that students bring is something I believe represents the essence of spring. Their efforts ensure that Ecology Park has many beautiful plants and their energy provides those around them, like me, with a sense of rejuvenati­on.

Ecology Park’s Native Plant & Tree Nursery’s Annual Spring Opening Event is May 20 from 10 a.m. — 4 p.m., after which it will be open for plant sales and self-serve compost sales Thursdays from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. and Friday-Sunday from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. The nursery is located at 1899 Ashburnham Dr. in Peterborou­gh. Parking is in the south end of the Beavermead lot off Marsdale Drive.

 ?? LILI PARADI ?? Teacher candidates from Trent University’s Learning Garden program experience workshops and garden-based activities at Ecology Park to develop a connection to a learning garden, with direction from Vern Bastable, director of Ecology Park.
LILI PARADI Teacher candidates from Trent University’s Learning Garden program experience workshops and garden-based activities at Ecology Park to develop a connection to a learning garden, with direction from Vern Bastable, director of Ecology Park.
 ?? ?? Jessica Todd, communicat­ions associate at GreenUP, a recent graduate of Trent University’s Environmen­tal and Resource Science Program, has spent more than two years working with, volunteeri­ng for, and engaging with Ecology Park programmin­g.
Jessica Todd, communicat­ions associate at GreenUP, a recent graduate of Trent University’s Environmen­tal and Resource Science Program, has spent more than two years working with, volunteeri­ng for, and engaging with Ecology Park programmin­g.
 ?? GENEVIEVE RAMAGE ?? Young campers aged 11-13 from the 2021 Earth Adventures Camp at Ecology Park prepare to work on leadership exercises.
GENEVIEVE RAMAGE Young campers aged 11-13 from the 2021 Earth Adventures Camp at Ecology Park prepare to work on leadership exercises.
 ?? LILI PARADI ??
LILI PARADI

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