Tempe garden oasis grows bountiful harvest
The community interest in FIGG is among the many hopes fulfilled since neighbors decided to plant a community garden. When the group seeded the garden last spring, they hoped to build a sense of community, educate families and children about organic gardening and foods, and provide for those less fortunate. In less than a year, to the delight of the neighbors who tend the garden, they have far exceeded those goals, said Schneider, who harvests a FIGG plot to feed her family healthy organically grown veggies.
This week, the garden got its first visit from a group of third- and fifth-graders from Kyrene de los Niños Elementary School in Tempe. The children were there to learn about pre-planting, composting, vermiculture and starting seeds.
The little ones got an eyeful of towering eggplant, leafy carrot tops bursting out of the earth, snowflake-and-amethyst-hued kale blooms, rows of lettuce beds and bunches of rosemary, thyme and tarragon.
The kids got a big kick out of vermiculture, which they learned is a fancy term for compost created by earthworms. The worms are used to digest food waste, shredded paper and animal manures to build a rich soil for planting.

THE Sebuyau River, which branches off Batang Lupar, plays a vital dual role – contributing to the income of the villagers in the area and supplying a much sought after species of fish for the state.








@ holla at your girl in spring when everything is blossoming and you will surely reap a bountiful harvest ;)
Smuggling a marajauna plant to the tanning bed so it will grow nice and bountiful for harvest LOL
Hausa wood African mask, 'Bountiful Harvest'
We thank you for this bountiful harvest of Dominos, KFC, and Taco Bell lolll
RT @: Go sow the seeds today to have a bountiful harvest tomorrow!!!! Never leave the field!!!