Tooele County 4-H Youth Garden: An Interactive Approach

Authors

  • Stephen Sagers Utah State University Extension
  • Linden Greenhalgh Utah State University Extension
  • Darlene Christensen Utah State University Extension
  • Terra Sherwood Tooele City Youth Services

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5195/jyd.2011.167

Abstract

The Tooele City 4-H Youth Garden program was designed to provide a non-traditional recreational activity for a growing youth population. Children ages 5-18, assisted by parents and other family members, tend an 8’x 15’ garden plot. A small registration fee covers 4-H enrollment. Tooele City provides land, water, employees, maintenance and equipment. Participants provide their own seed and labor, must attend an orientation in the spring, commit to work at least once each week in the garden, and attend periodic club meetings during the growing season. Club meetings cover basic gardening principles and specific issues related to individual garden plots. Approximately 800 youth have been involved since it was first organized in 2002. Many members have “graduated” or gone on to having their own gardens. The youth garden project has been a success due to a combination of dedicated leadership, hands-on learning and tangible, edible results.

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Published

2011-12-01

Issue

Section

Program & Practice Articles