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Greenhouse enables Alaskan school to go local year-round

Thorne Bay school’s indoor garden will now supply the district and local businesses with lettuce. Now she and the students of Thorne Bay School care for a greenhouse that supplies the school lunch program with regular greens for its salad bar; soon, they’ll supply the whole school district and nearby businesses with about 250 heads of lettuce a week.

November 10, 2014

2 Min Read
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JUNEAU, Alaska — Less than a year ago, Thorne Bay School science teacher Megan Fitzpatrick was “just a frustrated Southeast Alaskan trying to get food to grow.”

Now she and the students of Thorne Bay School care for a greenhouse that supplies the school lunch program with regular greens for its salad bar; soon, they’ll supply the whole school district and nearby businesses with about 250 heads of lettuce a week.

They’ve had lots of challenges, said Fitzpatrick, who is leading the program. They’ve had to focus on stabilizing the greenhouse’s pH and electrical conductivity. They’ve dealt with leaks. They’ve done electrical troubleshooting to keep the system running. During the winter, the greenhouse and the school are heated by a wood-fired boiler, which is stoked each hour.

The students do much of the work.

“They made a handwritten troubleshooting guide,” Fitzpatrick said. “They’ve actually designed the full way to solve problems, based on just constantly having to fix things. There are so many variables keeping a living plant going. They’re learning all of these variables and making sure it stays within the parameters to stay healthy.”

Eleventh-grader Ieshia Searle, who wants to be a paramedic firefighter, has been involved with the program since its beginning. She helped former Thorne Bay natural resources teacher Brian Adams (students learn about the greenhouse in a natural resources class) when he wrote a grant request for funding.

She was one of three students who ran the greenhouse this summer. Searle works there after school and on the weekends, and as someone experienced in growing food, found herself being like a teacher during the class.

“My family has always grown a lot of stuff,” she said. “We have gardens up north for food. … I was excited to take the class … I had never done (hydroponics) before.

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