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February 12, 2001
Contact: Jennifer McNulty (831) 459-2495; jmcnulty@cats.ucsc.edu
UC SANTA CRUZ FARM SEEKS DOCENTS TO LEAD PUBLIC TOURS
Training begins March 1
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SANTA CRUZ, CA--For Jim Rollins, it's all about the bees.
Rollins is a volunteer docent at the UC Santa Cruz Farm, and he gets a kick out of
guiding tour groups around the campus's 25-acre organic farm and garden. Reflecting
on what he gets out of being a docent, Rollins recalled the day a group of inner-city
teenagers from Los Angeles visited the Farm.
"I guess they'd never seen plants before, and they were frightened to death
of bees," said Rollins. "Well, one of the things I do on most of my tours
is stop by the beehive and let a bee land on my finger. These kids just couldn't
believe that, so I explained that bees aren't out to sting people--they just want
to get their honey. I told them that if you're not aggressive with bees, they won't
be aggressive with you. It's a metaphor for life, too."
Rollins remembered with satisfaction that by the end of that tour, one of the boys
who had been most afraid of the bees was repeatedly singling out the insects and
encouraging them to land on his finger. "It's fun to teach, and you learn from
teaching, too," said Rollins, a "mostly retired" Emmy award-winning
tape editor who lives in downtown Santa Cruz and visits the Farm almost daily.
Docents are the generous folks who lead the free tours of the UC Santa Cruz Farm
& Garden for the public and schoolchildren. Aspiring docents are invited to attend
an information session and Farm tour on Thursday, March 1, from 1 to 5 p.m. at the
Louise Cain Gatehouse near the entrance to the Farm. Classes will take place Thursday
afternoons March 8-April 19 from 1 to 6 p.m. at the Farm.
During the eight-week course, participants learn about organic gardening, sustainable
agriculture, horticultural techniques, composting, education, environmental interpretation,
and much more. Upon completion of the training, docents are asked to give two tours
and attend one educational meeting per month for a total monthly commitment of about
six hours. The training and all materials cost $35. For more information and an application,
call John Fisher (831) 459-3248 or e-mail johnfish@cats.ucsc.edu.
Kerry Hosley was drawn to the docent class one year ago out of a desire to learn
about organic farming and gardening. The intensive training left her wanting more,
and she enjoys the monthly potluck classes for continuing docents.
"For someone like me who is a perennial student, I will never feel done,"
said Hosley, adding: "Being a docent is a regular opportunity to enjoy one of
the most beautiful pieces of property on the Central Coast. The view is incredible,
and the land is so beautiful. I'm getting as much or more out of being a volunteer
as I'm giving."
As a lifelong gardener who now lives beneath the redwoods in Boulder Creek, Rita
Miles gets her gardening "fix" as a volunteer, sharing her knowledge with
groups as diverse as college students from Japan and senior citizens enrolled in
a Central Valley community college class. "I try to schedule tours with a variety
of people," said Miles. "I had a group from the Middle East a couple of
years ago, and there was a group from Taiwan on an agricultural tour of the Central
Coast. A lot of people come through here. It's not just locals."
Visitors are universally impressed by the power of compost, however. "People
are always astonished that compost is the only soil amendment that's used at the
Farm," said Hosley. And of course, astonishment provides a perfect "teaching
moment," in which docents can explain the process of recycling food waste into
compost that nourishes the soil.
"I love teaching kids that most of life is in the dirt itself," said Rollins.
"It's full of bugs and worms and nutrients, and it even smells good."
Docents are welcome to participate in as many aspects of the Farm as they're interested
in, noted John Fisher, outreach coordinator for the Center for Agroecology and Sustainable
Food Systems (CASFS), which runs the Farm, the 4-acre Alan Chadwick Garden, and sponsors
the docent training. Opportunities abound to learn about the politics of food production
and distribution, the aesthetics of gardening, the value of growing organic food,
and there's always a need for another strong back if volunteers want to pitch in
with physical labor, too, he said.
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