Thursday, 31 May 2012

Agriculture show to be bigger and better


The 2012 Crest Agriculture Show is set to be the biggest ever when the event is staged at Churchill Park in Lautoka from August 6 to 11.

With the theme 'Grow Me Fiji', the one-week show will display various ministries, departments and the role they play as well as business houses, financial institutions and stakeholders of the agriculture sector.

Crest Agriculture Show chairman and the Department of Agriculture permanent secretary Mason Smith said the Ministry of Primary Industries was all geared up for a hectic one-week with different activities planned for everyone.

"Special days are set aside for different activities and members of the public are urged to come out in numbers," Mr Smith said.

"The financial sector headed by the Reserve Bank of Fiji will provide information on micro financing that will assist farmers grow their business;  the health sector on NCDs; oratory contests by school children; tourism sector on the promotion of growing local produce and many more."

Crest Company has been awarded the naming rights for the show with a sponsorship of $40,000.

Lautoka City Council also signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Department of Agriculture for hosting this year's event. This agreement has prompted the council to give $25,000 in kind for the usage of its facilities.

The event will end with an awards night for the Prime Minister's Crest Agriculture Farmer of the Year Award. Other awards will include Young Farmer of the Year, Woman in Agriculture Award and FSC Sugar Cane Farmer of the Year Award.
Original Article Here
Students mentor students in agriculture
Kynoch classes tour ag complex at Marysville High School
With dirt on their hands or fingers moist from baby goat nibbles, 100 Kynoch Elementary School second-graders toured Marysville High School's new agriculture complex in the last two weeks for a hands-on lesson in plant and animal science.
The children scuttled from station to station, enthusiastically peppering the high school tour guides with questions and comments. The agriculture tour concluded the day-long field trip, which began with a historical tour of downtown Marysville and ended with planting seedlings, plant propagation and meeting goats, pigs and a miniature horse.
"We never get to do anything like this," said Hunter Valencia, 8. "You get to have a plant and take it home. You get to grow your plants and help the community."
The new $1 million complex, which was funded by a voter-approved bond measure, opened last year and includes a barn, greenhouses and corral with bleachers. Agricultural science teacher Bonnie Magill said she's eager to host more field trips and community activities.
"This was the whole point, to make the facility open to the community," she said.
Teacher Laura Anderson was thrilled to have such an educational outing for nearly no cost and something that complements social studies and life sciences children learn in school. At Kynoch, the students have their own greenhouse at school, and some classes have been raising baby chicks this spring.
"They were so excited to see a real garden," she said. "When we get out to water or weed or deadhead, they feel it's the coolest thing."
Anderson also thinks the field trip has deeper influence, although students may be a little young to recognize it.
"This is an agricultural area — they need to know this stuff," she said.
At one station, the second-graders scooped big handfuls of soil into little plastic pots, taking delicate care to nestle in pepper, marigold and sunflower seeds. Nearby, other students plucked trailing vines off mature plants and plopped them into soil.
"We are picking these off the plants and sticking them in the holes to start new plants," explained Jaxon
Finley, 8, as he tucked stems into soil. "It's fun because our teacher has a lot of plants, and we work in our garden at school."
Nearby, other students traversed through a Mediterranean garden as guides explained the plants were drought-tolerant, so they did not get thirsty as often as other plants. And when students explored the cherry, almond, peach and apricot trees, Amber Wagnon, 8, told one of her classmates the green fruit they saw was not yet prime for picking.
"They are supposed to be orange when they are ripe," she said.
A major highlight came when students watched Eli, the miniature horse, get shaved of his long winter coat. As MHS junior Amber Elliot, 16, asked, "You guys want to pet him now?" hands shot into the air and students crowded at the gate for a chance to rub his soft, velvety sides.
"I think it was cool because we got to see the horses being shaved and see how they feel," said Christina Hatfield, 8. "I would describe it as soft. It kind of felt weird."
Students soon moved into the ag barn with shouts of "Hey piggy, piggy. Oink, oink." A few bleated greetings at the goats before reaching in for a feel, giggling as the baby animals nibbled on their fingers.
"Because they wanted to drink off the bottles," said Kayla Hodges, 8. "They think it was the mother."
Tour guide Marisa Marquard, 16, said the field trip combined two of her favorite activities — spending time in the arboretum and being with kids.
"They got to learn a lot about what they are going to be doing in the future when they get to high school," she said.
Marquard and her classmates said they enjoyed seeing younger students get so excited about the plants and animals.
"I think it's great to open their eyes to what options they have if they want to go into ag," said junior Brooke Fletcher, 17. "Kids are awesome."
CONTACT Ashley Gebb at agebb@appealdemocrat.com or 749-4783. Find her on Facebook at /ADagebb or on Twitter at @ADagebb.
Original Article Here

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