Friday, 5 April 2019

Time to sow


27th March 2019 was a cool spring day, but a good day for sowing seeds. Twenty two children from a Reception class at a Sydenham primary school came with their teacher and their teaching assistant to Friends of Mayow Park and help us sow wild flower seeds in the mini meadow. The aim is to transform this semi-circular space into a colourful, pollinator-attracting wild flower display this summer and future years.
Scraping away the grass 
Wildflower seeds don’t like competition from grass so the children scratched the soil and pushed grasses aside which also helped to rake the soil to a crumbly texture.
The seed packs were opened so the children could see differing colours and shapes.  Colours ranged from light brown to dark brown, to black and grey. Some seeds were very small while others were larger and easier to pick out. They varied in shape too, some being round, others more oval.
Looking at seed shapes, size and colour 

Mixing the seeds with sand meant it was easier to see where they would be scattered. In pairs, the children took small handfuls of the sand/ seed mix and scattered their seeds in their chosen sowing spot.
Sowing seeds mixed with sand
 Watering the seeds was the final step.
Watering the seeds
This activity ended and the children returned to school. Well done all of you.
 It is so important for children to learn about the right conditions for plants to grow and practical activities such as this, in outdoor spaces, help them to understand in context.  The Friends of Mayow Park hope the children will visit through the spring and summer to see if their sowing efforts have been successful.
Over the coming weeks the seeds will be watered every evening by a volunteer unless there is rain.  With the right conditions, not too much rain, not too much drying heat from the sun, we should see the first shoots emerge by mid-April. 

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