Back to bush for school

Pictured is La Trobe MP Jason Wood, centre, with students and staff at the Gembrook Primary School.

GEMBROOK Primary School staff and students last Tuesday 27 October joined the Port Phillip and Westernport Catchment Management Authority to launch a bush foods trial on the school grounds.
The school has developed a Community Partnership Program (CPP) made up of local and regional organisations.
The aim of the CPP is to support student learning programs with opportunities to access expertise and resources beyond the mainstream school environment.
As part of the first phase of the CPP, the PPWCMA joined with the Yarra Ranges Landcare Network and the Cardinia Hills Ragwort and Landcare Group to launch a bush foods demonstration and trial site at the school.
Students planted a range of bush foods on the school grounds under the guidance of staff from the PPWCMA and volunteers from the local Landcare groups.
The students planted species including muntries, native raspberry, elderberry, strawberry gum and river mint.
When the plants mature, the school will be able to harvest the produce to sell at its monthly produce market.
This initiative has been supported by the Federal Government’s National Landcare Programme.
Federal Member for La Trobe Jason Wood MP joined the launch and praised the program.
“It is great to see the students getting involved in such a hands-on project,” he said.
“Not only do they have the opportunity to learn about native bush foods and their uses, but they also are taught how to care for different species of plants.
“I look forward to seeing the trial site grow and to see the fruits of their labour.”
The PPWCMA’s Regional Landcare facilitator Karen Thomas said the new bush foods trial would expand on the great work that Gembrook Primary School already did as a five-star sustainability school.
For more information on the National Landcare Programme, visit www.nrm.gov.au.