The Buff Bay Primary School in Portland is using farming technologies to generate the interest of students in agriculture and to boost food production for their canteen and for the market.
Vice Principal at the institution, Keisha Braimbridge, told JIS News that last year they won a school garden prize at a 4-H Clubs event in the parish, and from that they upgraded their semi-greenhouse with the installation of tanks and irrigation drippers, to automate the operation.
“We are promoting sustainable agriculture, using hydroponic and aeroponic methods, and those are the technologies that we are teaching,” she said.
Ms. Braimbridge pointed out that the aim is for the students to take the technology into their homes and communities and promote sustainable framing.
The Vice Principal noted that the school is very competitive in 4-H Clubs competitions, and over the years they have won a number of medals.
She said they teach the students, from early in their schooling, the love of agriculture, with many of them making careers in farming.
“It is important for them to know that agriculture is not the old man riding a donkey and the various sustainable ways that they can do agriculture within their own environs,” Ms. Braimbridge said.
“The things that we grow, we use them in the canteen, and when we have a surplus, parents support the 4-H Clubs by buying the produce,” she said.
Meanwhile, Principal of the school, Jacqueline Edwards, said an objective of the enterprise is to use it to train students from other schools.
“They would come in, look at what we are doing, and model whatever we are doing at their schools,” she said.