Valeria Nunez 鈥22 helped bring the Flex Farm hydroponic growing system to Lawrence鈥檚 Andrew Commons
Valeria Nunez 鈥22 helped bring the Flex Farm hydroponic growing system to Lawrence鈥檚 Andrew Commons. The first planting is happening this week.听 听

It鈥檚 been the summer of sustainability on the 澳门六合彩开奖结果 campus, with students front and center in making change happen.

The goats that have taken up temporary residence in the S澳门六合彩开奖结果G garden are just one piece of a much bigger puzzle.

So is the ongoing bee advocacy work that has resulted in Lawrence being certified by the Bee Campus USA program, only the second Wisconsin campus to earn that designation.

Now comes the installation of Lawrence鈥檚 first Flex Farm, a hydroponic growing system set up last week by Fork Farms in Andrew Commons. The first planting in the indoor growing container 鈥 basil and leaf lettuce 鈥 is taking place this week.

The three projects are the very visible fruits of ongoing efforts to make Lawrence a more environmentally friendly campus, efforts that gained momentum when the Sustainable Lawrence initiative was launched two years ago, funded by a grant to transform the campus into a living laboratory of sustainability.听

Many of the efforts are student-driven, supported by a Student Sustainability Fund that allows students access to project-based grants, overseen by a Sustainability Steering Committee.

鈥淭he goal of Lawrence鈥檚 sustainability initiative is to make students, staff and faculty aware of places where they can make more sustainable decisions and then challenge them to then make those decisions in their everyday lives,鈥 said Project Specialist/Sustainability Coordinator Kelsey McCormick, co-chair of the sustainability committee. 鈥淚t鈥檚 encouraging to see students applying their knowledge and challenging Lawrence to rethink its own processes and decisions.鈥

Student holding a goat
Floreal Crubaugh 鈥20 sought and received funding to bring 10 goats into the S澳门六合彩开奖结果G garden this summer to help control troublesome weeds. The goats are here through Friday.

Among those students are Valeria Nunez 鈥22 and Marion Hermitanio 鈥21, who secured funding through a sustainability grant to bring the Flex Farm to campus.

Students will operate the year-round Flex Farm, with an assist from Bon Appetit, the company that manages the commons. It鈥檚 expected that 50 percent of the foods grown will be served to students and the other half will be donated to a local food pantry. The hydroponic system will produce about 25 pounds of greens in each 23-day cycle.

Nunez and Hermitanio, along with members of the Bon Appetit staff, are getting the initial training on the Flex Farm. When fall term arrives, Nunez and Hermitanio will organize a student volunteer听program, in conjunction with the school鈥檚 Committee on Community Service and Engagement (CCSE), to run the Flex Farm and coordinate the community outreach.

鈥淲e both believe that any changes you can make to be more eco friendly can make a huge difference,鈥 Nunez said of her partnership on the project with Hermitanio.

鈥淲e were talking a lot about hunger and how not everyone gets access to fresh, nutritious foods. We saw the Flex Farm as an opportunity to address the food crisis locally by providing these nutritious foods to people in the Appleton area who need it.鈥澨

鈥業t鈥檚 a learning curve鈥

Lawrence students have their fingerprints on all sorts of other sustainability projects this summer.

Floreal Crubaugh 鈥20 tapped into the Student Sustainability Fund and sought permission from the City of Appleton to bring in goats to help control an overgrowth of weeds in the S澳门六合彩开奖结果G garden.

Goats working weed control

鈥淚t鈥檚 a learning curve for all of us,鈥 Crubaugh said of using the goats to control the weeds on the east end of the garden. 鈥淚鈥檓 hoping it鈥檚 something we can repeat. Hopefully it won鈥檛 get to this point again where it鈥檚 so unmanageable. Hopefully, with a combination of just weed mitigation and having this mowed down by goats once in a while we can control it. My end goal is to turn it into a wildflower pollination garden and not just a weed bed.鈥澨

Elsewhere in S澳门六合彩开奖结果G this summer, Phoebe Eisenbeis 鈥21 is working on a volunteer program that brings area children into the garden to learn about sustainable agriculture. Amos Egleston 鈥20 is working with a contractor to fix the drip irrigation system, and Cas Burr 鈥20 is heading a project to replace the hoop house.

On the bee front, Allegra Taylor 鈥20 and Claire Zimmerman 鈥20 are working with biology professor Israel Del Toro on the Appleton Pollinator Project, part of the bee advocacy efforts that recently resulted in Lawrence earning a Bee Campus USA designation from the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation.

Lawrence鈥檚 bee advocacy work

And Jessica Robyns 鈥20 is taking the lead on a pollinator garden and grounds survey at Lawrence鈥檚 Bjorklunden property in Door County.

Students come to these projects with deep passions, McCormick said. The Student Sustainability Fund allows them opportunities to put those passions into action.

鈥淪tudent projects play an important role in helping Lawrence achieve its sustainability goals,鈥 McCormick said. 鈥淭hese projects are often based on the strong interests or research questions from students, and therefore result in deep exploration of a particular topic.鈥澨

Sustainability grants average about $2,500 per project, McCormick said. A faculty or staff advisor is assigned to each project to provide oversight, and all grant requests must go through the Sustainability Steering Committee.

鈥淎ll sustainability grant recipients are also required to complete a final reflection for their project, to inform the Lawrence community what they have learned from the project and what the lasting effects to campus will be,鈥 McCormick said.