It is right next to the room labeled STAFF.
Rayla: Hello! What do you do for gardening club?
Saylor: Uh, we garden.
Marisa: We garden, we plant things, we have fun with our friends and with all people in gardening club and...
Andrea: It's a good community.
Marisa: Yeah, it's a community thing you can do after school from 3:09 to 4:15. It's really fun.
Andrea: It's nice, it's peaceful, and you get to garden.
Rayla: Cool! What types of things do you plant?
Saylor: Uh....
Marisa: We haven't planted yet.
Saylor: Well, we did, and then our stuff got pulled out.
Marisa: No, shh, that's not the point. Don't put that in.
Saylor: Put, put that in.
Marisa: So, we haven't planted yet, but there's a variety of things we want to plant like flowers and fruits and vegetables.
Rayla: So are you guys watering the plants right now?
Saylor: Uh, yeah, my shoe got watered!
Marisa: That's a very minor thing that we do... watering plants... but you kind of keep having to do it again and again, like, same with pulling weeds 'cause weeds grow back.
Rayla: So you've done a lot of pulling weeds?
Marisa: Yeah, there's a lot of weeds around here.
Gabby: I'm doing it right now.
Rayla: Cool!
Andrea: What else?
*awkward silence*
Rayla: Uh... Do you have anything else to say?
Andrea: Do you have any specific questions?
Saylor: Yeah, I have something else to say...
Rayla: Why do you like gardening club?
Saylor: Um...
Andrea: It's really fun...
Marisa: Relaxing...
Saylor: Yeah, it's basically a relaxing time after school where you don't have to worry about homework even if you have loads of it.
Rayla: Mkay.
Marisa: And you get to garden and have fun with your friends and plant things... you can get kind of proud over your plants that you've planted.
Rayla: Cool!
Andrea: It's nice taking care of the plants.
Saylor: Mm-hmm.
Rayla: Um, what are you planning to plant?
Saylor: Um—
Andrea: We haven't decided yet.
Saylor: —probably fruits and vegetables.
Marisa: There's a lot.
Saylor: Stuff that's good to plant in winter.
Marisa: Yeah, we want to plant, uh, so here—
Saylor: Oh yeah, here's a chart.
Marisa: Here's a chart. So these are some things that we can plant.
Saylor: So we can plant, like, in, so it's February—
Marisa: No, stop, stop, stop. So, like, things you could, like, plant in different, like, months could be like beans, corn, cucumber, eggplant, melon, peppers, pumpkin, squash (summer), squash (winter), tomatoes, watermelon, beets, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, celery—
Rayla: So—
Marisa: —chard and kale.
Rayla: —so, like, fruits and vegetables—
Marisa: Mm-hmm.
Rayla: —but not flowers. Or do you plant flowers?
Marisa: Oh no, we do plant flowers. These are just some of the vegetables we can plant.
Rayla: Mm, but you also plant flowers?
Marisa: Yeah, we also plant flowers and, um, currently we have, um, we're in a stage where we're just, like—
Rayla: Getting the land ready?
Marisa: —yeah, we're getting all the soil ready to plant, pulling weeds, yeah, basically getting the land ready.
Rayla: Um, cool! Thank you for letting me interview you guys!
Milkweed flowers are very important nectar source for bees and other animals that eat nectar. Deer, rabbits, milkweed bugs, tussock moths, and Monarch butterfly caterpillars eat the leaves.
Rosemary is an evergreen shrub with a strong smell of pine and mint. It is hardy and can stand cool climates and droughts.
These succulents and other assorted plants weren't planted by the Gardening Club, but are still in the garden!