San Carlos Community Garden youth ambassadors
James Hyde, an agronomist (soil scientist), shares lesson on the benefits and necessity of healthy soil and the vital role compost plays in the garden. (Photo by Kelly Wood)

Overview: San Carlos Community Garden young ambassadors

Every Saturday for nine weeks, we were greeted by a different teacher who taught us about so many philosophies and facets of gardening

As we feel the change in the air signaling the shift from summer to fall, we sow new seeds and look forward to the upcoming season and all the wonderful events it will bring. 

At the same time, we’re also looking back on a bountiful summer harvest of produce, events, and community memories.

At least, I know I definitely am. 

After an amazing summer of working at the San Carlos Community Garden as an ambassador for nine weeks with five fellow ambassadors, I find myself looking back on my transformative experience at the garden, while also looking forward to where I’ll cultivate my next prospects.

Like most of my fellow ambassadors, I joined the program after learning about it through Ms. Dicken’s AP Environmental Science class at Patrick Henry High School

Learning about soil degradation, trophic cascades, ozone holes, and pollution beyond repair, it was easy to feel like everything was horribly doomed. It led many of us to ask: How could we possibly be capable of making any real change?

San carlos Community Garden youth ambassadors
Ambassadors are observing the temperature and health of SCCGs compost production. (Photo by Kelly Wood)

Yet Ms. Dickens was able to encourage us towards practical solutions and how to make a difference. 

One day, something she said stuck with me. 

She described how whenever she felt hopeless, she went and did something. A cleanup, a community event, anything to accomplish something, however seemingly small, because small actions add up to make a massive difference.

So when I saw the opportunity to make my difference at the San Carlos Community Garden, I seized it, along with five other wonderful peers. And I learned so much in the process.

Every Saturday for nine weeks, we were greeted by a different teacher who taught us about so many philosophies and facets of gardening, down to how to treat the soil under our feet, up to the trees that extended above.

We participated in an interactive learning environment, putting our knowledge to practical work. 

One week, we were installing a beehive. The next we were making native seed packets, then practicing how to take a moment and capture the world around us through sketching plants.

The combination of learning and working enabled us to understand how to effect positive change based on each week’s exciting topic.

But installing beehives or learning how to make the best compost wasn’t all we learned or did. 

In the midst of all of our community events, sometime between when I was harvesting tomatoes with my fellow ambassadors laughing and making jokes the whole time, or breaking some of the most delicious bread and jam I’ve ever tasted with community members during SCCG’s monthly held Produce Swap, or listening to the thrumming guitar chords during the Summer Concert Series seeming to reverberate in every leaf and root and off nearby Cowles mountain itself – I thought back to this plant principle I’d learned on one of our Saturday sessions. 

A plant can only grow as tall as its roots, extending down into the earth. I realized that this principle doesn’t just apply to plants, but applies to us as well.

It’s the roots we plant, the community we ground ourselves in and give back to, that extends us further, creating and contributing meaningful change.

To solve the problems I’d heard about in Ms. Dicken’s class and wanted to do just about anything to try to fix, I realized that doing something, as she mentioned, was just the first step she had given us. 

Through this process of doing and my experience at SCCG, I realized that in order to create meaningful change, it starts with the community that you nurture, which empowers you to act together. 

It’s the people you connect with, the like-minded souls you meet at meditations, trade produce with, or find reading a book in the garden, that come together with a promise of solving any one of the thousands of environmental problems we confront today. 

And that starts here, at our San Carlos Community Garden, where we choose to put down our roots. 

So let’s have an amazing season ahead – growing the roots of our community deep in every event we attend, conversation we have, and seed we plant.

Plenty to do and see as fall comes around
Don’t miss out on SCCG’s upcoming fall garden workshops and monthly events:

  • Let’s Get Dirty: Compost & Soil Building, Saturday, Sept. 20 
  • DIY: Pumpkin Succulent Arrangement, Saturday, Oct. 18 
  • Create Your Own Living Art: Bonsai Tree with Lucky Jade Plants, Saturday, Nov. 15.

Learn more and register at sancarloscommunitygarden.com or email them at info@sancarloscommunitygarden.com

Editor’s note: Amelia Kirkegaard has served as SCCG summer youth ambassador. She is a 2025 graduate of Patrick Henry High School.