Spring Plant Sale at the Woodstock Union HS/MS Greenhouse

The Spring Plant Sale at the Woodstock Union HS/MS Greenhouse is coming up! The sale will run from May 1st-31st and be open from 9am-2pm on school days. We will be open late for school staff (until 6 pm) on Monday, May 6th.

We made a few really exciting changes this year. Students start more than half of our plants by seed but we do have to source some more difficult-to-start plants (think petunias and geraniums) from a nursery. This year, all of those plants came from a nursery that is neonicotinoid free (read more about the effects of neonicotinoids on pollinators here)! Students collected and sowed MANY native plants this year. Some will be available this spring and some will be available to pre-order for fall planting. See our full list of plants here.

This year, we will also be selling No Mow May signs and Fedco seeds for varieties that you may want to direct-sow in your garden.

We will be holding a plastic plant pot collection drive again. We can only reuse 4-pack and 4” square pots in good condition. We will accept other sized pots and broken pots (if they are #2 or #5 plastic) that we will recycle through a special program but they must be clean and sorted from the 4-pack and 4” pots that we can reuse. As always, bring cardboard boxes if you have them for transporting your plants to your car.

Please contact me with any questions.

Happy Spring!

Abbie Castriotta (Greenhouse/Garden Manager)

Fantastic Fungi

By Ada Mahood

On Wednesday, April 17, some fun(gi) things were happening in the greenhouse. Woodstock Alumni David Andrews and his partner Erin Donahue from Tiny Acres Farm, visited the greenhouses to demonstrate how to plant mushrooms and to talk about their business. Students engaged in hands-on activities such as drilling the holes for the mushroom spawn, learning how to put the spawn in the holes and sealing them with beeswax.
For a little bit of a backstory, David went to WUHSMS and took Agricultural classes that were offered. One year he and Kat Robbins, who helps coordinate our CRAFT department, went to Cobb Hill farm where he learned the ins and outs of mushrooms. This hands-on experience sparked his interest in becoming a mushroom farmer. He moved out to Colorado after high school graduation, where he and his partner started experimenting and growing mushrooms for their own personal use. When they moved to Maine a few years later they made the decision to switch from personal growing to commercial farming of mushrooms. Their business has grown through local farmers markets, and restaurants. Right now they have over 2,000 logs in production. They inoculate (plant) around 1,000 a year. David's long term goal is to have 10,000 logs in production.

In those 2,000 logs they grow many varieties of mushrooms including, 13 varieties of Shitake, 4 varieties of Oyster mushrooms, Lions Mane, Chestnut, etc.

All of the CRAFT classes were involved in inoculating around 60 oak logs donated by Leo Maslan. The students drilled holes in the logs and filled them with Blue Oyster and Shitake mushrooms. Middle School students “planted” a Wine Cap mushroom bed in our permaculture garden. For the Shitake, it’ll take about 12-18 months for them to fully become mushrooms, but the Wine Caps take as little time as 1 month. Come by and see the fruits of our labor!

Woodstock-Madrid Exchange April, 2024

From April 10th through the 20th, seventeen Woodstock students participated in the second leg of a cultural exchange with students from Salesianos Paseo de Extremadura in Madrid, Spain.

As they say, a picture is worth a thousand words. Here is your visual journey. Click here to see more pictures. Spain was fun!

EARTH DAY

Earth Day 2024 was a perfect sunshiney day for students in grades 7-12 to connect with the earth and each other. For the last two hours of the day, students engaged in workshops that included: making reusable beeswax food wraps, crocheting a hanging plant hanger, doing bird painting with VINS, making art from fruits and veggies, making wildflower seed bombs, learning to grow and harvest microgreens, learning vegan cooking skills with Heather Wolfe, making their own eco-friendly cleaning products including a shoe deodorizer (hello spring athletes!), greening up campus, learning from Change the World Kids, and creating a new perennial pollinator hedgerow. Seventh graders hiked through the King Farm and a group of high school students helped five different classes at Woodstock Elementary School perform stewardship of their campus, Vail Field, and their outdoor classroom on Mount Peg. This was a tremendous effort where students and staff came together to create, pause, and practice stewardship. A huge thanks to everyone involved!

The Women of Lockerbie Vision Board Projects in English 4

Ms. Hagge’s English 4 students finished reading Deborah Brevoort’s The Women of Lockerbie just in time for Yoh’s upcoming performance of this play. Written in the form of a Greek tragedy, the play portrays how individuals and a community cope with the trauma inflicted by the terrorist bombing of Pan Am Flight 103, a tragedy that occurred in 1988. For this summative project, students created vision boards with images and words representing the mood, characters, setting, and prominent themes in the play. After creating their vision boards, students wrote about their processes and presented their ideas in class. Here is a sampling of their vision boards and some excerpts of their presentations. We look forward to attending Yoh’s performances of The Women of Lockerbie on May 3rd and 4th!

“My process started by identifying my theme, which is that people need to grieve together and people need to support each other. I then found images that I thought related to my theme, like the image of the women grieving and holding hands. I then found images based on the mood and the setting, such as the hills, river, and sunrise. Then I added props, such as the candles, suitcase, and laundry. I chose the two words, hate and grief, because they were what I felt the play was really about; how to deal with hate and grief.” Grace Modarai

“I think that the two big themes of the play The Women Of Lockerbie are grief and unfairness. . . Madeline and Bill were still grieving from their son's death seven years later. Madeline thought she did everything right yet still this happened to her. My vision board captures this in the photos of the picture perfect house and the picture perfect family with a line crossing it out. . . The vision board being dark and gloomy shows that I understood the deep sadness caused by grief and conflicting feelings around fairness. The situation is so unfair. I also tried to show how important it was to the people left behind to have their loved one to be remembered as an individual and not just a nI also think that it is important to be able to tie all of the different objects together and be able to show a little bit of the story through the vision board. I think that one of the most important elements on my board were the many bags of people's belongings. I think that this one was really impactful because it showed us how many people lost their lives. Each set of their belongings showed us a little bit more about who the person was, making them real and not just random people or numbers. These were real people with real lives and had people that loved them. They mattered. “ Gracie Laperle

“For gathering my photos I looked up words relating to settings and the theme I chose which is to not let hatred win. I think my vision board communicates my theme through the photos I chose being directed towards more of a happy direction. . . I think the photo of the people hugging is the most important to my design because it represents my theme the most in the way that people can love and get through things with the help of loved ones and friends.” -Keller Pauly

“My design shows the two ways grief is shown in the story, one being grief that is shown through deep emotion and the other being grief that is hidden or pushed aside. This is shown by including pictures of emotion and images representing what Bill had to do after his son died, like talk to reporters and return his presents. . . My vision also shows Madeline’s sorrow, anger, and her search for her son.” -Lindsey Bacon

“I created this vision board by using keywords from my notes and the class notes on theme, mood, characters, and setting, and meshed each element together into one vision board. For example, I added a male character crying. However, in order to portray the grief that Bill is feeling in the book, I incorporated the ticket and the clouded thought bubble to portray his mixed feelings on his discovery of the ticket as well as the situation as a whole. This also doubles as a prop item. The image on the far left is added because I wanted to portray the grief of losing a child, as it is generally a very different type of loss than others. My props, in addition to the ticket, are the candles and the suitcase. The river and suitcase are placed where they are because of when they wash the clothes of their son in the story, but the word ‘healing’ is also incorporated into that section because I think that the river represented the family’s healing process and acted as an aid towards it. I think that the most important aspect of my vision board is the fire and clothing images because it represents the conflict of the story, and with no conflict there is no story. If I were to design the set based on a scene, the scene would be when Madeline is stepping over the river and expressing her grief. The set would have a hilly background and a river running through the center of it, so conversation can happen on either side of it, between Bill, the women and Olive, and Madeline can be in the center of it.” -Hannah Watson

“First, I thought about where it was taking place. We know that it takes place in Scotland, and in the story they talk about the rolling hills there. After that I thought about the theme, and I wanted to show how Madeline was mourning the loss of her son. Then I thought about important parts of the story like the memorial and how in the play there should be candles as props. Another prop that I thought could be used is a suitcase that would have been her son’s.” –Catie Austin

WUHS Senior Visits Freshman Class

Senior Vera Windish presented to the ninth graders last week, sharing her experiences as a Jewish student here at WUHSMS. She highlighted the joys and challenges of being Jewish in the state of Vermont. Vera, who loves to bake and who plans to attend culinary school in the fall, also baked black and white cookies to share with the students. Ninth graders asked many questions of Vera, including, "can someone be ethnically Jewish but practice a different religion?" and "has your experience here at WUHS improved over the years, or do you still experience religious bigotry?" As part of their Modern World History and English I classes, ninth grade students have been engaged in an interdisciplinary unit about the Holocaust. Hearing from students like Vera helps students make important connections to the present. Thank you, Vera, for your visit!"

Library News

In this week's From the Library newsletter, relive the excitement of the Dance Theatre of Harlem's workshop, see a photo of Ms. Vonada's solar eclipse experience, learn about the Vermont Reads 2024 book and get a reminder about the next Faculty/Staff Book Club meeting on May 9 to discuss The Fury by Alex Michaelides.
Please remember to return your overdue books, renew the books you need more time to read and check out some new reads for spring!

Susannah Gravel
Sophomore Shadow Day

From Candy Making and the Building Trades to Paleontology, Engineering, and Sports Marketing--Our Students Will Experience It All During Sophomore Shadow Day

We’re excited about our upcoming Sophomore Shadow Day on Thursday, April 25th. Our students will be throughout the Upper Valley and beyond, spending the day with professionals in career fields of interest to them. More than 60 community partners have generously stepped forward to host our students on this day.

Maggie Knox and Corinne White got a jumpstart on this event when they shadowed equine veterinarian Dr. Heather Hoyns of Evergreen Equine of Vermont in West Windsor.

Susannah Gravel
Dance Theatre of Harlem Workshop

On Thursday, April 18, the Middle School and High School participated in the Dancing Through Barriers educational program with the Dance Theatre of Harlem. The Dancing Through Barriers program fosters teamwork and community building through dance and dance education. Participants danced their way through history from a movement exercise to understand the Middle Passage, small group work to connect to each individual’s heritage, the Great Migration and the Harlem Renaissance. Ms. Perkins commented that it was fun to be “moving as a community of many communities.” During the program, participants also learned about the founder of the Dance Theatre of Harlem, Arthur Mitchell, and the ballet company’s history.
One of the highlights of the High School program was the “Soul Train Line” where two dancers at a time dance down the center aisle formed by two parallel lines of people cheering the dancers on while waiting for their turn to dance, strut or bust a move!

A number of students provided testimonials at the end of the workshops, and they used words like “exciting,” “fun,” and “a great opportunity” to describe their experiences. And, in one very moving testimonial, Kiki Grillo-Chope stated, “I love dancing!” When asked what she thought about the workshop, Sadie Boulbol said, “It was enlightening to see how they put that story to choreography.” Clara Burkholder, who takes dance lessons, even performed her solo competition piece at the end of the workshop for the Dance Theatre of Harlem educators’ feedback and critique.

This programming was made possible thanks to a grant from Pentangle.