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  • Teacher 'thank you' box of veg

    My daughter is 6 and in her second year at school, as we're in Leicestershire our kids break-up for summer today, and its become traditional for the children to take the teachers a thank you gift. Usually they are inundated with flowers, chocolates and toiletries (when I grew-up in Birmingham we used to pelt the teachers cars with flour and eggs last day, but times change!).

    So to be different, we make-up her teachers (plural - as its a job-share) a box of veg, she picked the veg last night: First early spuds, carrots, peas, mange tout, onions, beetroot, salad leaves, rhubarb, broad beans and is taking them in today.

    We did it last year and it really goes down well!!
    'People don't learn and grow from doing everything right the first time... we only grow by making mistakes and learning from them. It's those who don't acknowledge their mistakes who are bound to repeat them and do no learn and grow. None of us are done making mistakes or overflowing with righteous wisdom. Humility is the key.'
    - Thomas Howard

  • #2
    The price of being a skool kid has gone up it used to be a Apple jacob marley
    What lies behind us,And what lies before us,Are tiny matters compared to what lies Within us ...
    Ralph Waide Emmerson

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    • #3
      what a good idea wish i'd thought of that when DD was at primary school, thank goodness we dont do it at high school
      The love of gardening is a seed once sown never dies ...

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      • #4
        Brilliant Idea nice to think of something a bit different
        Gardening ..... begins with daybreak
        and ends with backache

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        • #5
          The biggest gift to a teacher ~ is to take your kids away for six weeks!
          All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.

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          • #6
            What a brilliant idea! I was just going to send in some potted herbs but I could expand a bit, thank you!
            TGR

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            • #7
              Who wouldn't be chuffed to bits with that? Well done!
              Whoever plants a garden believes in the future.

              www.vegheaven.blogspot.com Updated March 9th - Spring

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              • #8
                Though I have to agree with 2 sheds, the box of veg would be the icing on teh cake. What a fantastic idea!!

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                • #9
                  Fantastic idea - I've done herb planters before and in the last couple of years I've bought Oxfam gifts (ie: educate a girl, provide school books...) as a joint gift for the teachers/TAs. At Christmas the girls make their own bath bombes and wrap them in an imaginative way or we bake a chocolate cake and they decorate the box it goes in. Bit more thought goes into them than just another box of chocolate!

                  Veg box next year methinks!

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                  • #10
                    I think that is a lovely idea. When my children were at school we used to take in home-made cakes and biscuits for the teachers. I am a teacher and one family brought me in lamb chops when they had slaughtered a lamb and a pot of home-made mint jelly. A lovely present! A box of veg is a really good idea - much healthy then the chocolates!

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                    • #11
                      Lovely idea, and shows a lot more thought has gone into her gift, any one can pick up a box of chocs or a bunch of flowers at garage on way to the school, much more personal.
                      Life isnt about surviving the storm.....But learning to dance in the rain.

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                      • #12
                        Fab idea! I was gonna let the kids take in some of our hens eggs.
                        Imagination is everything, it is a preview of what is to become.

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                        • #13
                          As secondary school teachers we don't get presents, except one year when one of my years 7s made me a 'farmyard' of origami animals. It was a lovely gesture, and I still have them tucked away. I found a note in my unlocked desk drawer from one of my autistic children last week, and last year a child with a similar problem wrote her thanks on the whiteboard at the end of the lesson. Very few of the others bother, they are more likely to say 'good riddance'. It's usually the most unlikely year 11's that say thanks, I suffered one boy for 2 years, and managed to 'bully' him into getting a B grade at GCSE. At presentation evening he actually came up and thanked me for the detentions and after school support sessions I made him endure. An amazing change in just a few months!
                          This year I also had some of my year 13s come to find me to say thanks and goodbye, twisting my arm to be in on results day too. One said I had 'suffered' with them throughout the 2 years (it was the first year of a new qualification and we all had a steep learning curve) and I should be there to celebrate or commiserate at the end!

                          All the above waffle is trying to tell you all that personal thanks are much appreciated, especially if they come spontaneously.

                          When mine were at primary school we tried for unusual presents, but a veg box sounds a wonderful idea. I always tried to steer the kids away from tacky ornaments, something edible is appreciated, but doesn't linger (unless, in the case of chocs, on the hips!). Hand made cards and letters are good though.
                          I could not live without a garden, it is my place to unwind and recover, to marvel at the power of all growing things, even weeds!
                          Now a little Shrinking Violet.

                          http://potagerplot.blogspot.com/

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                          • #14
                            Middlefield,

                            Thanks once again for a genius idea. No. 1 son and I were out in the garden at 6.00 this morning harvesting whatever was ready. OH had lifted some new potatoes the night before last and I had already started some herbs off. In the end the boxes (one for the teacher and one for the teaching assistant) contained:

                            New potatoes
                            Rhubarb
                            Peas
                            Tumbling Tom tomato plant in pot
                            Baby courgettes
                            Parsley plant in pot
                            Sage plant in pot
                            Thyme plant in pot
                            Rosemary plant in pot
                            Marjoram plant in pot
                            Basil - sweet and dark opal (purple) plants in pots
                            Tagetes in a pot
                            Nasturtium plant in pot
                            Apple, spear and garden mint plants in pot
                            Little Gem lettuce plant in pot
                            Strawberries
                            Raspberries
                            6 fresh eggs from his grandma's free range organic chooks
                            Sprigs of honeysuckle and jasmine for decoration

                            There wasn't a massive amount of any one thing and some of the herbs were young plants. It wasn't completely cost free as I bought the compost, seed and 10 3 inch pots, also there is the labour of all who cultivated, planted and tended the produce. But it would still compare favourably with buying them from a supermarket I think and would still probably work out cheaper. OH thought I was barking but I know if I had received it, especially with rising food prices and the fact that everything was fresh and organic, I would have been really pleased.

                            Oh and his sister helped him make cards too.

                            Thanks again,

                            TGR
                            TGR

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                            • #15
                              Wow! I would have been chuffed to bits to receive that, what a lovely gift!
                              Imagination is everything, it is a preview of what is to become.

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