Location: Western Cape, South Africa
Managed by: CKG Youth Development Program
1. Executive Summary
The CKG School Food Garden Program is an initiative designed to establish sustainable, educational food gardens in under-resourced schools across the Western Cape. By integrating gardening into school life, the program aims to improve nutrition, environmental literacy, and food security among learners, while also supporting the CKG School League Program through health and wellness education.
Key Goals:
- Promote healthy eating habits among schoolchildren.
- Reduce hunger and malnutrition through fresh produce.
- Use gardens as practical learning tools.
- Engage the community in sustainable agriculture practices.
2. Mission & Vision
Mission:
To cultivate school gardens that feed bodies, minds, and communities.
Vision:
A generation of youth equipped with knowledge, skills, and access to nutritious food, growing stronger communities from the soil up.
3. Objectives
- Establish food gardens in 30 schools in Year 1 (aligned with CKG School League schools).
- Improve school nutrition through integration with school feeding programs.
- Deliver garden-based learning in Life Skills, Natural Sciences, and Health.
- Train teachers, learners, and parents in gardening and sustainable agriculture.
- Create a self-sustaining model where schools eventually manage gardens independently.
4. Target Market & Stakeholders
- Primary Beneficiaries: Learners aged 6–18 in underserved schools.
- Secondary Beneficiaries: Teachers, parents, school staff, local communities.
- Partners: Western Cape Education Department, NGOs, local municipalities, Department of Agriculture, CSR sponsors.
5. Program Components
5.1 Garden Establishment
- Raised beds, keyhole gardens, and vertical gardens depending on space.
- Compost bins, worm farms, and rainwater tanks for sustainability.
- Fence installation and signage for safety and branding.
5.2 Education Integration
- Lesson plans aligned with Life Orientation, Natural Sciences, and Environmental Studies.
- Hands-on garden activities for all grades.
- Garden clubs and leadership roles for learners.
5.3 Feeding Scheme Link
- Crops (e.g., spinach, cabbage, carrots, beans, herbs) go directly to the school kitchen.
- Reduce dependency on food donations by producing part of the school’s food.
5.4 Community Involvement
- Involve parents and community volunteers as garden stewards.
- Host seasonal harvest days, cooking demos, and community markets.
6. Operational Plan
6.1 Phased Rollout
| Phase | Timeline | Activities |
|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 | Months 1–2 | School selection, site assessments, permissions |
| Phase 2 | Months 3–4 | Infrastructure setup, soil prep, first planting |
| Phase 3 | Months 5–6 | Training, workshops, curriculum integration |
| Phase 4 | Months 7–12 | Maintenance, harvesting, impact tracking |
| Phase 5 | Year 2+ | Scale to more schools, garden competitions, revenue models |
6.2 Staff Requirements
- Program Manager (shared with School League)
- Garden Facilitator (1 per 5–10 schools)
- Education Officer
- Volunteers (teachers, parents, student leaders)
7. Budget Estimate (Per School)
| Item | Cost (ZAR) |
|---|---|
| Raised beds, compost, tools | 6,000 |
| Seeds and seedlings | 1,500 |
| Irrigation (e.g., water tank/drip) | 3,000 |
| Fencing and garden signage | 2,000 |
| Educational materials/training | 1,500 |
| Total per school | 14,000 |
Total Year 1 for 30 Schools: ZAR 420,000
Annual maintenance cost per school: ZAR 5,000–7,000
8. Funding Strategy
Revenue Sources:
- CKG Core Funding
- Sponsorships from retailers (Shoprite, Woolworths, Food Lover’s Market)
- Agricultural Grants (Dept. of Agriculture, OneHomeOneGarden)
- International NGOs (e.g., Heifer International, UNICEF SA)
- Local Community Contributions
9. Monitoring & Evaluation
Key Indicators:
- Kg of produce harvested per term.
- Number of meals improved with fresh produce.
- Participation rates among learners and parents.
- Academic linkages through garden-based learning.
- Stories of behavioral and health improvement.
Tools:
- Garden logs (planting, harvesting, weather, pest control).
- Monthly photo updates from schools.
- Bi-annual review workshops with stakeholders.
10. Risks & Mitigation
| Risk | Likelihood | Mitigation Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Drought / water shortages | High | Rainwater harvesting, mulch use |
| Garden vandalism or theft | Medium | Fencing, local community watch |
| Lack of maintenance buy-in | High | Garden clubs, training, competitions |
| Pest / crop failure | Medium | Organic pest control, crop rotation |
11. Long-Term Sustainability
- Student Leadership: “Garden Champs” to lead and mentor new schools.
- Micro-income: Sell extra herbs/produce to parents for small revenue.
- Integrated curriculum: Ensure learning outcomes drive interest and accountability.
- Ownership: Encourage schools to form Garden Committees.
12. Conclusion
The CKG School Food Garden Program is more than a garden—it’s a living classroom, a community resource, and a lifeline for better nutrition and health. Aligned with CKG’s vision of youth empowerment and holistic development, the program offers scalable, sustainable change one school at a time.

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