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Four Poems About Plants
By James Wilson, E.L. Haynes Public Charter School, Washington, DC
We received the following poems this past February via
foss@berkeley.edu. Jim wrote the poems when he was teaching the New Plants Module to his second graders. The FOSS
staff enjoyed them and hope that you will, too.
The Humble Brassica
A fleck, a speck
This seed would lie so lonely on a plate.
A spot, a dot
It only takes two days to germinate.
A root, a shoot
This cousin to the radish wastes no time.
A leaf! Relief
The stem will stretch and slowly start to climb.
Two, fourthen more
The pairs of leaves line up to lap the light.
A bead, a bud
Atop the stem they swell, then overnight. . .
Kaboom! A bloom
A yellow crown to advertise to bees
The need for seed
So won't you come and pollinate me, please?
Lawn in a Cup
A plastic cup with holes punched in the bottom,
A scoop of soil that's damp but not too wet,
A pinch of seedtwo pinches if you've got 'em,
A week, a sunny windowsillyou're set.
You've grown a lawn four inches square, and green.
Now all that's left to do is somehow buy
A lawnmower no bigger than a bean
And pushed by a determined dragonfly.
Alfalfa
All heifers fully favor
Filling up on some alfalfa.
The sprouts are full of flavor
Try falafel with alfalfa.
It follows that a fluffy
Furry bunny loves alfalfa.
Don't laugh, or get so huffy!
Try alfalfa for yourselfa.
The Onion
This doorknob looking for a door!
I can't imagine what it's for.
Its waiting for a friend to pour
Some water on, and then some more.
Up through the roots the waters
And then a slender shoot will grow
On warm days fast, on cool days slow
And soon enough we all will know.
For when it grows ten inches high,
Just take a snip and give a try
Your monster breath! Your burning
It's all enough to make you cry.
Far better to have sliced the things
Into a pile of ivory rings,
Battered, dropped in oil that sings
An onion feast for onion kings.
If your creative juices start to flow(and/or those of your students) while you're teaching FOSS, we'd love to see the results of your efforts. You can email them to us at foss@berkeley.edu
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