UAC Magazine - Summer 2021

Page 36

INDUSTRY

Keep it growing

UGA Horticulture Club helps grow scholarship funding by Caroline Odom, student communications assistant, UGA's Div. of Development and Alumni Relations Another basket that the club consistently contributes to is scholarship funds. In the past 15 years, the club has contributed $120,000 to scholarship funds. Philanthropy has been a tenet of the club since before Chappell joined UGA as a faculty member in 2007, but 2011 brought a shift in the club’s commitment to scholarship donations. Students made the decision to expand the plant sale to better support scholarships. Now, the club brings in approximately $60,000 to $70,000 in revenue at the spring and fall plant sales, the club’s largest fundraisers. The club also sells roses each February for Valentine’s Day. A portion of that revenue supports club operations and $6,000 to $7,000 in club scholarships awarded to members, but students of the club make the ultimate decision on where the money will go.

Students in the University of Georgia’s Horticulture Club are growing more than plants. They’re also growing support for current and future Bulldogs. In January, the UGA Horticulture Club donated a total of $27,200 to two scholarship funds: the Horticulture Scholarship Fund and the Paul Thomas Floriculture Scholarship Endowment. These contributions are the latest in a 15-year series of gifts from the club. The UGA Horticulture Club is a student-run organization open to students of all majors. Members of the club work throughout the year to grow plants for the club’s fall and spring plant sales. “The club is an intersection of two things,” said Matthew Chappell, club advisor, horticulture professor and UGA Cooperative Extension specialist. “It’s for anyone who likes plants, from house plants to succulents to outdoor trees and shrubs, and it’s a clearinghouse for students to give back through a number of ways.” The club works with organizations like the Campus Kitchen and Extra Special People and participates in renovation projects throughout the community. “We have our hands in a lot of different baskets,” Chappell said.

36 | UAC MAGAZINE

This year, students of the club voted to give $25,000 to the Horticulture Scholarship Fund, a non-endowed fund that provides scholarship support for horticulture students. The remaining $2,200 of this year’s gift supported the Paul Thomas Floriculture Scholarship Endowment, an endowment named for a former advisor to the club who died shortly after his retirement in 2019. Before the Horticulture Club made this gift, the fund had not met the $25,000 required to fully endow the fund. When members of the Horticulture Club learned they could help the fund reach endowment, they decided to contribute. “Horticulture students are generally very outwardly facing, philanthropic individuals,” Chappell said. “They see the benefit to society.” Additionally, the plant sales offer “boots-on-theground experience” to students, Chappell said. From growing to marketing to customer service, the skills they build through the club will translate to their careers. Money from the sale will allow the UGA Horticulture Club to continue its commitment to philanthropy. By supporting scholarships, the club grows a legacy that will be harvested for years to come.


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Articles inside

Bulbs in turfgrass Research examines performance

8min
pages 50-53

Seeing brown instead of green? Influx of disease to evergreens

5min
pages 46-49

Help save the bees Your lawn could play a role

4min
pages 44-45

NICH update Gearing up for the 2023 Farm Bill

2min
pages 42-43

Promoting water stewardship

2min
page 41

Keep it growing UGA Hort Club helps grow scholarship funding

2min
pages 36-37

Martinez recognized for excellence APS award

5min
pages 38-39

Capitol Connection UAC member poll results

1min
page 35

Legislative update

7min
pages 32-34

Irrigation info for your customers Benefits of "smart" irrigation

1min
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Is your marketing working? Part 1 How would you know?

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pages 28-29

Safety works Water, rest, shade

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pages 20-21

What the tech? Marketing automation

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pages 16-17

Changing your focus Zooming in on a solutions-based approach

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pages 24-25

Marketing 101 Series, Part 1 Value propositions

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GALA GALA is back and better than ever

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Pro project Water conservation in action

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Supply and demand Impacts to the market

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Executive Director message

3min
page 5
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