Soil Sophia RB Ellie W Isabelle

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The Dirt on Dirt Organism of the year: An insight into the life of the smallest, best diggers around!

Letters from our Editors Soil themed art

MOLES Themed Photo Montage

ONLY IN THIS EDITION Exclusive propaganda poster!

What you need to know about soil: How it could change the way you think about dirt

Poems from our subscribers


Table of Contents 3. Organism of the Year: Moles, the Soil underdogs. 4. It’s all About Soil 5-6. Photo Montage 7. Poppy Painting 8-10. Soil Poems 11-13. Letters from the Editors 14. Propaganda Poster


Moles: the soil underdogs When someone mentions soil, moles aren’t usually the first animal you think of. But they are one of the, most important animals that use the soil as their habitat. Not only do they eat worms and tunnel through the ground 24/7, but they have a major role when it comes to improving the soil’s living conditions, by improving the soil’s quality and nutrients. So although this small mammal may be considered a pest by some gardeners, it has a much bigger role in this world’s soil health that's just more important than one or two angry gardeners. Moles help the soil by eating all the unwanted pests in the garden. Some people who have moles in their garden say they do not have to use poison to get rid of the other unwanted pests. eating those pests is not only good for the moles, but also for the environment. Moles aren’t just Insectivora (reference paragraph 4), they are decomposers. A decomposer is an organism that breaks down organic matter. Moles decompose those unwanted pests into humus, which is just broken down organic matter. Humus makes up one of the four ingredients in soil, along

with broken down/eroded rocks blind. They have extremeand minerals, air and water. ly bad eyesight. Even though moles have terrible eyesight, A moles diet consists earththey have a great sense of worms and insects, but sometimes may include small mam- smell, which helps them find mals like mice. The moles saliva food and there way through the tunnels they make undercontains a toxic acid that will paralyze earthworms, allowing ground. Even though moles have extremely bad eyesight, them to store their living prey for later consumptions. Before a they can still they if it’s light mole eat an earthworm, they will out or not. Their eyes are loput the earthworm in their paws cated behind their and squeeze the collected earth snouts. Moles are not nocturnal. Currently research and dirt out of the worm’s gut. suggests that moles sleep and Moles eat 70%-100% of their work in a four hour shift. Moles are more active during quiet times, like early morning or late evening. When moles feel vibrations in the ground, when humans and pets walk or run, they cease their digging. Moles don’t live together, because they do not get along. If another mole is found on a different mole’ s body weight each day. territory, they will fight to the Many people assume many death. There are two excepthings about moles that aren’t tions, in which you find true. For example, people asmoles together. One will hapsume that moles are rodents. pen during the Spring, when But in fact, moles are not rothe males go out to find madents, they belong to a group tes. The other exception is, called Insectivore, making them some tunnels are sometimes closely related to shrews. Are used like a highway. Remoles blind? Many people ask searches and scientists say this question quite often. The that “ the social system with answer is no. Moles are not moles are more complex than


It’s All About Soil A gardener’s guide to help improve your soil, and grow the best plants. By: Sophia R-B Soil is a common thing found almost everywhere on and in the Earth. But, what most people don’t know is that there are different layers of soil, and different types of soil. There are certain types of plants that grow better with the different types, and some that die because they cannot get the correct nutrition. So, the main things to know when you’re starting a garden, is the type of soil you are using, and the types of plants that correspond with that specific type of soil. There are three main types of soil. Sand, silt and clay. The order of the names is from the finest, granular sand to the much more firm, malleable clay. In between those two is silt, which is a blend of the two. Silt is usually the soil with the most high nutrition of the three. But the world isn’t made up of three types of soil. There are often blends of soils, like sandy-silty soil. There is also the fact that depending on where the soil is, like what climate, that climate will have something to offer to the soil. In the desert, the sand will usually be rocky, and coarse. But, beach sand will be more silky and salty. So though they may be the same types of soil, because they are in different climates, the soils are very different. This is one thing to contemplate as you plot the aspect and places you want to plant your garden. One other thing to keep in mind is the accessibility of the place. Will water be able to reach the garden when it rains? Will it be able to soak up the sun for as long as possible? And will pesky bugs and birds eat everything before it has a chance to grow? Birds and bugs will try to devour the seeds you plant. What can you do about it? Well, you can research ways to make seed balls, which protect the seeds with clay, or you can look up natural remedies to get rid of bugs. Pesticides may be effective, but they harm the soil, the organisms that thrive in the soil and make it nutritional, and you also harm the things you are growing in your garden. Natural remedies are much better for the soil, the organisms that are helping your soil, and the plants that are growing in your soil. Moving on to the main aspect of gardening, the plants. While some plants may grow well in sandy-silty soil, others may not be able to grow in that type. It also depends on what type of climate you live in. For example, a Mediterranean climate (like the one in Southern California, or Greece) will have hot weather and rocky, dry soil. This climate is great for growing grapes, avocados and olive trees. This climate can also be classified as temperate. Other examples of climates are cold, tropical, dry and polar. The best way to find out what grows best in what type of climate (aside from trial and error) is to look at the plants that grow in the continent related to that climate. For a polar climate, you’d look at Antarctica. For a tropical climate, you’d look at Brazil, or central Africa. For a dry climate, you’d look at the Sahara region or Australia. The plants that grow there are the plants that grow there and are accustomed to the climate are some of the healthiest plants around. Gardening is the one activity that can bring us close to nature in ways we never thought possible. If you want to start gardening today, then you should, because the fruits of your labors are the most rewarding fruits. If you want to leave a legacy on the Earth, plant a garden. I hope this article has helped inform you, and encouraged you to make a change, and plant a garden.

Unemployment is capitalism's way of getting you to plant a garden” - Orson Scott Card


The Wonders of Nature Isabelle

As I took these pictures of nature, I noticed how some colors on the petals blended in. Pink and orange, yellow and orange, and pink and white. Leaves of amazing shapes, sizes and colors, all fill my eyes with their beauty as they show me, the real world.



Poppy painting Ellie W. This painting was modeled off of a photograph I took while visiting Descanso garden during the soil unit. Before I painted this, I had always thought that the California poppy was orange, but once I painted them, I realized that they were Golden, just like the rest of this state and everything that comes from it


Barbaric Yawp

Soil-related Poems

By: Sophia R B I walk with the soil under my feet

Sophia R-B

Though there may man on top

A New Look at a Garden

Earth is the foundation

A step through open gates

While it is ever changing, I stay grounded

to a woRld i have never known

Touching is much more different than

with the wind whispering, Lingering

feeling

with the chIldren of the trees

and as i feel the soil fall through

daNcing

the spaces in-between my fingers

and the wind carryinG the sound

i start to see

of peace

what i don’t want to see

harmony why do we have To incorporate ourselves

The corpses of men Have decomposed Into the sand in my Hands

intO every

And while I await my destiny

crevice

They have already gone

she has

And helped rejuvenate

and why do we

This

have to make a terrible mess oNe that we hide

The flowers Trees Worms All

but never clean up

I know this is my destiny

the twitterinG of a

Whether I be cremated, buried, or stuffed in a coffin

robin

I belong here

Awakens me to the sound of her

This is where

bReathing

I have come from This is where I must go.


Immortality (barbaric yawp) Ellie W

As everything does.

Although you may not know it, my blood courses through you.

Is there really so such thing as death?

My long forgotten energy is the Very thing that fuels your mind.

My fingerprints which once held my identity, now can be seen in the leaves of the great oak. My feet, which had once run many miles, now run through the sap in the veins of the creeping vines.

A Poppy Oasis Ellie W

After I am thought to be gone,

Above me, there is nothing. Nothing but blue sky and the occasional wisp of white cloud.

I will still be recreated by maggots and fungi, In the distance, there are telephone lines between suburban California and this small sliver of the past. until I am only part of the background. But I am still there.

No matter how hard you try, No matter how long you wait, there is no escaping me. I am the very ground you stand on.

I hear the sharp, staccato chirp of a bird nearby, and the rumbling of car tires on asphalt in the distance. I smell plant stems, which have been crushed between fingers, cool shaded stones, and the faint but sure scent of poppies. To my right, there is a bronze bouquet of watering spouts fanning out in all directions. The poppy is made of tangerine silk as the sun shines off it. When the poppy’s petals overlap, they are parchment paper in the sun.

How many have been through the process before me?

How long will you forget this oasis?

“Living” is only a small fraction of LIFE. We cloud ourselves with illusions. Life? Death? These are only labels, For the human mind cannot perceive immortality, no matter how obvious the evidence is. All matter on the earth cannot disappear or appear. It can only change form.


A Wild and Precious Life to See Isabelle P. Far in the distance, I see tall trees trying to reach towards the sky. Leaves of green and many different brown barks. Sunlight hits the leaves making it look Gold and Radiant. Sounds fill my ears all around me chatter of kids, chirps of birds calling to each other. Bees, buzzing, and cars rushing by. I can hear the leaves rustling in the wind. The farthest sound I can hear is footsteps of people, running and walking. I can smell fresh nature, the bright, brilliant flowers. Fresh leaves and herbs fill my nose. I feel dirt underneath my shoes, every stick cracking. I step on hard stone, solid stone. Above me, I see two butterflies, wings of a pretty shade of orange, black, and white. They silently flap their wings, dancing around each other. I watch the butterflies leave my sight. I should have seen nature’s beauty before, how could I not? Why did I not open my eyes and see all of this? This is One Wild and Precious Life I will keep in my heart.

from My Mini Garden Isabelle P. The hot, burning sun tries to burn a hole in my back. I wipe the dreaded sweat from my face. I drag a long, wooden flower box to get started. I grab a small hand shovel and start putting soil in the flower box. I had fill at least half of the long box. It was so hot. It really seemed like the sun is trying to burn me up, so I’d become part of nature. I had finally filled up the flower box with healthy soil. I walk over to my mother’s worm compost and opened it. The smell was overwhelming, so sickening, at least to me. I grabbed a small bucket and filled a little bit with compost. I spread out the compost along the soil. I was excited to start planting, gardening was fun. I walked inside expecting the nice airconditioning house. I open a top drawer to get my seed packet. I walk outside and rip the packet open. I dug little holes and put a seed in each hole and saved the rest. I buried every single hole. Almost done, I walked away, just to get a watering can full of rainwater, that I had gotten from our rain catcher. I had poured a nice amount of water in the flower box. I couldn’t wait, to see the blue bell flower to grow. A nice shade of violet blue, of a flourishing flower. I just couldn’t wait,


Dear Reader, Thank you for choosing to read this edition of the Dirt on Dirt. We have worked very hard to give you this. There is a certain pleasure in looking at the fruits of your labor. And, it was really rewarding to see what we had accomplished in that short amount of time. At our school, we had to make this magazine as a part of the Soil Unit. The soil unit was 7 days in which our school informed the seventh grade about soil and the ways it is formed and how it helps the world. It actually was a really interesting experience, and my group got to know each other really well. As we helped each other create the propaganda poster, the articles in this magazine, and the cover of this magazine, I started to become even more curious and interested about soil. How was it possible that hundreds of layers of tiny materials had piled up over thousands of years, and not blown away into space? How was it possible that thousands- no millions- of organisms could live under the ground I walk on, and yet I only ever saw a few organisms every day? It really bugged me, and yet it made me want to learn more. And I definitely did. The first day, we learned about victory gardens, and got assignments for the magazine. The second day, we went to Arlington Gardens, and learned about labyrinths, flowers, bacterial colonies, and how to work with people you don’t know very well. The next day, we started drawing our propaganda posters, in which we encouraged people to plant a garden and make a difference. After that, we went to the Pasadena Community Garden, helped weed, mix compost and soil, and learned about the different types of soil. Friday, the day after, we continued to make progress on our magazines. The next week, we started math. And we learned about the extremely confusing, yet quite interesting, Fibonacci ratio. Then we examined the bacterial colonies we had collected samples for at Arlington Gardens, and recorded the observations we made considering the colonies. On Tuesday, before the soil unit, for PE we went to Descanso Gardens for a hike, and then we split into our soil unit groups and observed the wildlife that lived in the beautiful habitat. When we got back to school for soil unit, we rotated around the campus to plant herbs and flowers, and make our school look even more beautiful than it already does. The next day, we wrapped up the soil unit, and reflected upon what we had learned. Which happened to be a lot. I want you to read and enjoy this magazine, not only because it was an assignment for the soil unit, but also because it will inform you about things you perceive to be as something it isn’t. “A garden requires patient labor and attention. Plants do not grow merely to satisfy ambitions or to fulfill good intentions. They thrive because someone expended effort on them.” - Liberty Hyde Bailey Thank you once again! ~Sophia R-B


My Letter to You Isabelle P Dear Readers, During these seven days of learning made me realize something, it made me realize the importance of soil. Soil helps us in so many ways that you don’t even know. Going to gardens, learning about trees, and native plants. Being in the wild nature is a great way to feel peaceful. A great way to keep a memory of a beautiful place isn’t always photos. It’s poems, poems describe what you feel, what you see, smell, feel, like you can picture yourself there yourself. Our first day we learned about organisms in the soil and Victory Gardens. Victory Gardens started in 1940. The Great Depression had ended and America was starving. The created a Victory Garden in San Francisco which fed about 40% of America’s food. Victory Gardens is a garden that grows plants that produces food for the community. Today there is a Victory Garden that stands in front of the Civic Center. We also learned organisms is the soil: moles, ants, amoebas, nematodes, bacteria, mite, earthworm, and fungus. We were broken up into groups of three or four and got an organism. An organism we would study, we were to make an online magazine for others to see. The magazine you are reading now. We had to make a cover, put poems in there, and have other subjects in it. The second day, we packed a zero waste lunch. We walked towards Arlington Gardens and did three different rotations. One was ways to do for being peaceful, getting dirt to study about bacteria, and wrote poems of the garden. We wrote about the place, what we saw, what we felt and smell, and what you could hear. It was peaceful writing a poem about the garden. A garden that held many wonders. Thursday, April 4th was an interesting day, we started making Propaganda Posters that made a statement about Soil. In our groups we broke up and started thinking of a statement that would fit. At 10:10 we walked to PCG, Pasadena City Garden. It wasn’t really a garden yet. We, Westridge girls, were helping out to start one. We broke to two halves, one group helped take out the weeds while the other group started fill a bigger version of a flower box, with healthy soil. Healthy soil grows healthy gardens. There were many critters there, not rodents but bugs. They were everywhere! Spiders here, earwigs there, and so many more. It is a kind of place not many girls would want to go. When we left, the Garden barely started, one day, that place will be a beautiful garden. The last day of the week, not the unit, we learned about Dirt Demystified during the first half of the afternoon. We learned ways that soil connected with us. We read poems that the writer wrote about connecting with the soil. That was homework, to write a poem, a happy, joyful poem about your connection to soil. The other half of the afternoon was working with your groups about the magazine you are reading now. The first day we came back to school in the new school week was Monday! We learned about mathematical ways Fibonacci number were used in earth, including certain numbers. We had read a book about a boy who loved numbers, the numbers always had something to do with Fibonacci numbers which no one could figure out. Then we all worked on our magazine’s again. Even though this magazine is only a few pages, it takes a long time to put together and write about all the stuff you want to include in there. Tuesday, our last day of Soil Unit (well, the last day we will work with soil). In the morning we went on a small hike. It was beautiful sight to see. We also went to a garden where flowers were blossoming in many different forms, sizes, and the color. The color was probably the best part of the garden, the fascinating colors you can make out, two colors mixing in on the same petal of a flower. We headed back to Westridge and had 5 different rotations. A tree walk, learning it’s history and names. A Worm Compost, where we made our own worm compost. A herb garden where we planted many different herbs. A rain garden, planting plants that doesn’t use so much rain. A sort of craft area, where we made seed balls and planted strawberries that we got to take home. Each rotation was something different, but it was all related somehow. All had something to do with soil. Everything we learned is so fascinating, so beautiful. Seeing gardens, reading poems that were heart touching, it’s wonderful. It’s wonderful to have a great opportunity to have, to do such great things and learn in a fun way. After this unit, soil is much more than something dirty to all of us, it something that helps us in a way that nothing else can help at all like soil can.


Letter from the editor- Ellie W. At my school, we had a 7-day period of time called the soil unit, in which we learned about, well, soil. At first, I thought to myself, “What could be so interesting about soil that we would need 7 days to learn about it?” But dang, was I surprised to find out. THERE WAS SO MUCH TO LEARN!!! I had never known just how many organisms were hidden inside the soil, and how big of an impact the soil really made. During the soil unit, I learned so many different things about our soil and what lives in it. For instance, if it wasn’t for soil, there would be no live on earth. There would be no plants, so there would be no organism to regulate the amount of carbon dioxide and oxygen in the air, and there would be no food. Think about it. If you ate a salad, all the greens would be from the soil, and if it had cheese or meat on it, the cheese would be from the milk of an animal who had consumed greens that had grown from the soil. I learned at the Pasadena community garden that the perfect plant-growing soil is an even mixture of compost, fertilizer with bat guano, and the original soil. Unfortunately, the bat guano part I learned from experience. (I had to mix it up with my bare hands.)I also learned there just how many organisms must live in the mulch and soil in order for it to thrive. At Arlington garden, I got to see a real Mediterranean climate garden and discover what kinds of bacteria and fungi are in different parts of the soil. I loved making the propaganda poster because I love art, and the poster was a way to express the soil unit’s ideas through art. I learned a lot from the magazine, because our topic was moles, which is an animal I didn’t know much about. I learned lots of things about moles. Their significance to the soil that they are not, in fact, rodents, but they are a type of insectivorous mammal, etc, etc. Throughout the soil unit, all in all, I learned much more about soil than I thought I didn’t know (if that makes sense). I realize now why there is such a fuss about topsoil loss. It is because soil is one of the most precious, respectdeserving things on our planet that takes a very long time to “grow” back, and we’re treating it like trash. I leave this unit with much more respect for the soil, and knowledge about its importance.



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