10,000 primary schools have already registered to take part in the potato scheme

10,000 primary schools have already registered to take part in the potato scheme

Grow Your Own Potatoes, the largest primary school growing project from the potato industry, is well on its way to smash targets for 2010 - but there is still time for industry to recruit local schools before registration closes on 5 February.

Over 10,000 primary schools have already registered to take part in the scheme, which helps to educate young children about potatoes. This year, the Potato Council has encouraged even more key figures and organisations to participate and lend their support to the project.

With partnerships formed with the Farming & Countryside Education (FACE), the British Nutrition Foundation and Peter Seabrook MBE, Grow Your Own Potatoes is on course to reach more young children and build their understanding of where potatoes come from, how they grow and their role in a healthy balanced diet, as well as building future demand for potatoes.

Since the project began, and through committed industry support, over 750,000 children have taken part and it is now being replicated around the world. Planting takes place in March and in June, classrooms unearth their crop. This year there are amazing prizes on offer, such as an allotment makeover for the school that yields the heaviest crop and runner-up prizes of eco-friendly picnic tables and playground benches.

Bill Graham, FACE head of education, said: “There is no doubt that Grow Your Own Potatoes is a flagship project that is really making a difference. The key to its success is that it is just so easy to take part and the project can be incorporated into the curriculum in a wide variety of ways. I look forward to the time when all schools will be taking part in this scheme.”

Growers and processors can get involved by distributing recruitment flyers, available from the Potato Council, or becoming a school buddy and assisting with planting and harvesting.

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