Announcements

Our farm-based education and intervention program provides experiential, interdisciplinary education that connects students and the public to the environment, their community, and the role of agriculture in our lives. The team consists of a certified teacher with a background in agricultural sciences and staff who have practical experience in livestock management.
Animal-assisted activities and experiential learning create the opportunity for children to self-reflect through interactions and relationships with people, peers and animals in the barn environment. Experiences with farm animals can teach responsibility, care and concern for other creatures; help with personal boundaries such as appropriate touch and movement; and improve fine and gross motor skills. Children become primary caretakers, feeding animals, cleaning stalls and tending to the basic needs of the animals.
With the completion of an elaborate new habitat built by Green Chimneys’ woodshop students, the Farm Science classroom was able to welcome Brownie into her new home. Brownie previously lived alone in her cage in the farm and wildlife office, but guinea pigs do best in larger environments. The new habitat allows her to live in a herd as she would in the wild, with many places to hide and ways to practice her skills. Brownie has always been a social creature, and she has taken over the guinea pig herd but is a very peaceful leader.