Akin Outdoor Learning

Akin Outdoor Learning

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Our Outdoor Learning Center helps us to learn, serve and succeed.

We teach the WHOLE child, and we strive to: *better the society we live in, *meet the needs of our Akin Frogs daily, *protect the environment, and *work to fix what we have neglected.

05/18/2026

Some excellent tips to grow food in raised beds/planters/pots. We followed these suggestions this year in our own raised beds in the OLC, and it has truly been a game changer.

Container vegetables don't fail because you forgot fertilizer. They fail because you put two heavy feeders with the same root depth in the same pot β€” and one of them starved.

Every crop pulls nutrients from a different soil layer. Put three plants with different root zones in the same container and they share the space instead of competing for it. The grouping matters more than the pot it's in.

🌿 Nine container trios that work β€” and why:

- Tomato, basil, marigold β€” the tomato roots deep, basil spreads shallow, and marigold roots discourage soil pests around both. Use a deep container with enough volume for the tomato's root system β€” this is the grouping that needs the most soil depth

- Cucumber, bush bean, nasturtium β€” the cucumber climbs a small trellis in the pot, the bean fixes nitrogen into the soil the cucumber feeds from, and nasturtium draws aphids away from both. Use a wide container with a trellis attached

- Pepper, oregano, alyssum β€” all three love full sun and heat. Oregano's aromatic foliage confuses pepper pests, and alyssum draws hoverflies whose larvae eat aphids. Any pot with good drainage works β€” peppers rot in containers that stay wet

- Carrot, scallion, lettuce β€” carrots go deep, scallions occupy the mid-zone, and lettuce spreads across the surface. They use three different soil layers without competing. A deep rectangular planter gives the carrots room to grow straight

- Kale, Swiss chard, pansy β€” all heavy nitrogen users that prefer consistent moisture. Fabric grow bags work well here β€” the breathable sides air-prune the roots and prevent the waterlogging these leafy crops are sensitive to

- Strawberry, spinach, chives β€” all shallow-rooted and early-season producers. A hanging basket works because none of them need depth. The chives' sharp scent may help deter the aphids that target strawberry foliage

- Eggplant, thyme, bush pea β€” eggplant provides the tall canopy, thyme covers the soil surface and keeps it cool, and the pea adds a light nitrogen contribution while growing on a small support. Use a large pot β€” eggplant roots need room

- Zucchini, radish, borage β€” the zucchini takes over the canopy, the radish is harvested before the zucchini needs the space, and borage flowers attract the pollinators zucchini depends on for fruit set. Use a wide container β€” zucchini spreads

- Bush bean, beet, garlic β€” the bean's quick canopy shades the soil for the beet, which roots deep beneath it. Garlic fills the gaps and its scent discourages some common vegetable pests. A deep trough gives the beet room to swell

🌱 The principle that ties all of these together:

- Group by root depth first β€” deep, medium, and shallow in the same pot. Then check water needs β€” if one plant wants to dry out and another wants to stay moist, they don't belong together regardless of how well the roots stack

Nine groupings. Nine containers where nothing competes for the same inch of soil 🌿

05/18/2026

Mrs. Behel’s 4th grade student, Amelia, brought cucumber seeds and she was able to plant them this morning. She took yellow banana peppers, tomatoes, a tiny bean, peas, and wonderful herbs inside afterwards to the class.

Photos from Akin Outdoor Learning's post 05/14/2026

Our second year using our raised beds in the OLC. Last year was trial and error, but this year we have this process down to a fine art, and everything is growing and starting to yield produce. Sadly, most of it will only come to edible fruition after our students leave for the summer break, but the students who have planted have loved watching everything grow.
If you are craving a tomato, pepper, peas, beans, strawberry, herb or two this summer, please feel free to stop by and take what you need. Or just come up and smell the wonderful aromas in all the herbs. Please be gentle with the plants and leave some for others to enjoy too.
There is a family of possums living in our large flowerbed - please be kind to our sweet AKIN possums; they have found a safe and welcoming home in our OLC, and are good for the environment. (Will try to capture the babies in a photo - they are precious.)

05/11/2026

Mrs. Carreras took her 4th graders outside to work in fresh air and sunshine.

Photos from Akin Outdoor Learning's post 05/04/2026

Many tomatoes getting ready, the pea plants are starting to flower, we have a baby green pepper and two banana peppers growing, and the onions are thriving.

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1100 Springwood Drive
Wylie, TX
75098