• Part of Badgerdog’s summer camp experience includes two getaways intended to provide a change of pace from the classroom environment and to offer other life forms and art forms as inspiration for students’ writing. This summer, for the first time, our elementary-aged writers took a trip to the Urban Roots farm, where they enjoyed an up-close look at the summer harvest, a little work in the fields, and plenty of grasshopper sightings. Though it was a hot, hot summer day in Texas, the students turned their experiences on the farm into beautiful poetry and prose, and we’re happy to share it with you this week. Enjoy!

    Haiku

    Round and very sweet.
    It is red and fruity. Yum!
    It is ripe today.

    Angela, fifth grade

    A Spider’s Point of View

    I am a spider, and right now I am so angry at those human monsters. I spent two days finishing my web, and then those monsters came with a broom and bang, my web broke. My friends and I have tried to avoid those human monsters. We tried to tell the humans our webs are delicate, but they won’t listen. Right now, my family is sitting dead at the bottom of a dumpster.

    It is really boring weaving a web. It is like weaving a basket. My mom taught me to weave a web. My first web was really small. But the web the monsters broke was as a big as this whole page. Most of my friends died because of the monsters. It is the worst life for a spider.

    Francisca, fourth grade

    A Day in the Life of a Tree

    Sitting, watching, waiting. I have a sad, lonely life as an evergreen tree. My spikes are mean, and they will never go away or fall of because I am an evergreen tree. Other trees lose their mean leaves, and the mean ones turn different colors. But the innocent leaves are picked off the branches, for they lived on a regular tree.

    I sit. I watch. I wait.

    Sage, fifth grade

    Green

    The leaves
    are as green as
    a grasshopper. I feel
    as fresh as the time
    I opened my door
    when the weather
    was great!

    The flowers
    are like a garden
    in a secret place
    I have never seen.

    Aditi, fourth grade

    Field Trip

    Hot
    Sweaty
    Summer
    Day

    Sweaty
    Itchy
    Fun
    Day

    Eric, third grade

    A Two-Winged Dragonfly

    Perching on a branch
    Looking for a place to land
    Fluttering away

    Joshua, third grade

    Beautiful Fields

    I feel the smooth grass
    I taste the sweet tomatoes
    I see the tomatoes growing before me
    I hear the crunch, crack, click of a bug

    I taste the sweet tomatoes
    I see the flutter of excitement
    I hear the crunch, crack, click of a bug.
    I see the flies flying away.

    Joshua, third grade

    The Flying Bug

    Black and clear
    Flying swiftly
    Buzzing in your ear
    Bumpy

    Flying swiftly
    Rough
    Bumpy
    And skinny.

    Lauren, fourth grade

    Weed Tree

    A weed
    as big as a tree.
    A colossal, huge
    weed. It’s
    agony. It’s
    impossible
    to pull. Sweat
    pouring down
    my head.
    I never got
    it out.
    Will it
    ever
    come out?

    Alex, fifth grade

    A Tree

    In the middle
    of nowhere
    stands a lifeless,
    twisted, deformed
    tree. All the leaves
    have fallen and
    gone. What is
    left is only
    the hollow trunk
    and the shady
    branches, giving
    the tree
    a spooky image.

    Alexander, sixth grade

    Drying Onions

    Drying out the onions
    under the hay,
    as dry as a hot desert.
    The sun shines
    as bright as a flashlight.

    In the greenhouse,
    it is hot, sweaty, and bright.
    The sun bleeds through
    like a marker on a paper.

    Shreyas, fifth grade

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