February Spotlight: UCCE San Bernardino County Master Gardeners Lynn Brown-Summers and Tim Summers

Jan 26, 2021

Lynn Brown-Summers and Tim Summers are a dynamic husband-and-wife team. Their differing strengths have made them an inspiring team in serving their local community wherever they are needed. UC Cooperative Extension (UCCE) San Bernardino County Master Gardeners since January 2019 (Lynn) and July 2017 (Tim) and UCCE Master Food Preservers (since 2017), they enjoy spending time together gardening and preserving their own food.

Lynn's strength is to connect with like-minded individuals to accomplish mutual goals. She has the mind, heart, and soul of an activist, which comes as no surprise since most of her family members are involved in public service, politics, and publishing. Her mother, Cheryl Brown, is a former Assemblywoman of the 47th District and current California State Commissioner on Aging who has devoted most of her life to public service. In 1980, Lynn's father and mother founded Brown Publishing Company to produce Black Voice News. This weekly newspaper focuses on local news in Riverside and San Bernardino counties.

Lynn knows how to “make things happen” and the right people to help in that effort. As Tim says, “My wife is one of those forces of nature. Tell her what, you point her in the direction, and she will get it done.” A self-proclaimed “gardening nerd," Tim is the “nuts and bolts' implementation force of the team. He enjoys the hands-on part of their collaboration, and it shows through his gardening. Together, they are unstoppable in their goal to make the world better through the Master Gardeners' mission, “To extend research-based knowledge and information on home horticulture, pest management, and sustainable landscape practices to the residents of California.

Learning the researched-based approach to sustainable gardening taught in the Master Gardener program has helped Lynn and Tim fulfill their strong desire to help others. They believe that the program provides supportive credibility to their Master Gardener and Master Food Preserver presentations. It gives them a greater depth of knowledge and background of information to pull accurate and useful information. Lynn and Tim believe that research-based knowledge is especially critical for integrated pest management (IPM). They took a UC ANR IPM class a few years ago. They recommended that anyone interested take one of the online courses or workshops https://www2.ipm.ucanr.edu/master-gardeners/.

Tim and Lynn believe that society can be affected positively by teaching people how to grow and store their own food. Food insecurity is a problem throughout the world. One of their goals is to educate people regarding how they can have access to healthy food. There is a sufficient supply of food in the world to feed people. However, a lot of food is thrown away. As a society, we are accustomed to seeing food that perfect in appearance. Many foods thrown away are perfectly acceptable for consumption. Still, they may have some blemishes that we are not used to seeing in grocery stores. Encouraging people to understand that unattractive fruits and vegetables are not always bad and teaching them how to preserve them could make a difference in our society. They would like people to understand that these items are perfectly acceptable for food preservation and consumption. Doing this one thing could help make a difference in our society.

Before COVID restricted activities, Lynn and Tim were active in presenting Master Gardener and Master Food Preserver workshops at the Rialto Community Garden at 539 Acacia Avenue, Rialto. They are passionate about teaching people the safe way to preserve and store food they have grown.

They took the Master Food Preserver class together in 2017 to teach people how to become more self-sufficient. The course helped Lynn grow in the way she preserved and canned foods. She grewup preserving and canning, but techniques have changed since she learned from her grandmother. When teaching a gardening class, they incorporate concepts and techniques for food preservation. This includes fermenting (pickles), preserving (jams, jellies), pressure canning (just about anything including chicken), dehydrating (fruit), and drying (spices, okra).

Lynn and Tim are involved in so many projects that I am amazed at how they find the time and energy to keep “all the balls they are juggling in the air.” They are currently finishing a new (second) Rialto Community Garden at 150 Palm Avenue opposite City Hall. They are proud that they were asked by the City of Rialto to work on the garden for the past two years from start to finish. They served as the UCCE Master Gardener experts for the project, helping develop and implement a garden plan. They represented the community garden project as advisors, attending city planning meetings and spoke at city council meetings regarding the project.

They have developed a curriculum for workshops held at the garden when COVID restrictions are lifted. They are excited to have a garden plot where they will conduct monthly gardening workshops. Their goal is to get relevant gardening information to the local community and encourage more people to become involved in gardening. They want people who may not have sufficient space for a garden to know that there is a place for them to learn about starting their own garden.

They are also working with the Mayor of Rialto to start a seed bank there. There is a beautiful old adobe building at the Bud Bender Park that Lynn and Tim think would be a perfect spot to start a seed bank. The early 19th-century structure is the oldest building still standing in Rialto. It has been used for many purposes over the years. The internal temperature of the adobe structure is perfect for storing seeds. The Mayor would like to use it for the seed bank, but it needs some repair work. The project is currently in the planning stage “on paper." The city likes the idea and is reviewing the budget for available funds. Lynn and Tim don't easily give up, so if the adobe site doesn't work out, they will find another location for a Rialto seed bank. It may be at the community garden at Bud Bender Park if the idea to use the adobe structure doesn't work out.

Lynn and Tim have participated in the City of Rialto's annual Civic Day for four years. Their favorite activity at the event is teaching Rialto Unified School District third grade students on their annual field trip how to grow vegetables. Lynn and Tim provide all the supplies for the project, so each student can take a seed planted in the soil home with them. Last year Lynn and Tim introduced the students to some of the basic concepts of designing a garden. They provided a large roll of paper for all the students to draw their garden designs. Afterward, Lynn and Tim presented the students' plan to the Rialto School Board and the Rialto City Council to foster awareness of teaching children that gardening is important and fun.

For three years, Lynn has worked with the San Bernardino Public Library and the American Girl project to teach girls who participated about some of the historical characters who had victory gardens. Lynn and her mother on the San Bernardino Library Board were planning a fundraiser for the library. They weren't sure what they would do. Lynn's sister, who serves on the Irvine Foundation Board, told them about another organization that had successfully done an American Girl fundraiser.

Lynn thought having an American Girl Victory Garden workshop would be fun and educational for young girls and attendees to learn about gardening. Stations were set up where the girls made paper, planted seeds, and made a berry jam. The UCCE San Bernardino County Master Food Preservers made food to sample, such as finger sandwiches, cakes, cookies, and other goodies from the American Girl cookbook.

Several people donated American Girl dolls and books to the San Bernardino Public Library. Any of the children who were not able to afford the American Doll event could check a doll and book out of the library and journal their thoughts before returning the library items.

A tea was held for the girls attending the first year. During the tea, each of the girls had an American Girl doll who had historically had a garden sit with them. The girls learned about historical characters like Kit, Addy, and Kaya. The families of the latter all grew and prepared their own food to survive. Kit Kittredge is an American Girl Doll whose family loses their comfortable life during the Great Depression. They had a victory garden, a vegetable stand and made their own preserves. Addy Walker is an American Girl doll who escaped slavery on a plantation in the 1860s. Addy helped on her family's gardens, where they grew all their own food. Kaya'aton'my (Kaya) is a Native American Girl doll. While the men of the tribe were away hunting, the women gathered, dried and prepared food. At the end of the event, one of the girls even won an American Girl doll!

The American Girl Victory Garden workshop that Lynn organizes each year is a well-attended, popular event. The organizers were sad they were not able to hold a workshop this year due to COVID restrictions. However, everyone is looking forward to having another workshop as soon as possible.

Lynn and Tim are highly skilled at helping people feel comfortable to think outside the box to come up with creative gardening solutions. They recently discussed how property at the St. Paul African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church in San Bernardino can be converted to a garden with a minister's alliance group. The AME Church does a lot of outreach on self-sufficiency, sustainability, and how to give back to the community. Having their own garden would be a promising avenue for them to sell their product and help the community.

The first step is to help them develop a design concept for the designated area that takes water constraints at the property into consideration and choose the best plants for their needs. They have asked the alliance group to consider planting berries or grapes. Lynn and Tim would also like to teach them how to preserve food and make jams and jellies. Knowing Lynn and Tim, they will make the garden a success!

Lynn and Tim - Spotlight UCCE San Bernardino County Master Gardeners
Like many UCCE Master Gardeners, Tim and Lynn have a life-long love of gardening. Tim grew up loving horticulture as a child and has been gardening for over 50 years. As a young adult, he had his own landscape company. Lynn developed a love of growing her own food and canning from her grandparents in North Carolina, who had 10 acres of land. Together, her grandparents raised pigs, chickens, geese and grew and preserved all their own vegetables and fruits.

I was so inspired by Lynn and Tim, their strong partnership, and their drive and passion for teaching the world how food insecurity can be alleviated. They were such an exciting and engaging couple that I could have spent many more hours chatting with them. UCCE San Bernardino County Master Gardeners and Master Food Preservers are thankful to Lynn and Tim for their dedication and support. They are an inspiration to us all!