The Kiwanis Club of Zielona Góra in Poland teamed up with the Kiwanis Club of Frankfurt, Germany, for Projekt Klima(T), which teaches young students in each country how to grow an eco-friendly garden. Elementary school students in Słonem maintain three raised beds of vegetables, herbs and flowers — including onions, daffodils and rosemary — and study how they grow through daily journals, photos and videos.
The Kiwanis Club of Montego Bay celebrated Jamaica’s National Tree Planting Day last October by planting fruit and shade trees at four primary schools for students to enjoy for years to come.
Visitors to the Peter and Paul Wildlife Park in Switzerland can watch the park’s lynxes play while staying comfortable in the shade thanks to trees planted by the Kiwanis Club of St. Gallen.

The Kiwanis Club of Mt. Laurel in New Jersey raises money for student scholarships through an annual pumpkin-decorating event before Halloween.

In Germany, the Kiwanis Club of Achern-Ortenau sponsored a multiple-day tree-planting event with a local vocational school. About 350 students planted 5,000 two-year-old English oak trees to reforest an area hit hard by an ash tree fungus.

Gardeners in Belgium support the Kiwanis Club of Mons en Hainaut’s projects for children by purchasing plants from the club. The plant sale offers 117 varieties of tomatoes and flowers, including a tomato called “La Kiwanienne (The Kiwanian).”
The Kiwanis Giving Garden in Brookfield, Connecticut, has provided thousands of pounds of fresh vegetables for local food pantries and soup kitchens for more than a decade. The garden is a signature project of the Kiwanis Club of Greater Danbury.