Let Kids Grow - In The Garden!
Taking time to work in the garden can be turned into family fun when you get the kids involved. Children are usually fascinated with how things grow, and being a part of the process may even get them to try some new foods! Try some of these projects to get them interested, and not to mention, free help in the garden!
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- A bean teepee is a fun and relatively easy project. Assemble three 8-foot poles in a tepee shape, make sure you give them a good push several inches into the soil, and tie the poles together at the top with jute twine. Continue using the twine to make a loose net so the vines will have support, just make sure you leave one section open for a doorway. Plant pole bean seeds at the “base” of the poles and webbing, and watch them grow, and the kids will soon have a little hideaway with fresh beans close by for a snack.
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- Once your garden is planted, have the kids paint rocks as decorative row markers.
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- Hummingbird feeders are a common sight, but how about butterfly feeders? Make this one from PBS Parents with a clean ketchup bottle, fake flowers and a few other household items.
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- If you don’t have room for a full garden, try a few plants that can be grown in clean five-gallon buckets. Make sure there’s a drain hole in the bottom, add about an inch of gravel, broken old clay pots or old bricks, and add a good potting soil/compost mix. Plant cherry tomatoes, bush beans, cucumbers, or zucchini, following the planting guidelines.
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- Plant recipe-specific plants: have a spaghetti sauce or pizza row with tomatoes, oregano, basil and bell pepper; a salsa row can have tomatoes, cilantro, garlic, peppers and onions; plant chamomile, any type of mint, or lavender and make tea!
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- Sunflowers are always an amazement to children because they grow so tall. These beautiful giants can be grown in many layouts using a garden hose to make the design, leaving room for a path if you’re planting a mini-maze, then planting the seeds along the way, and sunflowers can even be trained to make a little house.
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- Grow flowers whose blossoms open at different times of the day: morning glories, daylilies, four o’clock, evening primrose and moonflowers.
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- A garden based on favorite storybooks is another good way to get them to dig in the dirt. Plants based on The Tales of Peter Rabbit, Stone Soup, and Blueberries for Sal are just a few ways to engage children in growing and eating what they’ve grown.
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- Adding a water feature doesn’t have to mean a huge pond with waterfall--small pond containers are available at garden centers, as well as water plants. Create a mini pond with this guide from Better Homes & GardensⓇ.
There are so many benefits to your family while spending time together outside. Gardening encourages your children to try new things, and gives them a knowledge of where their food comes from, along with a little biology. You may even be creating life-long gardeners. Most importantly, you’re making memories.
Courtesy of Chester County PA Realtor Scott Darling.
Photo credit: gardenateaseshops.com