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Family
Fun - Growing a Family Garden
Real Families, Real FUN: Get Out!
Growing a Family Garden
By Pamela Stock for Real Families, Real Fun
What makes gardening the perfect family activity? "Dirt!"
shouts a gleeful Ely, 4, who always manages to find an excuse
to dig when it's his turn to water the marigolds. His grandmother,
Susan, is more philosophical: "It's exciting to watch
something you've planted flourish under your care."
Cultivating a family garden -- be it vegetables, flowers
or an arrangement of potted plants on the patio -- has something
for everyone. Adults get the satisfaction of beautifying
their surroundings, and young kids get to play in the dirt.
Everyone gets to enjoy the thrill of success, watching the
flowers bloom or the vegetables ripen. Plus, it's an excuse
for the whole family to be outside together, without having
to jump in the car.
Here, some tips on starting a family garden.
- Look up, look down
Determining what to plant depends both on how much sunlight
you get and what type of soil (rich or sandy, for instance)
you have. Read the plant cards and discuss what will grow
best for you with the staff at your local garden supply
store.
- Everyone gets a plant
Let each family member choose a plant or to call his own
-- and to care for. Note: Some parents panic if a child's
special plant isn't faring well and will even replace
a dying one. Others talk to kids first about the possibilities
that plants don't always grow, and say that the kids aren't
as disappointed as parents fear. Remember too, while there
are a few special plants, the whole garden is shared.
- Assign age-appropriate jobs and tools
Young kids can hold the hose or watering can, older kids
can tie vines to stakes and EVERYONE gets to hunt for
ripe tomatoes and strawberries. Gardening shovels can
be sharp, but small children can dig with plastic shovels.
- Dressing up is part of the fun
My son wears his rain boots and plastic construction hat
every time he heads outside with a watering can, which
adds to the festivity. Wear sun hats.
- Add art
Your kids can decorate the garden with found stones (painted,
if you like) or pieces of broken flower pots to make the
garden their own. Similarly, you can make your own garden
stakes by painting wooden dowels or gluing pieces of rock
to them.
- Keep it simple
If the kids burn out on some of the maintenance the green
thumb in the family insists on, let them play in other
parts of the yard. Gardening should be fun, not a chore.
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