5 Vegetable Garden Ideas

Everyone knows there are many benefits from having your own garden. Feeling a sense of pride as you watch the fruits (or vegetables, as the case may be) of your labor begin to flourish is just one of them. And your garden doesn’t ever have to be boring or the same year after year. Discover five vegetable garden ideas that will give you something creative to try for your next planting.

Plant a pizza garden
Vegetable gardening with a theme can be great fun for all ages. A theme garden is the perfect way to get the kids outside enjoying nature. Involving them will provide Read the rest of this entry »

Top 10 Veggies For a Kids Garden

June 30, 2009 by Lynn Sherman  
Filed under Gardening with Kids

Many children find great joy and satisfaction in growing their own vegetables and then serving them up for dinner. Below are a list of easy and quick to grow veggies that are perfect for a beginner’s garden.

1) Beans-These large seeds are Read the rest of this entry »

Your Children Should Learn Vegetable Gardening

June 30, 2009 by Lynn Sherman  
Filed under Gardening with Kids

If you can create a sense of nature, patience, and an appreciation of work they’ve done themselves in your children, you will have accomplished something great. This will have provided them one of the longest lasting gifts you could give them. One way to accomplish this is to encourage them to learn vegetable gardening. All that is needed is a <!–more-memberlock–>small patch of earth, some seeds, and water. Some other things that may be added along the way will be wonder, laughter, and dirty faces. All of this will be mixed together to provide a very memorable project and experience.

Obviously, it is best to have your vegetable garden outside. That is if you have the space available. With a good shovel, you can cut an outline of the garden in the grass. Your child can then pull the sod away and set it aside it for composting. This will be another great lesson involving the cycle of nature that can be saved for another day. After you have bare earth, your child can help turn the soil with a spoon or trowel until it’s workable by hand. Have your child place the seeds on the top of the soil, cover lightly with earth, and add water. You have just taught your little one the basics of vegetable gardening!

How Can I have A Vegetable Garden In the City?

Even if you do not have a backyard, you can do vegetable gardening. A perfect place for a container garden are apartment balconies. They will get plenty of sun and they will be pretty displays until the vegetables are ripe and ready for harvest. Rather than using plot of earth, your child can fill a container with soil you have purchased from the store. To provide for drainage, you can use a recycled margarine container. Punch holes in the bottom for drainage. Your child can sprinkle on seeds, cover lightly with soil and be responsible for watering the plants every day.

Vegetable gardening can help teache children patience. This is because they have to wait for the seeds to sprout. Once the plant has broken above the soil, they can watch the daily growth of the sprouts. They can follow the growth until the plants are full sized. Because this can be a long process for little kids that may have short attention spans, you might plant something new every week. This will keep them entertained for the whole summer. After the plants have bloomed, you and your child can read about how they will soon grow food. Your kids will be excited to finally see little red tomatoes or green peppers appear on their plant.

It can be a satisfying experience for the children of today’s throwaway society. Returning to the olden days, when we raised our own fruits and vegetables. Not just for the hard work but for the feeling of accomplishment. When children know that what we buy in the store is not the only option as to how we get our food instils a sense of responsibility. They will carry this feeling and knowledge with them all their lives. As they grow older, they will think back on their vegetable gardening with fond memories. And they will probably share the experience with their own children.

Author: Dave Owen
About the Author:

Dave Owen is the owner of My Garden, where you can learn with me as I create a new garden…

Article Source: ArticlesBase.comYour Children Should Learn Vegetable Gardening

How to Grow Vegetables with (and for) Your Kids!

June 26, 2009 by Lynn Sherman  
Filed under Gardening with Kids

How to Grow Vegetables with (and for) Your Kids!

Author: Jane Thomas

The best way to ensure that your children eat healthy is to grow your own vegetables! And the trick to getting your children interested in healthy, organic vegetables is helping them grow their own.

You and your children can grow your own vegetables even if you don’t have masses of space to grow vegetables in your garden or a specified vegetable plot, since there are more and more possibilities for growing vegetables in containers.

Here’s how you do it:

1. Set aside a couple of Read the rest of this entry »

Make Gardening a Family Event

June 26, 2009 by Lynn Sherman  
Filed under Gardening with Kids

Make Gardening a Family Event

Author: Organic Gardener

Show them how much you enjoy gardening. Spend time in your garden. It is especially easy to stimulate a child’s interests when they see you having fun.

Make gardening easy. Don’t expect a perfect garden. Allow your family to work Read the rest of this entry »

Garden Safety For Kids

June 24, 2009 by Lynn Sherman  
Filed under Gardening with Kids

Do you keep your home safe for your child? Well keep them safe in the garden as well. A flower or vegetable garden of their own can be a wonderful thing for a child, but if left unattended or unsupervised by an adult, it can become Read the rest of this entry »