Tag: gardening with kids

  • How to Get Your Kids Outside With a Natural, DIY Playhouse

    How to Get Your Kids Outside With a Natural, DIY Playhouse

    When I was a kid, to play out in nature for hours on end wasn’t just a privilege–it was my natural inclination! Over just a few short decades, we’ve domesticated our kids and planted them firmly in front of glowing screens and in school desks, and we wonder why so many problems crop up. For the cooped-up kid, a day outside is the best medicine. Here’s a great little project to turn a small patch of land into a seasonal, living, and edible playhouse, and it’s even easy enough for your children to help you build it!

     

    The Runner Bean Teepee

    What You Need:

    1) 8 – 10 long bamboo canes (6 to 7 feet minimum, all the same length).

    2) Gardening twine or zip ties.

    3) A packet or two of runner bean seeds.

    4) A large spool of gardening twine or a roll of chicken wire (optional).

     

    How to Build It:

    1) Choose a spare area of garden, either on a border, or on the lawn. Choose a spot where you’ll be okay with the kids playing.

    2) To create the circular frame of your teepee, push the bamboo canes into the ground, starting with four equidistant canes and filling in the spaces between. Leave a large gap between two of the canes for an entrance. Secure the tops of the canes together using the twine or zip ties. At this point, it should look like the frame to a teepee.

    3) For best results, reinforce the teepee frame with either chicken wire, or a network of gardening string.

    4) Dig one square foot (12″ by 12″ and 12″ deep) around the base of each bamboo cane.

    5) Add compost, aged manure, or seed-starting soil.

    5) Sow two runner bean seeds approximately 1 to 2″ deep at the base of each cane.

    6) As you sow each seed, fill the hole with water. Once the water has drained, gently cover the hole with soil and water once more. Depending on your climate, you may also start your runner beans early in 3″ pots and transplant when they reach about 6″ tall.

    7) The bean plants should find and cling to the bamboo naturally. If they don’t, you can carefully wrap the main shoots around the first part of the bamboo canes or chicken wire until they start to climb on their own.

    8) Keep weeds down and moisture in using grass clippings or bark chips around the young runner bean plants. Water frequently. You may start to see slugs preying on your seedlings–no matter! Remove the slugs every evening until the bean plants are about 6″ tall. Once the plants start producing, harvest the beans regularly to encourage growth!

     

    Now you and your children can watch as the beans quickly grow and cover the frame to create a living playhouse! Your kids will love the “job” of harvesting their own beans, and the satisfaction of having built something so fun! Start growing early in spring, and this playhouse will last ‘til the end of summer.

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  • 5 Easy Plants for Kids to Grow

    5 Easy Plants for Kids to Grow

    Teaching children to garden is one of the best lessons they could possibly learn. And the younger, the better! There are so many benefits to getting them out in the garden with you: sunshine, fresh air, exercise, bonding time away from distracting devices and the basic essential skill of growing one’s own food.

    To guarantee a young child’s interest in gardening, it’s good to plan on some crops that will be sure to grow and be productive. Below is a list of some of the easiest and best plants for kids to grow to initiate them into the wide and wonderful world of gardening:

    Sunflowers: Most kids love sunflowers, with their bright bold bloom and the way they track the sun throughout thegardening-with-kids day. These very visually-striking and low-maintenance flowers are an excellent option for kids, with the added bonus of seeds to harvest once they’re dry.

    Peas: Peas tend to be a staple of most small children’s diets so it’s a delight for them to watch them grow in the garden, and shelling peas is a classic homestead chore for younger children. Peas also tend to be quick and easy to grow, so they’re a very fun addition to the garden for little ones.

    Strawberries: Who doesn’t love strawberries? Most kids certainly can’t get enough, and they’re a really fun and easy option for both gardens and pots. Strawberries make a good choice for the young urban gardener, as they can be grown in a pot on a porch or in a small yard, and they’re extra fun to hunt for on the vine.

    Radishes: Another easy plant to grow that young children will greatly enjoy, radishes are cute and colorful and another quick crop. Nothing is quite as exciting as digging into the soil to check the size of a radish and pulling them out of the ground, which is bound to keep children engaged and excited to see when their radishes will be ready.

    Carrots: Carrots, like peas, are often very familiar to even the youngest of children, and due to their sweetness often one of the few vegetables you can convince a picky eater to entertain on their dinner plate. Like radishes they are easy and relatively quick, and also super fun to pull out of the ground. A classic staple of any edible garden, carrots are an excellent choice for little gardeners.

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