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Gardening…with Kids!

gardening with kids

I have always loved having a garden, but we have not always had much space or time to get a bigger garden accomplished.  We have had success with a few small flowerbed veggie gardens, where we have grown carrots, okra, onions, snow peas, radishes, squash, and zucchini.  This year, with the boys being a little older, I felt was a great time to till up a part of our backyard and start a family garden.  My hubby bought a used tiller and we also borrowed our neighbor's tiller and we went to work.  For the past three days, we have been tilling up land, raking up grass, killing grubs, and working hard!  Gardening with kids is so much fun!  It's awesome to work alongside my family and know that we all are working towards a common goal:  to grow veggies for our family to eat!  I am not sure what we will plant, but I'm planning for okra, yellow squash, zucchini squash, tomatoes, peppers, and….I don't know what else…but it's exciting!

I thought it would be fun to encourage everyone to start growing your own vegetables this summer.  There are TONS of options for growing a garden, even if you don't have a lot of room.  Check out my gardening board on Pinterest for a few awesome ideas!  There are also lots of natural, organic ways to take care of pests and to fertilize your garden, so check those out before you unload tons of chemicals into your garden.

If you have kids, here are a few fun ways that the boys have helped us with our gardening project.

Ways for kids to help with a family garden:

1.  Older kids (4+) can help dig up and pull weeds and grass.

2.  Collect harmful grubs and kill them.  (Baby D was best at spotting the grubs after we tilled the garden!)

3.  Water the garden.

4.  Help plant seeds.  (Plant indoors with these awesome DIY seed pots.)

5.  Spray weeds with vinegar in a spray bottle (Outside of gardening area, you don't want to get close to where you'll be gardening, because it messes up the pH of the soil.  Baby D was quite good at this…as long as he held the spray bottle pointing the right way and he wasn't spraying valuable things…)

6.  Set ladybugs free in the garden as a natural pesticide.

7.  Help parents set up trellises for peas and beans.

8.  Pick out plants and help make a plan for the garden.

9.  Help transplant seedlings.

10.  Throw old fruit and veggie scraps in a composter or compost pile.

11.  Harvest, wash, and eat the fruits and veggies!

Does your family have a garden?  What are some more ways that kids can help out?

raking

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Julie

Friday 9th of January 2015

I miss having a garden! We mainly had the kids pull weeds, plant seeds, and water. 

amanda mcmahon

Wednesday 5th of March 2014

My kids help water our tree -we're on the 5th floor of an apartment... our cat digs up most anything else!

Krystal Bernier

Tuesday 4th of March 2014

I am so jealous that you can start gardening already, I have about 4 feet of snow covering my beds. I was able to start my greenhouse seeds though. (Up here in the great white north we fill our windowsills by starting seeds early due to our short gardening season) I will be starting the rest of my seeds in two weeks. I love that you're getting the whole family involved, gardeing is such a rewarding activity. Great tips on getting the kids to help out as well, they will have fun eating the fruits of your labour!

Gena

Wednesday 5th of March 2014

This was an older post, BUT it is almost time to start our garden up again!  I can't imagine having to live with snow on the ground in March!  I'm glad you're still able to start your seeds indoors though.

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