
1. They'll have the chance to see that food isn't just "born" at the store.
2. It's a great opportunity to get them to try new things!
3. They get to see that bees only purpose is not stinging people. You can talk about why you need bees for your garden.
4. Butterflies! Just today, my kids ran around with butterflies while trying to catch them in a net. Since I knew they wouldn't catch them, I just let them run and run with at least four different types of butterflies that were by our garden in less than a 20 minute period.
5. Helps them to have pride in their work -- I know that my kids are always more pleased when we are able to pick produce off of a plant that they helped to plant.
6. Responsibilty -- Depending on your kids ages, they could be responsible for making sure the garden is watered.
7. Generosity -- Sometimes you just have too much of a certain type of produce. Let your kids learn the benefits of giving by giving away excess produce to friends, family, and neighbors. In our area, there are even some of the food pantries for the less fortunate that will let you bring in extra produce from your garden to put in the lobby.
8. Cooking lessons -- They can learn how to prepare things that you might not normally want them to make because of high costs. When you have pounds and pounds of strawberries, you can teach them to make freezer jam, whereas you might not want to spend so much money on enough strawberries at the grocery store.
9. It gives you the perfect excuse to start a composting bin (compost bins can be made inexpensively). With this, your kids can learn about decompostion of vegetable matter, and you can even help them to understand why it's better for that banana peel to go in the compost bin rather than a plastic trash bag.
10. If you teach them how to garden, you will be giving them a gift that will just keep giving. As they grow older, they can help their children to appreciate gardening, etc. (Of course, you could also get to the point that they want nothing to do with gardening when they are older. But, let's look at the positive side, shall we?)
11. They need some time away from electronic games and gadgets.
12. Starting some plants from seeds will give them an even greater sense of accomplishment, and it's a great science lesson. Imagine their delight when they look outside to see the tall tomato plant with a bounty of red fruit on it, and to know that they helped it grow from a tiny seed.
13. It helps to connect them to the past. My kids get excited when we have read from books like the Little House series and they recognize things that we have done too. There is comfort, I think, in feeling that you are in the present and that you can look to the future, but also, that you feel a connection to the past.
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13 comments:
I SO wanted to plant a vegetable garden with the kids this year, but couldn't. We have had our house on the market for almost a year now and I thought it would have been a waste to plant a garden and then move before anything grew. Of course , we're still here...but there's always next year!
Thanks for stopping by my blog today!
What a wonderful idea. Before moving into my condo, I had so much fun with my little effort at a veggie garden.
SJR
The Pink Flamingo
http://thepinkflamingo.blogharbor.com/blog/_archives/2008/7/30/3814345.html
This is soooooooooo excellent!! yes, yes...thirteen times. Perfect for the week.
My 13 is posted...drop by and have a laugh or two! Won't you?
I love my garden and think it's so important for kids to see where things come from. Good for you for making the effort to teach them! I know it's a lot of work!
Happy TT
Gardening with the kids! Yes!
Have you looked into any of the websites with the children's theme gardens? I'd like to do a fairy garden next year and maybe a container garden of pizza herbs.
Also -
The Little House series. The best summer I had with my daughter was the year she was reading those. She was so well behaved - her hero, Laura Ingalls, never sassed her mom!
What a great post. I can relate to so much of what you have said. And the Little House cookbook is a good way to bring the thing full circle.
It's cool to show kids they can make food happen.
I might have to start a garden with my kids for reason #11 alone.
My wife and I had our house built and just put on an addition. Perhaps gardening would be a great project for us to try to do together.
My 34th TT is up: 13 comments you can make to your physician while he's performing a colonoscopy on you. Here's the link.
I love Gardening and miss having one of my own, since I have moved south everything I plant dies. I guess I need to buy a book about gardening in the south. Kim
Great list, gardens do teach kids so much.My kids love to garden. Miss will pick the green beans right from the garden and eat them. It seems my children like to eat more veggies if they took care of them and watched them grow.
Kelly
I love this entry. DH and I don't have a garden but we are discussing it. This post helps me see how beneficial it would be for DS. Have a great day.
I would love to have a garden eventually but a little hard living in an apt Happy TT
I'm so jealous! I'd love to have a garden. Our summer has been so yucky though, that the poor thing probably would have just drown! LOL
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