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  • Signs of Spring In Your Mailbox

    We're in the midst of a winter snowstorm and I am so pregnant that I have taken on the appearance of a Weeble. Getting up off the couch much less doing more than the bare minimum of daily chores is a challenge. In short, I am cranky and weary.

    So I found this article, about those seed catalogs that start showing up on your doorstep at this time of year, was a pleasant reminder that there will be spring weather and workable ground again someday, probably someday soon.

    According to the story, flipping through garden catalogs can be a nice teaching tool for kids. Talking about the colors or the shapes can be fun with young children, and older ones can actually read them and help pick out what to grow in the garden this year.

     

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  • Front Yard Gardens Improve Diets, Communities

     

    Ripping up the front lawn and planting a garden may sound rash, but not only is this new trend improving the diets and culinary skills of many families across the country, it's also a great way to strike up conversations with neighbors, and make a statement about the importance of fresh, local, seasonal eating. 

    Architect and artist Fritz Haeg is part of a project called 'Edible Estates' (the book, due out in 2008, is called Edible Estates: Attack on the Front Lawn), and says he's been overwhelmed by the response people have had to the front yard garden, and who want him to design their front garden next.

    'People are obsessed with their homes, creating these cocoons that isolate them,' he said. 'This project is about reaching out, getting them connected to their streets."  Not only will it look beautiful, but, as one front gardener points out, growing your own organic fruits, veggies and herbs will ensure clean, healthy eating without breaking the bank. It may help you make new friends, too: Some front-yard gardeners say that ripping out the sod and putting in vegetables gave the neighbors their first-ever excuse to speak to them.

    We live on a busy suburban street - and only know a handful of our neighbors.  I'm thinking this could be just what the doctor ordered - a great conversation piece, and a healthy family project to boot!  Think the car exhaust would contaminate the crops, though?

    [Via NewforParents.org]


  • Vegetables Don't Grow in the Grocery Store

    Gardens are great for kids. In addition to teaching kids about different vegetables and gardening tools, gardens are also an excellent way to learn responsibility because it's much easier to dispose of a dead tomato stalk than a dead cat. And a garden will get the kids out of the house for a while!

    My father-in-law keeps a large garden at his home. Whenever we visit, my daughter spends lots of time out there with him, asking hundreds of questions and studying the growth of the plants since her last visit. She loves it and is eagerly awaiting the harvest. Now if we could only get her to eat her vegetables.

    For the city dwellers among us, you can easily grow a mini garden on your rooftop, balcony, or windowsill. Here are some tips from Texas A&M University for gardening in the concrete jungle.

    Kids are naturally attracted to dirt. Gardening can turn their love of dirt into a constructive activity. After all, carrots taste much better than mud pies. Or do they?
  • Open Your Mouth: Grow Your Own Dinner

    Early this spring our family had a great time planting a huge herb garden, with a few tomato plants thrown in for good measure. Our preschool-aged children were totally up to the task of helping dig and place the tiny seedlings, and thereafter if they were bored, they could be sent out to water or weed the plant beds. Within a couple weeks, virtually every meal we prepared had something in it that we had grown ourselves.

    Then we moved. Now we've got a plastic pot of basil from Trader Joe's sitting on the steps, and I have a couple of teensy pots of grow-your-own parsley seeds from the dollar bins at Target, which have yet to sprout. Thank goodness for farmer's markets, right? Only I can't send my kids to the farmer's market to play when they're squirrelly.

    I can't rave enough about gardening, on any scale, as a family activity. Even though nurturing a plant hasn't made an immediate impact on my picky-eating older child's habits, her interest in what each plant is and how it's used gives me hope for her palate. And it doesn't require a particularly green thumb: herbs practically grow themselves, you can even buy Chia Herb Gardens

    This week if I had lemon thyme, I'd be roasting a chicken. If I had tarragon, I'd be making a big mustardy potato salad. And if I had dill, I'd be grilling salmon with it. Instead, I guess we're having pesto. I can't wait to get another garden into the ground, and neither can the kids: watering the ficus isn't quite cutting it for them.

    George Hapgood explains the benefits of gardening for kids, without even getting to the part where you can make them put in some hard labor go play in the dirt when they're working your nerves. Kalyn's completely sparking my envy with her herbs and vegetables (maybe I can go steal some of my herbs from the old house?). And over at Adventures in my Urban Garden you can learn about how one person is getting her dirt fix right in the city, participating in a community garden project.
     


  • Urban Gardener: Willow Wigwam for Kids

    willow wigwamAre you thinking about gettin' your yard or garden (or patch of dirt) on for Spring? You might want to consider setting aside a corner for this cute willow wigwam. It's no secret that kids love to garden, and this is a fun family project. Plus, this is way cooler (and far more eco-friendly) than any of those ugly, plastic, snap-together playhouses.

    My brother built one of these out of bamboo in his yard, only his is about 10 feet high and big enough for 3 or 4 kids to fit easily inside. He started with green bamboo poles that he buried in the ground then bent gently together to form the top of the teepee. As the bamboo dried it got more sturdy.

    In the spring sweet peas and flowering vines cover the the structure making a green and shady haven. In the summer he grows squash and vine tomatoes on it, and his kids get a kick out of harvesting the vegetables that grow in and out of their "playhouse." In the winter, devoid of greenery, it serves as a reminder of fun times past and future.

    No yard? Perhaps your local park or garden co-op would be willing to let you build one of these. You never know until you ask.

    [photo: kiddley.com] 



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