OIly Rag: The kids’ garden
Thursday, 10 September 2015, 4:35 pm
Press Release: Frank and Muriel Newman
The kids’ garden
By Frank and Muriel
NewmanThe garden is not only a wonderful
place for kids to be kids, but at the same time they learn
about growing healthy and fresh food. They also get the
message about the benefits that come from putting in a
little bit of effort. While some
children may be disappointed to learn that toffee apples do
not grow on trees, those who persevere beyond such initial
disappointments will find huge rewards. Children who garden
love their greens and their enthusiasm will rub off on the
whole family!The first thing about
starting a children’s garden is that it should be
proportional to the size of the child - small - and it
should be full of interesting plants that are easy to
grow.Pretty much the same rules apply to
a kids’ garden as for a big-person’s plot: good fertile
soil, a warm sunny spot, and access to water. We recommend a
raised garden, because it’s easier to dig with a plastic
spade - and to a child it probably looks more like a sandpit
than a work site!According to our oily
rag letter writers, the trick is to get children involved
from the very start. That includes talking about what sort
of garden you should have, how big it should be, selecting
the timber for the frame, putting down the weed barrier,
dumping the soil, making compost, organising the worm farm
if you want one, selecting what to grow and where and when
to plant, when to pick, and best of all how to prepare it
all for eating.
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The garden only needs to
be about a metre or so square, or maybe a little more, so
make the frame about a metre by a metre - or say make it
long and narrow (a couple of metres by half a metre, but
depending on what spare or free timber you can locate) - so
little hands attached to short arms do not have a problem
reaching in. You could also used edging like stones, punga
or other logs, bricks and the like, if you do not have any
timber handy. Use compost that is light
and easy to work. Mix in some fertiliser like sheep pellets
(no putting in your mouth please!).A
kids’ garden should be fun as well as a productive, so we
like the idea of planting things in addition to vegetables.
Big, bright, happy, sunflowers are fantastic. Use the
bigger varieties that grow up to 3 meters tall and have
heads 25 cm across. Plant the seeds directly into the
soil.Swan plants are also great – they
are a full nature study in themselves, to see the
caterpillars transform into monarch
butterflies.As far as vegetables go, try
silver beet, carrots, lettuce, beans, peas, courgettes, and
cherry tomatoes that can be eaten whole by small
mouths.For herbs try mint (kids love the
smell), parsley, rosemary, and thyme. Add mint from the
kids’ garden and a slice of lemon to a cool jug of water
and you can delete fizzy drink from your weekly shopping
list!A reader has sent in an interesting
activity for kids. She says they grew vegetables in a
bottle. Here’s how it was done. “We took an empty two
litre plastic fizzy drink bottle and poured about 75mm of
top soil mixed with compost into the bottom. We then dropped
in some runner bean seeds and used a thick bamboo stick to
push the seeds under the soil but against the side of the
bottle so we could see them sprout and grow. The bamboo
stick was then push into the soil and left to stick out of
the top. In no time at all the beans sprouted and grew up
the bamboo and out of the bottle. It was really cool to
watch. We tried the same thing with cucumbers and leaf
lettuce. We had to cut the plastic bottle open to get to the
greens, which made them even more delicious when
eaten!”Please send in your spring tips
and queries by visiting the oily rag website (www.oilyrag.co.nz) or by writing to
Living off the Smell of an Oily Rag, PO Box 984,
Whangarei.
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