How to Grow Vegetables with (and for) Your Kids!
The best way to ensure that your children eat healthy is to grow your own vegetables! And the trick to getting your children interested in healthy, organic vegetables is helping them grow their own.
You and your children can grow your own vegetables even if you don’t have masses of space to grow vegetables in your garden or a specified vegetable plot, since there are more and more possibilities for growing vegetables in containers.
Here’s how you do it:
1. Set aside a couple of containers or a small area of your garden and designate it the "children's garden". Obviously, you as a parent will be doing most of planting, tending for vegetable plants, weeding and watering, but let your child take pride in selecting (from the list of easy to grow vegetables) which vegetables to grow and how the plants will be positioned. If you don’t have a garden, there are many vegetables that can be grown in containers!
2. Choose vegetables that produce something to eat quickly, such as radish, spring onion, baby carrot and baby salad leaf. Quick growing vegetables are the best way to insure your child remains interested in vegetables and gardening! Tomatoes are another obvious choice, especially cherry types, as children can pick and eat them straight off the plant. Cucumbers are great candidate also. The traditional type is too large, but looks for varieties which are ready when they’re just 10cm long.
3. Encourage your child and to keep up the enthusiasm, by letting your child choose some of easy to grow vegetables, and you will both be delighted with the results. Find out what vegetables grow in your area, and what time of year each vegetable should be planted. (Check the library for magazines and books on vegetable gardening, look it up on the internet in gardening related sites and forums, or ask a gardener or farmer in your neighborhood).
4. Remember, make growing your own vegetables a FUN activity! Your child will love digging up the potatoes and carrots – make it a game, like digging for buried treasure! And watching seeds grow from tiny seedlings into grown, mature plants, tending for them and keeping an eye on their progress every day, protecting them from invaders (slugs and insects), really is quite an adventure even for us adults, let alone for the children.
Additional benefit from home growing vegetables with your kids is that it will encourage your kids to eat more vegetables – especially the fussy eaters! Let them choose the vegetable seeds or plants, help them plant and tend for vegetables together, and finally harvest the fresh vegetables. Home grown vegetables taste SO much better when they are fresh and not mass produced or bought at the supermarket. Tasting the difference between home grown vegetables and the supermarket kind is like eating a completely different vegetable. And your kids will notice the difference!
Another benefit that comes from growing your own vegetables with the help of your children is that children actually learn what vegetables look like, where vegetables come from and how vegetables grow. Furthermore, use this opportunity to teach them how to prepare vegetables for eating. Given that more and more children seem to have difficulty recognizing basic vegetables and knowing what to do with them, learning how to grow vegetables in your home garden or in containers will provide your children with a valuable education and a useful life skill– while at the same time they have fun and plenty of fresh air!
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Tagged with: Cucumbers • Easy To Grow Vegetables • Growing Vegetables In Containers • Vegetable Plot


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Good thoughts. My 3 year granddaughter loved planting green beans last fall. They came up and grew quickly so she stayed interested. When they were ready, she picked them, washed them, snapped them, and then she and her mom cooked them. And did she ever eat them too.! She and her sister eat the Sweet 100 tomatoes right off the vines too. Fun stuff. (East Texas)
cooked cabbage, onions, cauliflower.
just use the vinegar and regular salt omit the garlic and seasoning salt….at least that's the way we make them in the south. Let sit to wilt the cucumbers, we also add raw onions sliced in rings….delicious
A new seven-minute mini-documentary on the White House garden, the second installment of the Inside the White House series, smartly places Michelle Obama’s fruit and vegetable plot in its rightful political context by connecting it with victory gardens, education reform, seed saving, and Thomas Jefferson and Monticello. The best part, though, is probably the neat time-elapsed view of the garden’s progress thus far.
I usually buy potting soil but then add more perlite and peat moss which helps hold moisture and with the density. For container types I use pretty much any type. They're usually really cheap at rummage sales or 2nd hand stores. Make sure you put the same water/sun type plants in a pot. If you want a large pot but don't want to fill it fill of soil (gets too heavy), you can fill the bottom with pop cans, styrofoam pieces, etc. As far as how many per pot, check how large the plants will grow, if they spread, etc. Usually there are tags with them that state that, or if you buy from a nursery they should know.
Soak in salt & vinegar water, add a bit of pepper and they are Delicious.=)
How dummified do you have to be? Good book, bougth it last year.
Growing vegetables in containers
Glad to hear KRudd is spending Easter making a vegetable plot
Great Job Kelly! I see you used closet rod hooks to support your buckets. That is what my husband used to support the chain link top rail that we used in our hanging system. they are extremely strong and were bolted to 4×4 beams that he screwed into our existing privacy fence. I know that your garden will be producing in no time. If I had known how great planting the tomatoes upsidedown was, I would have started a long time ago. We have tons of fruit set already, Now I am waiting on cukes.
RT just got off the phone to .. convo about sex, camwhores, porn and cucumbers
xx
a vegetable plot I now have!
Lucky you!
Growing vegetables in containers