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If you are passionate about gardening and nature, chances are thatyou want your kids to get passionate about it, too. After all, gardeningencourages physical exercise, it’s fun, and it teaches a lot of lifelessons. If you try to force it or make it a chore, however, those kidswill balk fast. Enter the 10 garden activities to do with kids. When kids are outdoors and involved in something, they are muchmore likely to stick with it than they would if you simply decided tomake them weed the vegetable garden. Hey, we can’t blame them; wedon’t want to weed our own vegetable gardens. But find cool things todo in the backyard? We're in!
10 Garden ActivitiesTo Do With Kids
Cultivate a love of gardening in kids of all ages with garden activitiesfor kids that you can do at home. Here are some fun ways to defeatboredom with enriching activities that will inspire little gardenerseverywhere.
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PIZZA GARDEN
Pizza LoversIf you have pizza lovers inthe house, why not plant apizza garden! This is a great way tointroduce gardening tochildren.
Steps on Growing a Pizza GardenSection off a small parcel of garden space for the pizza gardenGrab some containers and plant all of the fixings for a perfectpizza.Nurture the seeds and watch them grow. Then, come harvest time, you can have a family pizza-makingparty made with fresh ingredients from the garden.
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RecommendedPizza Garden PlantsSome suggested essential seedsto plant in your pizza gardeninclude:
BasilOregano ParsleyTomatoes
OnionsGarlicPeppers
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T H I N G S T O F I N D
N A M E T H E B U G S N A M E T H E P L A N T S
N A M E T H E P O L L I N A T O R S
SCAVENGER HUNT
Touch Something Soft
Smell a Flower
Water a Plant
Touch Something Rough
Chase a Butterfly
Pick a Ripe Vegetable
Make a Pile of Leaves
Pick Some Weeds
T H I N G S T O D O
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You’ll need a piece of paper and a pencil for each child, along with achecklist of things to find. Walk your outdoor space to make your list.
*Use our resource page to find ideas to add to your scavenger hunt.
Lean your garden poles toward eachother so that they are evenly spread atthe base and bundled together at the top.Use your twine to bind the poles togetherat the peak firmly.Settle the base of the poles into theground and pack some additional soilaround the bases of each pole to securethem in the soil.If you’d like a more secluded enclosure,wrap the remaining twine between thepoles at intervals of approximately onefoot. This will give the growing vinessupport and provide the tendrilssomething to latch onto.Plant 3-4 seeds at the base of each poleand watch them grow and cover theteepee structure.
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4-6 gardenpoles/ stakesthat are at least6 feet in lengthTwineGarden SoilPole BeansLarge rock orstump to sit on
HOW TO BUILD IT YOU WILL NEED
SUPPLIES
CREATE A Garden Teepee
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Sprinkle a few seeds of grass into the footof a nylon stocking.
Fill the nylon stocking with a cup ofpotting soil and tie off at the end of the soilball.
You can use permanent markers to draw aface on the nylon and then place the ballat the top of a cup or glass so that it restson top of the rim.
Water the soil ball regularly.
Soon your grass head friend will sprout alovely head of year for you to let grow ortrim as you please.
GARDEN ARTPaint Garden Rocks for Plant Markers
Gather smooth stones fromaround the yard.
Use water based acrylic paint topaint them to look like thevegetables that you plan ongrowing in your garden!
Use them as plant markers inyour vegetable garden.
Make a Grass Head Friend
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Cut off the base of your vegetable
Put it in a bowl with a small amount of
warm water and place that in direct
sunlight. Change out water as needed.
Within a week, leaves should appear &
thicken at the base.
Did you know you can regrow some of your favorite food from bits that we would normally throw
away? Garden activities for kids can go from table to garden and back to table again.
Bean Sprouts
Carrots
Celery
Lettuce
Onions
REGROW KITCHEN SCRAPS
WHAT CAN YOU REGROW? HOW DO YOU DO IT?
Apples
Avocado
Cherries
Peaches
Tomatoes
Garlic
Ginger
Pineapple
Potatoes
Sweet Potato
For most seeds, remove, then dry the
seed and plant in soil.
Avocados, wash the seed after you
remove it. Using toothpicks or other
support material, balance the seed over
a jar or bowl of water.
Regrow from plant parts
Regrow from seed
Regrow old food
Take a piece of ginger with buds on it
and plant it, buds facing up.
Plant potatoes that are beginning to
sprout (whitish shoots).
*Use our resource page for detailed information on
regrowing each fruit and vegetable.
Save your egg crates and cracked eggshells and create a little starter herbgarden! Add some potting mix to each of the eggshell halves and plant some seeds inthe soil and water them. Place in a sunny spot, and before you know it, you will have fragrant andtasty herbs flourishing. Plant the seedlings in a bigger container or out in the garden as they growbigger.
Garden activities for kids can start in the kitchen. Did you know that brokeneggshells can make great seed starting pods?
Choose a glass container.Place rocks at the bottom of thecontainer. Soak dried sphagnum or sheet mossin water for a few seconds andsqueeze out any excess liquid. Using a funnel fill the container withseveral inches of soil. Add your plants.
Mini GARDENS
Create a Terrarium
Make a Mini Herb Garden out of Eggshells
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Cut the top portion of a two-liter soda bottleoff.Alternate adding a couple of inches of soil with athin layer of light sand. Repeat this layering process until the soil reaches acouple of inches from the top.Find a couple of earthworms in your garden andcarefully place them in your soil-filled bottle.Cover the open end of the bottle with plastic wrapand poke some holes in the wrap.Each day, remove the plastic wrap and add a coupleof tablespoons of water to the soil and replace thecover.Watch for changes in the soil composition over thenext two weeks. You should see a mixing of the layersand worm tunnels that facilitated it.Carefully return the worms and the soil contents tothe garden bed.
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TWO-LITER SODABOTTLE
EARTHWORMS
PLASTIC WRAP
WATER
Dive into some soil science and create a wormery which will allow you to watch how wiggly
worms penetrate the soil, mix things up, and help things grow.
CREATE A WORMERY
SUPPLIES
HOW TO BUILD IT
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*Use our resource page for detailed
information on worm composting.
It’s never too early to teach children about the importance of protectingour Earth and doing our part to reduce climate change. Starting your owncompost pile is a great place to start. All that you need to get started are some kitchen scraps and a corner ofthe yard that is unoccupied. Children will be fascinated that they canturn items we normally throw away into treasure, and your garden willbe happier for it.
K I T C H E N S C R A P S
Create a Compost Pile
B R O W N M A T E R I A L S G R E E N M A T E R I A L S
N O T E S
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*Use our resource page for detailed information on how to start a compost pile.
RESOURCES
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How to Start a Compost PileWorm CompostingThe Importance of Garden Worms
How to Make a Raised Bed Using Pallets
Mason Bee HousesCreating a Pollinator Friendly GardenTop Plants That Attract PollinatorsTypes of Pollinators
How to Find Your Planting ZoneHow To Start A Garden With KidsChildren’s Books About Gardening18 Fruits & Vegetables You CanRe-Grow from Kitchen Scraps
Kid's Garden Scavenger Hunt Ideas