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Organic Gardening and Kids: A Natural Match

By Lisa Taylor Read more articles, family, gardening, healthy eating, kids, local eating, organic foods, and videos

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If you want to foster a love of nature in your child, consider tending an organic garden together. Gardening with our children helps them understand where food comes from and teaches them how to care for plants, creatures, other people and the planet. It is also super-duper fun!

Organic gardening isn’t about the plants or the bugs or the gardener, but rather how these work together, to become greater than any one single element. Children want to care for and help the garden by watering, weeding and feeding plants compost. They also love to explore the creature world! The critters that crawl and skitter, slime and slither, flutter and fly all help the garden, and we can help the creatures in return by building bug houses and creating habitat.

The invitation to garden

If you want to garden with your children, invite them into the garden world. Teach them where to walk, how to pick and eat the plants and how to use the garden tools — then let them do the work. Nothing instills a sense of accomplishment and ownership better than entrusting children with good tools, teaching them how to use them and having them rescue an overgrown area from the stranglehold of bindweed.

Keep a critter journal

Great gardens start with great soil, so get down low and explore yours from a bug’s eye view. Caring for bugs and spiders is critical for maintaining balance in the garden ecology, so why not spend the afternoon learning that all living things need shelter, sun, water, soil, food and air? Better yet, find a magic spot in the garden where you can keep a critter journal over time.

Make the space kid-friendly

Kids will be kids, so make space for them in the garden. Help them learn where their feet go by making paths wide and obvious (use straw or burlap sacks) and by keeping beds narrow (perfect for jumping across). Practice being aware of your feet by installing stepping stones and playing “hot lava” games.

Choose plants that are edible and easy to grow

Perennial herbs, annual vegetable and flowers, fruit trees and vines are perfect choices for family gardens. Use all your senses to learn everything you can about the garden environment. We learn so much about our world by looking carefully, smelling, touching, listening and tasting. Don’t underestimate your child’s capabilities. Anything you like doing in the garden, your children can also do with training.

Learn along with your child

Kids’ science and gardening books are great resources. Read seed catalogs together, and track your garden’s progress with a special journal. Make plant collages each month to remember what was growing.

Lastly, remember that you don’t need a backyard to do this. Grow and eat plants, explore the creature world and experience nature in a community garden, or in a rooftop or container garden. Even growing a seed indoors or having a worm bin under the sink can be an amazing adventure in gardening. Grow on!


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  1. User_48
    KASHIBAMAFAN commented on this. over 2 years ago

    I have just discovered this site and love it. My husband and I have been gardening
    with our grandsons for years and they still love it at ages 11 and 13. Since they have been too old for their swingset this year they recycled plastic buckets and hung tomato plants from the swingset. Already they are planning something new to do next year…

  2. 48_img_0303
    katrinakr commented on this. over 2 years ago

    I really love this idea

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      KatLuvsShoes over 1 year ago

      Great minds (and great Katrinas!) think alike! I’m very into having my sons know where their food comes from and how to make health decisions.

  3. User_48
    peytonsmom16 commented on this. over 2 years ago

    I think this is a wonderful idea. I took my son to pick green beans and he was amazed how the beans grew and that a farmer must tend and care for and pick acres of beans.

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    ashleyreynolds commented on this. over 2 years ago

    Such a Wonderful idea!!! My son (only 7 months now) and I are definitely going to enjoy an organic garden once he is old enough. I am so excited!!!