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How To Make Your Kids Love Gardening

How To Make Your Kids Love Gardening

Kids change your life from the roots up, don’t they?

When we’re talking about home, they influence your choices for home furnishings, as well as the patio furnishings. Your garden also has to allow for some fun toys.

However, your garden can be both a fun zone and a place where they explore the world through observation, engagement and personal investment. In other words, through gardening.

If you would like your children to grow green fingers, we have put together the steps that will help you turn them into passionate little gardeners.

Not only is there a trove of benefits for the kids, but there’s a nugget for you too: a peace of mind knowing that your little ones will appreciate your plants more (and watch their step round your flower beds).

Before you and your kids get your hands dirty, it’s noteworthy to have a look at all the positive aspects of gardening with kids:

But, what’s the nitty gritty here?

Step one – Pique their interest

Just a straightforward exclamation: “Let’s do some gardening!” is highly unlikely to spark any motivation in your children. It is wiser to take the indirect approach like asking them to help you with pot decoration.

It could also be intriguing to take them with you to a garden centre to pick their own plants and seeds. Ask them to help with watering the plants – give them their own watering cans or bottles with pierced lids.

You can even have a water fight in summer! The point is, work with any glimpses of interest they show in plants or garden and try to include them by drawing on their talents or preferences.

Step two – Select the plants

This could be a powerful magnet. Allow your kids to choose the flowers and veggies they’ll grow, but steer them to consider some of these foolproof options:

You are really spoilt for choice when it comes to the plant selection. It’s probably a good idea to start with one plant and when the kids see the fruit of their labour, hopefully they’ll get hooked and ask for more.

Step three – Prompt them into action

Kids love being active and engaging all the senses, and there’s no shortage of things they can do while gardening. Here are some to get your imagination started:

If you like the general idea but are hesitant about risking the garden you cherish with your children’s miniature attention spans and brimming energy, remember that you can simply give them pots and a patch as a starter kit – with a promise to give them more territory if they prove themselves as budding gardeners.

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