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Cabbage Patch Kids: Start a Vegetable Garden with the Whole Family

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Spring has sprung and itโ€™s time to start a vegetable garden โ€“ kids included! Now that the kids are old enough to help out, thereโ€™s no reason why you should spend those gardening days alone. Working in the dirt gives your little ones the chance to learn about nature, build fine motor skills, explore through their senses and learn about where their food comes from. And as a bonus, gardening as a family is an awesomely active way to spend quality time together. So, how do you start a vegetable garden with the whole family? Check out these simple how-to steps and get growing!

Draw a List

Thatโ€™s right, โ€œdrawโ€ a list. Your toddler wants to help pick out the veggies that youโ€™ll grow. But, they canโ€™t write the words โ€“ yet. Thatโ€™s okay, pictures are symbols too. Have a family meeting and pick out a few potentials to plant. If your kiddo isnโ€™t being overly verbal, page through books (or look at photos online) and ask them to point to the plants. Say each plant or veggieโ€™s name, and have your child repeat it back to you. Hand over some paper and crayons or markers, and invite your imaginative kid to get artsy as they draw the list.

Do Some Research

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Youโ€™ve got no less than five dozen drawings of random vegetables, plants and alien-looking fruits. Now what? Well, you canโ€™t plant all of them. Itโ€™s time for some serious research. Okay, not really super-serious research. You just need to know which of your childโ€™s picks will grow best in your region during this time of the year, and under the conditions in your yard. Ask your child to describe the familyโ€™s garden site, as you write it all down. Go outside and really explore the space. Dig in the dirt, compare light and shadow areas and mark the exact region where your garden will grow. Go online and look up the best plants for your area or head to the local garden center and ask a pro.

Go With a Theme

Your child has picked a few favorites and youโ€™ve narrowed down the list to what actually grows in your region. Now itโ€™s time to shop. Or not. Instead of planting a garden thatโ€™s filled with totally unrelated foods, choose a theme. Using a themed approach isnโ€™t just fun (even though it does make the project more interesting for young minds), it helps your child to develop cognitive abilities such as sorting and categorizing. Get creative with the theme and pick a pizza garden, salad patch or something thatโ€™s based on your childโ€™s favorite book.

Get The Goods

themeBefore you can plant anything, you need the actual plants. Armed with your list and some information on what grows well in your region, head out to a garden center or nursery and pick the plants. If you donโ€™t already have some kid-sized gardening tools, get a trowel, a shovel, gardening gloves and anything else you think your little farmer needs to grow some spectacular vegetables.

Prep Time

Before you can put those plants in, youโ€™ll need to prep the area. Start by asking your child what they think plants need to grow. Get specific with questions such as, โ€œDo you think we can plant the tomatoes in the grass? Why or why not?โ€ or, โ€œWhat do you think we need to do to make the ground ready for planting?โ€ Work together to pull weeds and till the soil before you start the planting process.

Piece Together A Plan

Walk through the space and puzzle out where youโ€™ll put each vegetable plant. Keep in mind, different types of plants need different amounts of space in between. Check the stats, and explain that each plant needs room to grow. Place the seedlings, seed packets or full-on plants where youโ€™ll eventually plant them. Doing this doesnโ€™t just give you an organizational leg up on your gardening plan – it also helps your child develop problem-solving and critical thinking skills.

Planting Time

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Hand over the trowel and dig away. Your child can put the plants in, with your help of course, and cover the roots with dirt. Get crafty and create small-sized signs to mark what each plant is. Draw pictures on card stock paper, cover it up with plastic wrap (to keep at least some of the water out) and attach the art to craft sticks. Push the sticks into the dirt near the plants to mark the spaces.

ย Keep Caring

Your kiddoโ€™s job is far from done. Work together as a family to care for the garden. Your child can help water the plants and pick them when theyโ€™re ready. Add in a mini math activity and measure each plantโ€™s growth. Make a height comparison chart and see which plant wins the growing race!

With these tips, your family with have a garden that will keep on giving all season long. It will get your child active and outdoors, learning new things, and could even be the start of a hobby that lasts for years to come!