Monday, March 1, 2010

News Flash: Entire Vegetable Crop Eaten By Life-Size Bug

This year my son the Bug has really got involved in vegie production. He's been planting, watching, picking and eating all our crops. He has a new enthusiasm for eating beans and tomatoes since picking them for himself from the garden.

"Growing their own' is a really effective way to increase the range of vegies in your kids' diet. Vegie growing is great for the health of our bodies, our minds and our home and wider environment. It's also a good way for children to observe natural processes like germination, growing, ripening, decaying and so on.

At the moment we grow our vegies in self-watering pots. They're great during water-restrictions and are suitable for gardens, courtyards, balconies, even windowsills and doorsteps. Even the smallest apartment has room for a saucer of cress seeds on a windowsill.
Good vegies for little kids to grow:
  • Cherry tomatoes: our favorite is 'Sweet Bite', which grows well in Victoria. We grew ours from a seedling this year.
  • Green beans: they're the Duplo (TM) of seeds, big and easy to grow. You can get short 'bush' beans or climbing varieties. The climbing ones are space-efficient and are supposed to crop over a longer period, but the Bug planted two bush beans this season and we've been picking them for weeks. I'll definitely plant them again next season.
  • zucchini: they have big seeds and big male and female flowers, so it's easy to observe the fertilisation process.
  • capsicum: my Bug has been watching patiently as they ripen from green to red. We grew ours from a seedling. 
  • Cress seeds on a saucer: pop them near the kitchen window and watch them germinate. You could put a few saucers in different places and watch how the different levels of light affect their growth, colour and taste. 
  • if you have space, pop in a pumpkin for fun! The giant orange ones aren't great for eating, but kids could use it as a seat.

2 comments:

Joanne said...

Cute- love your heading!
Good to hear from you again, Bellgirl.
Capsicums are so slow- ours are from seed and still only about 12cm high after months and months.
Beans are the best! I've got a really good crop this year too and more flowers still to come.
And we even have large tomatoes growing in our lawn! They've got bigger, better tomatoes than the ones DH grew deliberately. Awkward to mow around though ;-)

Bellgirl said...

Hi Joanne, I love those compost bin escapees!- the summer our Bug was born we took so long to mow our lawn that it was almost entirely taken over by parsley! when we eventually mowed it it smelled delicious ;)