Posts tagged gardening with kids
Spring Gardening with Kids In the East Bay

Here is some great advice for working on your home garden with kids. Whether they are your own kids, grandkids, or if you just need some great advice for working on your first home garden, this article pulled from 510families.com has you covered!

Tips to start an East Bay garden with kids:

  1. Designate some garden real estate for kids, let them own the space. Try to find the sunniest spot, somewhere that gets 6+ hours of sunlight outdoors, or in a south-facing windowsill. Our yard allowed us to reuse an outgrown sandbox as a new raised planter bed. Maybe you have a wagon or busted wheelbarrow.

  2. Give kid helpers jobs and goals

    • Weeding: We like to have a contest to see who can get the longest weed with seeds in it. Sure a flower might get picked here or there, but we use those as our countertop bouquets.

    • Digging holes and planting: We use starters or seedlings, which are much easier than seeds and just as fun.

    • Reseeding lawns and sprinkling grass seeds.

    • Fertilizing: Using organic fertilizer is important because we can’t over-fertilize and it’s safer for little ones.

    • Watering: If you give your kids the hose, be prepared to be sprayed every now and then.

    • Composting: Kids can collect meal scraps each day for the compost bins.

    • Gathering earthworms: Collect worms for your outdoor garden or compost. Both my daughters love inspecting all the critters we come across.

    • Mulching: Good for any age — and relaxing, too.

  3. Germinate seeds indoors: Our seed germination activities are a functional science experiment to sprout hearty garden seedlings. Pro tip: use cardboard egg cartons for sprouting and transferring seedlings to an outdoor garden (here’s how).

  4. Find non-toxic pest control when little hands will be digging in treated yards and gardens. Check out these home remedies. We crush egg shells (with gloves on) around the base of our young plants to keep slugs at bay. Reflecting ribbons and a scarecrow also help to keep the birds and squirrels from eating our blueberries (for now).

  5. After everything is planted and weeded, I keep my kids engaged by decorating your garden with DIY gnomes and scarecrows (scarecrows are super easy to make with clothes my kids have outgrown and some sticks).

  6. Further reading and resources: Based in Berkeley, the Edible Schoolyard has designed a suite of lessons and activities to teach kids about growing food in the garden.

Best things to plant in the East Bay during spring

I’ve had the most success with the following in Oakland’s zone 10a (a numeric gardening zone based on the average temperatures across the US). It’s fun to figure out what zone you live in and discover what might grow in your garden.

  • Lettuce: the easiest, edible and most rewarding because it grows quickly

  • Sunflowers: heat and drought tolerant, durable and wonderful to look at

  • Nasturtiums: this vibrant, edible flower can be for beauty or consumption

  • Peppers or chilies: thrive in 510 climate (think jalapeños and bell peppers)

  • Collard greens

  • Mint: can also be a natural deterrent for vermin

  • Basil & parsley: with fewer trips to the grocery store, herbs can add great flavor to meals

  • Rosemary & lavender: thrive in a pot or in the ground

  • Can’t find seeds or plants of what you’re looking for? Oakland mom, Carol, recommends trying a plant or seed exchange with a neighbor. Everyone wins!

Tools suggestions for gardening with kids

  • Gloves: while tiny gloves are probably cute, I just let my daughter use my adult gloves, she doesn’t mind that they’re a little baggy. Besides they’re only worn 25% the time.

  • Buckets: for collecting weeds, mulching, fertilizing.

  • Shovel: My four year old uses a regular gardening hand-held trowel, my one-year old uses a plastic sand shovel.

  • Kid scissors: used like gardening shears, but safer.

  • Recycled containers for watering: my youngest daughter can stay busy walking water from a large bucket to the plants, with a smaller used yogurt container.

  • Books: though libraries are closed, there are a handful of excellent Bay Area specific gardening books. (I included a list of bookstores further down that have new and used local gardening books for social distancing sale.)

Click HERE to read the original article from 510Families.com!