Strollerderby

Open Your Mouth: Grow Your Own Dinner

Posted by Patti

Early this spring our family had a great time planting a huge herb garden, with a few tomato plants thrown in for good measure. Our preschool-aged children were totally up to the task of helping dig and place the tiny seedlings, and thereafter if they were bored, they could be sent out to water or weed the plant beds. Within a couple weeks, virtually every meal we prepared had something in it that we had grown ourselves.

Then we moved. Now we've got a plastic pot of basil from Trader Joe's sitting on the steps, and I have a couple of teensy pots of grow-your-own parsley seeds from the dollar bins at Target, which have yet to sprout. Thank goodness for farmer's markets, right? Only I can't send my kids to the farmer's market to play when they're squirrelly.

I can't rave enough about gardening, on any scale, as a family activity. Even though nurturing a plant hasn't made an immediate impact on my picky-eating older child's habits, her interest in what each plant is and how it's used gives me hope for her palate. And it doesn't require a particularly green thumb: herbs practically grow themselves, you can even buy Chia Herb Gardens

This week if I had lemon thyme, I'd be roasting a chicken. If I had tarragon, I'd be making a big mustardy potato salad. And if I had dill, I'd be grilling salmon with it. Instead, I guess we're having pesto. I can't wait to get another garden into the ground, and neither can the kids: watering the ficus isn't quite cutting it for them.

George Hapgood explains the benefits of gardening for kids, without even getting to the part where you can make them put in some hard labor go play in the dirt when they're working your nerves. Kalyn's completely sparking my envy with her herbs and vegetables (maybe I can go steal some of my herbs from the old house?). And over at Adventures in my Urban Garden you can learn about how one person is getting her dirt fix right in the city, participating in a community garden project.
 


+ DIGG + STUMBLE

Comments

 

RachelZ said:

I am whatever the opposite of a green thumb is.  I can kill FAKE plants, even.  But I am bound and determined to grow something this year.  I got a basil plant from Whole Foods and re-potted it.  Under my care for the last two months, it is thriving.  I have peppermint, cilantro, parsley, and thyme going, too.  Outside, I have red and green peppers and two tomato plants for which I have high hopes.

If I can keep the Devil Squirrels away from my "garden" I might be able to eat something I grew myownself.

Today I'm going to go look at a house WITH A YARD and even if the house is a shithole, I'm going to put a bid on it because I need a yard, dammit!

June 5, 2007 8:47 AM
 

fortunecookies said:

I love to garden.  But parents should know there are lots of things that are poisonus for kids to eat- like the leaves on a tomato plant.  

June 10, 2007 8:51 AM
 

Strollerderby said:

I've been paying the extra bucks and feeding my kids organically-grown foods for years now, because like

June 14, 2007 2:55 PM

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