Children and Vegetable gardens

I remember as a child heading off with my Grandpa, down the back of the garden to the vegie patch, here I learnt many little gardening skills, including planting, how to water plants, how to use my special little shovel, but most importantly how to know when to pick the garden goodies. We would load up our buckets with all manner of vegies and head back to the house were Grandma would be waiting and then she would teach me how to prepare the vegies we had just bought into the house. My most favourite vegetable was a purple bean, now I didnt like beans, but for some reason, the purple ones were ok, now I dont know whether it was beacause they didnt really look like a traditional bean or whether it was beacuse I had helped to grow them. But they sure tasted the best! So it got me thinking about getting children started in the vegie patch. Not only will they learn lifelong skills, but it may also encourage the more picky eaters to try some vegies.

With a young child, a good starting point  is to involve them in your family garden, give them a small watering can and get them to help with the watering, let them pop the seeds (non chemical coated/treated is best) into the soil and let them pull the odd weed out, and most importantly let them help pick the vegies. It is a gentle learning introduction, then as they get a little older, give them their own piece of patch to plant out with their favourite vegetables.

If your child is a picky eater or your would just like to make the vegie gardening process a little more interesting, investigate some heirloom varieties of vegies, there are some fairly unusual and can I say funky vegies out there.

Here are just a few ideas (note: you may need to purchase these varieties as seeds, rather than seedlings);

  • Beans – Purple King, Rattlesnake (purple and green), Dragons Tongue Bush Bean ( purple and white)
  • Capsicum  – Sweet Chocolate
  • Carrots – Dragon (purple skin)
  • Corn – Popcorn or Anasazi (multicolour kernels-red, white & blue)
  • Beetroot – Candy stripe (red & white flesh), Golden (yellow fesh) or white (white flesh)
  • Pumpkin – Guatemalan Blue Banana or Turkish Turban
  • Radish – Black round spanish
  • Tomato’s – So many to choose from, but black russian, green zebra or the large mortgage lifter may be fun, along with yellow and red cherry tomatoes.
  • Watermelon – Moon & stars
  • Zucchini – Tromboncino.
  • Strawberries – White Alpine, yes they are White! ( and available as seedlings)

These are just a few fun, yet traditional heirloom varieties that may just spike some interest in Vegetables and gardening, plus they can also make a great “show and tell” subject at school.
Look what I grew!

Our favourite seed sellers and need your help to find more

I though it is about time to write post on our faourite seed sellers! After showing off all our lush, scrumptious looking vegetables it’s only fair to tell our dear readers where we source our seeds from. These seed sellers offer online purchasing and you can pay via credit card or cheque.

We are in the process of collecting more seed or seedling growers and we need your help! If you are or knows someone who sells seeds and seedlings (via online or Mail order preferable), contact us today!

Seeds vs Seedlings – Whats your choice?

Vegetable Seedlings

Well what can I say, I have been slack!

And now I find that the year is marching on and I am sooooo late putting in this season’s crop of vegetables. So off I trotted to the garden centre and I begrudgingly purchased some seedlings.

Now don’t get me wrong, I am not against the planting of seedlings and I find them very convenient and a great way to get a vegetable garden off to a flying start. It’s just I feel that seeds give me better bang for my buck! Even when I factor in the other costs such as seed raising mix, I still feel that seeds give better value. Plus you get to see a mature plant develop from scratch.

But in the “for’s” for seedlings, you only pay for what has sprouted and you don’t need to thin them out, they are just ready and waiting for you to pop into your vegetable patch.

So because I am running so late this year and have only just cleared out my vegie patch, I have decided my plan of attack is to plant some seedlings to get crop 1 started and then some seeds to get the second crop going so that I have a continuous crop of vegies such as cucumbers, lettuce, bok choy and beans…. hope my plan works and if it does it should keep me in vegies for a while…

But  what is your preference? Seeds or seedlings?