Tag Archives: Gardening

Keep Your Kids Busy Gardening With Garden Pots

Have fun with your kids while doing something useful – container gardening! This will certainly help keep them from getting bored and they will love learning how to plant in garden pots. And, seriously, what could possibly be better than getting their little hands dirty while growing their own food. They might just be inclined to try some new foods they wouldn’t ordinarily try (I know this works since I saw it happen with my own 6-year old son.)

The Containers

A good place to start is with the containers. Garden pots can be made from a wide variety of raw materials like wood, stone, clay, plastic, etc. The safest material that I would recommend for your kids is plastic since it is really hard to break and its lightweight. The second best option is wood. Usually wood containers don’t hold water well and are used for decoration. You will probably end up putting the pot that holds our plant into the wood one.

This is a really good time to have your kids decorate the pots. On both wood and plastic, acrylic paint works great. Be sure to use paints that are non-toxic. Once your child is finished, pick out a location now where you want the pot to go since it will be harder and heavier to move when its filled with soil.

The Soil

I recommend using a good potting soil as opposed to putting in plain old dirt. Potting soils are blended specifically for use in containers and they are made to hold water (which means less watering – and less maintenance). Its always a good idea to help freshly placed plants get a good start by feeding them with the proper nutrients. Mix the recommended amount into the potting soil (a guide will be printed on the bag). Be careful not to add too much as this can kill the plant.

The Plants

Pick your plants according to size and type – flowers, vegetables or herbs. Some plants (like tomatoes) require larger pots. If the plants do get too large for their pots, they can be easily transplanted into larger garden pots later. So, you can see how this is a great project for kids as the plants need their love and attention as they grow. Your kids are sure to love seeing the fruits of their labor.

Andy Raydall has been working in gardens since early childhood and has always been interested in educating others on gardening and landscaping techniques. If you’d like to know more about container gardening, visit AllGardenPots.com

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Better Veggies With Heirloom Seeds

A growing number of seed companies are advertising and successfully selling heirloom vegetable seeds to discerning gardeners. Heirloom seeds routinely produce distinctively flavored vegetables which our grandparents used to enjoy in the years when there were no modern hybrid seeds. Of course, modern hybrid vegetables remain nourishing, tasty, and more convenient to grow than heirloom vegetables. For that matter, these advantages were the purpose for the creation of hybrid seeds from the start. Although, just as with homemade bread and hand fashioned quilts, many of us have decided that the extra attention that these vegetables need is merited by the old-fashioned aroma and the nostalgic connection to our ancestors.

Generally speaking, the vegetable seeds which are designated heirloom seeds must show two traits. They must be open-pollinated, and the variety must be no less than 50 years old. Even though some seeds currently sold in catalogs or stores may meet one of the aforementioned standards, they really have to meet both requirements for a trustworthy seed business to describe them as Heirloom.

Nearly all seeds available today are called Hybrids. A hybrid is a plant which is the result of cross-pollinating two different species. A common issue experienced with hybrids is, they will never replicate themselves. If you plant cross-pollinated seeds, then harvest the seeds from the hybrid plants, that second generation of seeds will only come with the genetic material of one of its genetic predecessors. Maybe an oversimplified explanation would clear this up. If some seeds produce hybrid plants which were a cross-pollination of red peppers and yellow peppers, the hybrid may produce orange peppers. If you harvest the seeds from those hybrid peppers and plant them, the resulting plants might merely produce either green or yellow peppers.

Heirloom seeds, in contrast, are open-pollinated species. Therefore, if you remove seeds from this type of plants, the next group of plants should grow “true to type”, which means the identical vegetable will be grown over and over. The capability of these vegetables to copy themselves is the reason these varieties have survived for all those years.

While the fifty year standard for tracing back heirloom varieties may seem arbitrary, the decade after the Second World War marks the start of when major seed companies started developing and selling the more robust hybrid vegetable seeds. This generation’s gardeners have developed a new approval for the old fashioned vegetable varieties, however, and the seed companies have reacted by dedicating increasing amounts of advertising space to Heirloom seeds.

Please do not conclude that hybrid vegetables are considered bad. The technology which gave us our hybrid vegetables has given us better growing conditions and higher yields in today’s agriculture, which has international advantages. Heirloom vegetables are appreciated by some home gardeners, however, as a result of their texture and flavor, and their ability to bring back memories of Grandma’s tomato sandwiches.

Ibrahim Hasan runs and manages a Lawn Mowers Review Site that informs consumers about the different kinds of Black & Decker MM875 Mulching Mower and much more.

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