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Ginny's grandkids harvesting a bunch of
Christmas carrots from the garden.
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Grow More Veggies in 2009: Kids Can Help
by Ginny Stibolt
Happy New Year! Now is the time when many folks make
resolutions to lose weight, eat better, save money, exercise more, and
spend quality time with their children. You can work on all of these
resolutions with one activity—growing your own vegetables and getting
the kids involved.
Here in northern Florida, you can start right now by planting some
easy-to-grow cool-weather crops such as leaf lettuce, radishes, and
carrots. Plant vegetables your family will enjoy first. You
may find, like we have, that your vegetable garden gets a little larger
each year with one or two new crops to add variety. I just love
that we never buy lettuce or carrots throughout the winter because we
harvest plenty from our garden and we eat a lot(!) of salads.
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle (Animal.
Vegetable, Miracle
podcast)
I highly recommend, "Animal,
Vegetable, Miracle" 2007 by Barbara Kingsolver, a well-told
tale of how she and her family lived mostly from their farm in Kentucky
with some other local sources to fill in the gaps. Kingsolver
may be best known for her novels, "Poisonwood
Bible," "Prodigal
Summer," "Bean
Trees," and others. She uses her ability to spin
a tale to make this nonfiction account quite readable. Her
education as an ecologist provides a rich learning experience, too.
This was a family-oriented project with all
members of the family contributing to the effort and to this book.
Kingsolver is the main farmer, cheese maker, and canner. The older
daughter includes healthful recipes, while the younger daughter manages
the chickens and their eggs. Husband, Stephen Hopp, fixes the
daily bread and includes various sidebars on ecology, the business of
agriculture, and more.
Get the Kids involved
One of the stories that Kingsolver relates in this book is when some
urban kids on a field trip come to their farm. Hopp pulled some
carrots from the garden, which horrified the kids. They wondered
why he'd put them in the dirt. Can't you just hear them gasping,
"Eew! Your carrots are in the dirt!"? He finally
convinced them that they grew there when he washed the carrots and cut
the tops off to demonstrate how they look in the grocery store.
Then he asked them what other crops might be root crops. One kid,
who seemed to speak for the group, answered, "Spaghetti?"
More kids should be involved in growing veggies for many reasons, but
maybe the most important part is so they know what they are eating and
where it comes from. It's an important part of their education for
better life-skills. So when the grandkids came for a Christmas
visit this year I saved the harvesting chores for them. While
they've been involved in 4H and agricultural fairs for years, their lot
is too shady for a vegetable plot.
The grandkids pre-wash
the carrots and turnips at the rain barrels over a bucket to catch
the water and soil. >>
So as folks were busy fixing a Christmas I took the grandkids
out back and showed them how to choose the carrots and turnips that were
ready. The turnips ended up in the butternut squash soup, the
turnip greens were steamed and served with some vinegar, and the carrots
graced the finger vegetable plate and added a fresh crunchiness to the
dinner. The kids were surprised that these carrots didn't need to
be peeled and at how sweet they were. These were Burpee's Sweet
Treat Carrots.
The next day we harvested some leaf lettuce, other greens, onion
greens, and some thinnings from a new crop of turnips for a yummy pear
salad.
The kids were happy to have an 80-degree day for Christmas where they
could go barefooted all day instead of bundling up like they would have
done for the much colder Mid-Atlantic region where they live.
<< Granddaughter
pours the wash water onto the compost pile.
Resolve to Get the Kids Involved in Veggies in 2009
So save money, eat healthier, lose weight, become a locavore,
and grow your own vegetables either on your property or start a
community garden at the kids' school or church lot. As you get the
kids involved in growing veggies this year, send me your stories and
photos and I'll share your experiences here. Have a bountiful new
year.
Ginny Stibolt would like to hear from readers who have suggestions
and questions. After all, there are more than a few transplanted
gardeners here in northeast Florida trying to figure out what works
and what doesn’t in planting zone 8/9. She's written a book, "Sustainable
Gardening for Florida," to be published by University Press
of Florida in 2009. You may contact her or read extra details on
her articles and other information posted on her website: www.transplantedgardener.com.
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