I bought the plants at a flower market that is close to our place: 6 flowers and a green plant:
Verbena
Snapdragon
Marigold
Periwinkle
Petunia
Dakota Sunspot
White-edged Swedish Ivy (a kind of mosquito repellent with leaves that has special smell if you rub it, no flower though)
You can download the flower picture here. (Buttercup is also included as E. found one in a field and we needed to check what it was). The names are added both in Hungarian and in English.
What you need:
- flowers/plants of your choice
- flower pots
- soil (we had 5 kg for 7 plants)
- shovels
- watering can with water
How we did it:
Best to do it in the garden or on the balcony but the weather was very windy (still is) so I put down an old wax tablecloth on the floor and we did the planting on it indoors. In this way we did not dirt the whole living-room and it was relatively easier to clean up.
E. doesn't really like to dirt her hands. I try to come up with ideas when she needs to do so in a fun way so she can overcome this bad feeling of dirty hands.
She touched the soil/dirt with great hesitation, though.
We filled up half of a pot with dirt.
She took the plants out of its small pot and pinched off some ends of its roots (it was L.'s advice that she'd learnt from her mom)
Then, she placed the plant into the bigger pot in the new soil after having created a little hole in the middle and added more dirt on top of the roots.
We have some nice blue buckets which can be hung on our balcony so the final step was that E. put the pot in the bucket.
When we were ready with all the plants she took them all out onto the balcony and hung them up.
Let's not forget about watering the plants.
For a few days she wanted to go out and water them, but now it's been a week she last saw her plants. I need to water them, but it's true that a lot has been going on recently because of her birthday. Not to mention the fact that this strong wind we've had nowadays has destroyed the flowers and to be honest they are far from nice at the very moment. I can only hope a little later they'll revive when the weather gets better and E. will show some more interest in them.
All in all, it was great fun, a nice way to have one of our last sessions with our nanny, L. I admit it was quite messy, but E. enjoyed it and learnt a lot about planting, getting your hands dirty, decorating our home and taking care of a living creature.
Her English vocabulary expanded: she learnt quite many synonyms like shoots/sprouts, spade/shovel, throw away/dump, soil/dirt. (For the Hungarian readers: when she told Daddy about our planting project she said: ." ...aztán koszt raktunk a cserépbe")
What gardening project do you do with your kids in the spring? I'm looking forward to your answers in the comment section so we can do something new next year.
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