Help for Homeowners - Gardening with Kids
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Coming at you with another in the "Help for Homeowners" blog post series. (To read the first two posts, click the following links: Showing Your Home or Decorating for Living Large.) With Spring around the corner (can you believe it?), this time we're talking about gardening. The following GMAC article shows what a benefit it can be to get your kids involved in the planting and maintaining of a garden. Again, Sugar Pine Realty agents, feel free to copy this text and email it to your online farm list. It's just another great way to pass on some real good information and keep in touch with your client base. And so here we go with "Growing Up Gardening":
Dear Homeowner,
Gardening helps to teach children responsibility, respect, self-assurance and love of nature — but most importantly, it lets kids have fun digging in the dirt! Here's how to capture their interests and lure them into gardening.
Toddlers
Design the garden so it can't hurt exploring toddlers and so they can't hurt it. Smooth gravel paths help teach them where it is and is not okay to walk. Bite your tongue and let toddlers touch, smell, rip, tromp and otherwise experience the garden.
Ages 6 to 12
Use the garden to stimulate physical and intellectual abilities during this growth stage. Give a budding artist a book about Monet or a young scientist a microscope. Look for ways the garden can be used in school projects.
Adolescents
The child who once loved gardening may now hate it. If a teenager doesn't want to garden, don't push it. If they have a garden of their own and want to make unusual decisions with it, respect their opinions. Some slack given at this stage will help them enjoy the activity as adults.
Theme Gardens
To spark interest, try planting a theme garden. Some examples are a rainbow garden; a pizza garden with tomatoes and herbs planted in a circle; or a pet garden to raise parsley for hamsters, corn to dry for squirrels or catnip to entice the family cat.
As children's gardens grow, nature not only bewilders them with the cycle-of-life, but sets their imaginations to work.
For more gardening tips, call Sugar Pine Realty/GMAC Real Estate at 209-533-4242 or EMAIL US HERE.
Dear Homeowner,
Gardening helps to teach children responsibility, respect, self-assurance and love of nature — but most importantly, it lets kids have fun digging in the dirt! Here's how to capture their interests and lure them into gardening.
Toddlers
Design the garden so it can't hurt exploring toddlers and so they can't hurt it. Smooth gravel paths help teach them where it is and is not okay to walk. Bite your tongue and let toddlers touch, smell, rip, tromp and otherwise experience the garden.
Ages 6 to 12
Use the garden to stimulate physical and intellectual abilities during this growth stage. Give a budding artist a book about Monet or a young scientist a microscope. Look for ways the garden can be used in school projects.
Adolescents
The child who once loved gardening may now hate it. If a teenager doesn't want to garden, don't push it. If they have a garden of their own and want to make unusual decisions with it, respect their opinions. Some slack given at this stage will help them enjoy the activity as adults.
Theme Gardens
To spark interest, try planting a theme garden. Some examples are a rainbow garden; a pizza garden with tomatoes and herbs planted in a circle; or a pet garden to raise parsley for hamsters, corn to dry for squirrels or catnip to entice the family cat.
As children's gardens grow, nature not only bewilders them with the cycle-of-life, but sets their imaginations to work.
For more gardening tips, call Sugar Pine Realty/GMAC Real Estate at 209-533-4242 or EMAIL US HERE.
Labels: broker, calaveras county, garden, gardening, home, homeowner, mother lode, real estate, realtor, sonora, tips, tuolumne county, twain harte
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