Inspire LIttle Gardeners with Short-Term Magic
How to do it:
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- Get a few white carnations (1 would be enough, but with 2 or more you can do two colours)
- Fill flower vase(s) 1/4 full of water.
- Use a fair amount (10 to 20 drops) of food coloring – blue or red work best
- Put a freshly cut flower stem in each vase and let it sit.
- Check back every few hours to see how it’s working.
- After 30 minutes you should see a significant colour change which may continue to darken for up to 24 hours
Tip – At the end of your experiment, by examining the whole plant carefully (stem, leaves, buds, petals, etc), you can have the children identify what flower parts they can see the food color in.
Mid Term Magic
- Cut the top from a carrot. You’ll need about one inch of the root part.
- Place it on a jar lid or other non-precious item as it will become stained.
- Fill the lid with water up to barely touch the bottom edge of the carrot or parsnip piece.
- Set it in a light, but not a too sunny window.
- Top up with water daily to keep it touching the vegetable piece.
- Watch the roots sprout over the next few days!
Long Term Magic
- ideally, purchase seed potatoes (available from a seed company or garden store) as they have not been treated with a growth retardant and are disease free.
- Quarter the large potatoes, making sure there are 1-2 eyes on each piece.
- Let them sit in a paper bag for a couple of days so that their cuts heal over
- Plant each seed potato, with eyes facing up, about a foot apart, and 6 inches deep in the garden.
- Water them weekly.
- “Hill them” by mounding the soil around the stems as they grow.
How to do it (Container method):
- ideally, purchase seed potatoes (available from a seed company or garden store) as they have not been treated with a growth retardant and are disease free.
- Quarter the large potatoes, making sure there are 1-2 eyes on each piece.
- Place the seed potatoes with cut-side down (‘eyes’ facing up) in an egg carton.
- Leave them alone until they start growing leaves.
- Choose a large container that’s deep enough and has drain holes in the bottom. An old tub or bucket would work.
- Pot-up the potatoes by placing them at the bottom of the container and then covering them with soil – not too deep to start!
- Place the container in a sunny place outdoors.
- Top up with soil regularly as the plants grow.
- Watch the plants grow big and flower and be careful not to over-water.
Whichever method you choose, the potatoes should be ready to harvest by early to mid-summer. After flowering, the plants will start to wither and die. Then, the magic will finally be revealed. Like treasure hunters you or the children can use a garden fork to carefully loosen the soil (or turn out the container) and watch the excitement as they pick the long-awaited potatoes they’ve been nurturing!
Inspire little gardeners – What an impact growing their own food can make!
Many years ago a young boy said he hated tomatoes but he would grow them as instructed to get his badge. He carried the pot around with the young seedling from sunny spot to sunny spot. He watered diligently and watched for bugs as instructed; talking to the plant the whole summer. He was very successful and had a large number of cherry tomatoes on his plant. He tried one of the tomatoes that he had grown and nurtured and guess what? He ate most of them himself as he no longer hated tomatoes.
Now that’s magic!
Children love to play in the dirt, and if the end result is a growing plant they previously would NOT eat or picking a home-grown flower to give to Grandma, the end result is truly magic.
Read More – Gardening as a family? Try these ideas!
About The Author: Agnes Burroughs
Lived and loved in the country for 70 years! Married to an amazing man for 50 years and helped raise 3 children and did lots of farm work. In addition to my 18 years as a Master Gardener, I have worked many years as a florist, written stories for Daytripper, served as Secretary for Dorchester Horticulture, led the Junior Horticultural program, quilted with Oxford Quilt Guild, written with Dorchester Writers Group, and now I’m studying to be a floral judge for county fairs. My 5 grandchildren are now a big part of my life and are why many of my posts are about things that appeal to children.
More posts by Agnes Burroughs