Hello.
This post is a dedicated space to my toddlers learning’s from the garden and what he accomplishes over the time spent here on our little homestead. First a little introduction.
Ryan is now 3 years old and is a little ball of energy that could run a good size city for weeks if there were a way to harness it. Some of his loves are quite typical for a normal toddler, cars and army men and planes and just about anything that can hold his attention for longer than 5 minutes. He has other loves in his life including but not limited to his brothers Matthew and Andy, his cat Gracie, flowers, bugs and even vegetables believe it or not. When we started to plan this journey into a more self reliant way of living we knew our children had to be included and their learning was even more important than ours due to the uncertainty of our economy’s future.
Ryan’s older brother Matthew has a debilitating condition which unfortunately prevents him from participating on any level around the garden but on a sunny day you can sit him in the grass and he’ll pull as much as he can get to without moving much. Ryan’s little brother Andy just came into our lives here a couple months ago and will have the benefit of his brothers teachings when he is ready to start learning.
When it was time to assemble the raised beds for the garden Ryan was all about it and I had the idea of him building one of his own not only to give him his own space but to hopefully keep him from ours too, we’ll see how that one goes later in the season. He was all excited to get started and as soon as it was in place he had a list of what he wanted. The list consisted of 1.) flowers, 2.) strawberries, 3.) lima beans (also known as “fava”) and 4.) carrots. We weren’t too surprised since those are all things he loves but others couldn’t believe it, thats right a 3 year old wanting to grow carrots and lima beans. Well on an outing with his grandmother to the store one day he came home with… You guessed it strawberries, carrot seeds and flowers.
The lima beans were first to go in along the rear of the box to allow them to grow to their full height following a trellis still yet to be built (UPDATE; just received some bamboo from a friend trying to control his patch and will be building trellis from those, will be a post on that in the future.). He seems intrigued at the fact that these small dry beans will be taller than him in a few months and we will be eating them for dinner in no time.
Second came the strawberries which he loved due to the fact that they already had leaves and gave some instant gratification when they perked up in their new home. He was very careful to break the dirt away from the roots in a gentile way and plant them in his own grow bed replacing the dirt in and around the hole. The carrots are slated to go in next with the flowers too and he’ll be about done in his garden but there are many other projects to do until harvest. We just picked up some blueberry plants and need to get them into the ground before too long
This post was inspired in part by Darcy Menard over at Stumbling Homestead who on many occasions has relayed his belief in a child’s labor around the house and the benefits to a child having a “purpose” and I couldn’t agree more. Ryan doesn’t see anything he does as work and looks forward to every little chore we can come up with for him to do in the garden and he too will be gathering eggs like Darcy’s son before too long, something I see as life building skills for him that will last long past our lives. Please check out Darcy’s blog by clicking HERE and consider following him on facebook too, he’s doing great work over there.
Thank you for reading this post and I look forward to sharing the next step with you here on our little plot of dirt.









