Preparing your Vegetable Bed
In preparing your vegetable bed for another season, or just
getting started, Abby's recommends the following products:
- Soil Amendment: Bumper Crop (TM) Soil
- Cow Manure
- Hydrated Lime
- Espoma Garden Tone (TM), or
- Espoma Plant Tone(TM)
10 Easy-Grow Veggies for Your Kids' White House Garden - US
News and World Report:
March 20, 2009 03:58 PM ET
Michelle Obama just became the hero of parent-gardeners across
America by spading up a corner of the White House South Lawn
and planting lettuce, chard, and kale. She's not alone; seed
companies across the nation say they're swamped with orders
from first-time gardeners eager to grow their own. And why
not? Homegrown veggies are cheaper, they're local, they can be
organic, and they are less likely to have food-safety issues.
The first lady also pointed out that making a family effort to
raise vegetables emphasizes the importance of healthy eating
at a time when childhood obesity is a national epidemic. Plus,
homegrown veggies are way yummier. So it's time to join Sasha
and Malia in the garden. (Michelle joked that she expects to
have the whole family, including the president, out there
pulling weeds. We'll see.)
U.S. News sought out expert advice on backyard vegetables that
kids will love planting and eating. These are almost foolproof
to grow, don't need pesticides, and many will grow happily in
a pot on the patio. Here's the list for your own White House
garden:
1. Sugar snap peas. Sweet, crunchy pods that beg to be eaten
right off the vine; these also make a terrific lunchbox snack.
Now's the time to plant in most parts of the country. Just let
the vines flop on the ground, or plant along a fence so they
can climb.
2. Lettuce, spinach, and other leafy greens. These are dead
easy to plant and grow and can thrive in a patio pot, too.
Michelle picked arugula, but kids might like some of the White
House's other options better. Check out red and green
lettuces, kale, cilantro, and dill. Sprinkle a new line of
seeds every two weeks, and you'll have homegrown salad all
season.
3. Radishes. They grow like superheroes, ready to eat in a
month. Try an Easter-egg blend with pinks, whites and purples.
Josh Kirschenbaum, product development director for
Territorial Seed in Cottage Grove, Ore., says that if you
plant radishes in the cool weather of spring and fall, they
won't get fiercely spicy. The kids can give them to Mom for
Mother's Day.
4. Carrots. Another quick-grower. The tiny seeds need to be
sprinkled carefully, but soon you'll have real baby carrots,
sweet enough for Peter Rabbit. The green tops attract
swallowtail butterflies.
5. Potatoes. Cut in pieces, bury now, and you're eating new
potatoes in June. "When you harvest, you just dig in the side
of the little hill, and leave the mom plant there so she can
grow more, bigger potatoes," says George Ball, chairman and
CEO of W. Atlee Burpee & Co. in Warminster, Pa. You can
buy seed potatoes, which haven't been treated with
growth-retarding chemicals like some supermarket potatoes. But
a potato sprouting in the kitchen cupboard should work just
fine, too.
6. Green beans. It's fun to plant the big seeds, and beans are
delicious raw or cooked. Bush beans are simplest, but pole
beans, which grow up a teepee made of sticks, make a great
secret hiding place come July. Scarlet runner beans have a
stronger bean flavor that some kids don't like, but they
attract hummingbirds.
7. Sungold cherry tomato. Buy a small plant at the local
garden store, and you'll be picking supersweet orange orbs off
these prolific vines until frost. If you've got the space,
plant a red grape tomato, too.
8. Pumpkins. They take a bit more space, and you'll have to
wait until fall to harvest, but the vines are enchanting. Grow
your own jack-o-lanterns for Halloween, or pick one of the
adorable minipumpkins like Jack Be Little.
9. Sunflowers. Taller than Dad, or elf-sized mini versions. If
you've got a big yard, plant a bunch and make a maze. In the
fall, dry and eat the seeds, or leave them in the garden for
the birds.
10. Broccoli. You might be surprised to see what kids like
when they've planted and harvested the crop themselves. Garden
broccoli is sweet and tender. Buy plants at the local garden
store to speed up harvest.
Where to plant? Pretty much any piece of ground will do, as
long as it gets sunshine most of the day. "Rule No. 1: Don't
have a children's garden," says Ball. "Have a family garden.
Kids want to be with Mom and Dad."
Dig in a bag of compost or cow manure to enrich the soil.
Organic is the way to go; kids and pesticides don't mix. In a
home garden, "you can control most pests by just picking them
off," says Lou Zambello, director of sales and marketing for
Johnny's Selected Seeds in Winslow, Maine. "The kids can learn
the difference between a beneficial insect like a ladybug and
a Japanese beetle."
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