Showing posts with label sunflower tunnel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sunflower tunnel. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 August 2013

Toddler Garden Update



She has been harvesting the fruits of her labour as things have come into bloom; it has grown into a lovely little spot for her to explore and play with her fairies in ( I finally got some on sale in ELC).




She loves finding her miniature strawberries but we have to keep telling her to wait till they turn red.....if she finds any especially small ones she takes them to Little.


Her greenhouse seedlings have mostly all died in assorted ways - the only five survivors are three pumpkin plants which are now flowering in the veg plot and two pea plants looking very pathetic in her garden that I doubt will come to much.


Her sunflower tunnel has grown loads. This was a couple of weeks ago and they are even bigger now and nearly flowering. One side is a lot higher than the other and I should probably have thinned the seedlings out a bit but it is getting there. Pretty soon they will be high enough to bend together and create a tunnel (it will probably be more of a crawl-through tunnel rather than a walk-through one).


Rain collects in the centre of the lupins and in little puddles in the folds of the broccoli leaves, and she loves finding these little reservoirs of water, using them as drinks and bathes for Fairy and Mr Rabbit.



The fuchsia flowers are 'princesses' apparently, and she likes picking off big, fat ones and tiny little ones and making little fuchsia flower families. Or pulling off the buds and picking the petals open to find the 'princess' inside. She has yet to discover the satisfying enjoyment that comes from popping the buds!


Her sweetcorn looks great, I think it may be ready to harvest but I am not sure, if anyone could tell me that would be good?! She seems quite curious about it and I'm not sure she entirely believes there is sweetcorn in there. Corn on the cob is one of her favourite foods so she is really going to love it when we can pick it.



The annual flowers we sowed a few weeks ago have shot up although are also a victim of overcrowding. They are now flowering and attracting bees and other insects to Poppet's garden. There are also loads of centipedes that live under them that she likes to look at as they scurry away. No insects have taken on our upturned flower pot as a home though!

Poppet: 2yrs 6mos
Little: 10 mos



Friday, 14 June 2013

Additions to the toddler play garden!

Poppet's garden is looking a bit more garden-like now we have added a few more plants to it - we've planted a couple of sweetcorn plants, some purple sprouting broccoli, a fuchsia (I loved these when I was little as the buds are so satisfying to pop and the little flowers look like ballerinas) and a thyme. Her alpine strawberry plant has grown a lot and is flowering and her little willow tree has leaves. I've also kept her garden well-weeded - I wish I could say the same about the rest of the garden!

We were lucky enough to receive a lovely little gardening set for Poppet from MoneySupermarket. It was the exact one I had been eying up at the garden centre so I was really chuffed! 


It came with 3 packets of seeds - Pansies, Sunflowers and mixed flowers, and we have spent a couple of lovely mornings planting them.

She loved the gloves but alas, the task of putting fingers into the correct places proved too much. I'll keep them aside until she is older. The watering can was put to use very quickly and she spent a good wee while watering everything in sight. Her watering method of choice is to concentrate on leaves and flowers, just like her Aunty Anna at the same age.

 

The back of the Pansies packet had a suggestion to grow the plants spelling out the child's name but Poppet is a bit young to appreciate that. She likes naming shapes so I decided to try growing them in shapes instead. I chose an empty border next to her garden and marked out a square and a circle using stones and then she started excitedly telling me to 'do a triangle!'. I don't know why she is so fond of triangles, she loves spotting them wherever we go. She's a real triangle fan. After that I did a star. This took me absolutely ages. I'm rubbish at doing stars on paper too but in stones on soil I was even worse. Stars are my downfall. But it looked quite star-like in the end.


Poppet poured the pansy seeds into a dish so we could investigate what they looked like.


Then we both sprinkled them into the shapes and covered them with compost. I'll have to keep an eye out for any stray pansy plants that appear outside of the shapes as Poppet was quite enthusiastic with her sprinkling! I hope the experiment works and we get some recognisable pansy shapes appearing later in the summer. Poppet also found a worm which made her day, obviously. It went up her jacket, eugh!


We had a plastic window box filled with pine cones in Poppet's garden so filled it up with compost and planted it up with the mixed flower seeds.


In only a few days these seeds have already germinated and she liked seeing all the little seedlings pop up through the soil.


I've been doing some research on sunflower houses and it is definitely something on my to-do list (once I have convinced J to let me dig up the lawn a little bit!). They are basically like dens made from sunflowers and sound magical. I will console myself with a sunflower tunnel of sorts for now. I thought it would make a nice entrance into Poppet's garden.

Unfortunately Little, who up to this point had been content crawling around the grass trying to eat dandelions, decided to get in on the gardening and knocked over our dish of seeds into the grass. Poppet and I spent a long time searching in the grass for enough sunflowers seeds to make our tunnel. I made two shallow trenches either side of the 'path' and Poppet scattered the seeds in.


I stuck bamboo sticks in either side and tied them together with string for support as the plants grow. The idea is that as the sunflowers get bigger they create a tunnel walkway into her garden and when they get tall enough I'll tie their tops together to make a roof.  Even if they don't get high enough for this they will still create a special entrance into Poppet's garden. I can't wait to see how it turns out!


She was really excited about 'her tunnel' as she already calls it. I also planted a few lobelia plants in either side to help define the path better and hopefully stop her stepping on the sunflower seedlings. She planted a couple in her garden too.


Once we were all finished I taught Poppet about the importance of keeping your tools in good condition! Here she is wiping the mud off them on the grass and putting everything back into her bag. She's a good little tidier-upper.


She is very proud of her little gardening set and enjoys carrying it around with her!


Indoors, we sat down and I started filling out a few of the seed labels for her and she copied me.....I love how she tried to make her squiggles look like actual writing....her emergent writing skills are really coming on and she definitely recognises that words have a meaning and purpose now.


This post is an entry for Britmums' #KidsGrowWild Challenge, sponsored by MoneySupermarket. We were sent the gardening kit for free for the purposes of this post.