Call Us Now! 800-335-4769

make life beautiful

Activities to Get the Kids involved

Chances are the kids are looking for something to do this summer.  Get them involved in the garden.

Gardening teaches children respect and concern for nature.  It reinforces what children learn in science class, plus gardens encourage creativity and self-discipline.  Gardening also promotes healthy eating through vegetable gardens. It’s fun for everyone in the family.

Here are some projects that will help your children to get started in the garden.

Start out small.

Bring your kids out when you tend the garden and have them identify the plants. Let them take a guess and have a talk about what each plant is and maybe what it does. (i.e. attracts butterflies or changes color).

Demonstrate the tough parts.

We all know keeping a garden looking beautiful is not always a picnic and that’s life. Have your children help you weed to demonstrate that life has challenges that they will have to overcome, but if you work hard and weed, a beautiful garden is the reward!

Pick the harvest.

Kids love a reward for all their hard work. Let them plant and tend to the vegetable garden, but also let them eat from the harvest. Show them that the veggies that grow is their benefit for doing a great job in the garden! This will promote healthy eating and self-satisfaction.

Show them properly.

Watering is a big job and a very important one. Show them how important it is. Explain to them that plants drink water from their roots and need water especially in the summertime, just like people do.

Plant with them.

Adding or enhancing a perennial garden is a great summer project.  Let the kids help you with all aspects – picking out new plants, preparing the area, planting them and taking care of them throughout the year.  Share your knowledge, encourage questions, research answers, start a conversation. It’s a great opportunity to explain the different parts of the plants in your garden, as well as the difference between an annual and a perennial.

Encourage them to document the process.  

Garden journals come in handy when you want to know the things you learned in the garden. This is a great opportunity to improve the writing skills they learned in school or even the typing skills on the computer. Every time they join you in the garden, have them write a couple sentences about what they saw, what they did and what they liked about gardening that day.
If the kids are more the shutterbug-type, motivate them to take photos or videos of the garden.  Document your adventure; then plan to relive it on a cold winter day.

Plan a meal with the crop.

Vegetable gardens promote healthier eating, and allow for a great lesson in the kitchen. List out the different vegetables and herbs you use and pull out some recipes to cook with your kids.   If they’re old enough, have them research possible recipes on line, or let them browse your cookbooks for ideas.
Cooking will help them exercise their math and reading skills, and planning from their garden will help them gain skills in preparation and organization.

If you don’t have many vegetables or herbs growing, plan a visit to a local farmer’s market or take them to the grocery store and explain that the different items from the produce section come from gardens. This allows for children to make the connection of where vegetables come from.

Look to next year.

Next summer could be really fun in the garden, since your child has developed a gardening interest. Start planning the garden; what kinds of flowers to plant, what your garden is going to look like, etc.

You can even promise your child a spot in the garden to call their own, so they can use the knowledge they learned this summer. Children love something that’s their very own.  Adding a sign with their name on it to show ownership of that space, such as “Mary’s Garden” or “Mary’s Beans” will keep the child interested and aware of their space. If more than one child has plants growing in the same garden, this can minimize disputes over whose plants are whose. It also creates another family arts & crafts project to make the signs.

“Patience is a virtue,” and waiting for flowers and vegetables to mature can begin to teach the rewards of patience. Watching a garden grow may not be easy: children may want to pull up young carrots and radishes to see if they are “done.” Even if they do pull up a few young plants, they may be far enough along to wash off and give a taste of bigger things to come.

Watching your child grow

Gardening activities provide an ideal time to really talk to your child. Talk a little about how plants grow, and talk about the birds, insects and worms (kids love worms!) and all that good gardening stuff. But the privacy and quiet of a garden is also an excellent place to just talk about “things” such as school and friends, hopes and dreams. Ask them if they were a plant, what would they tell the gardener?

You’ll be surprised what you can learn in your child’s garden, and your opportunity to hear your child’s thoughts will help you guide their personal growth as well as their gardening growth.

Instilling love, respect and understanding of how nature works and how it affects us all is especially important for the future of our children and the world at large. And it can all begin in a child’s garden.

Want to learn more?  Visit one of our English Gardens stores in Metro Detroit and talk to the experts.

Share this good advice with others

Facebook
LinkedIn

More Good Advice

Garden Tips by Month

April Gardening Tips

The temperatures are rising, the birds are singing and the sun is shining- Spring is here! The weather, rather than the calendar, dictate when to start working in your garden.

Read More »
Gardening Tips

March Gardening Check List

Spring is so close we can smell it. Time to get in the garden and start prepping for the season (once all the snow melts, of course). Forsythia blooms, Robin

Read More »
Good Advice

Landscape Design Basics

Creating an inviting and beautiful landscape can seem like a daunting task. While you may need to put in some sweat equity, it doesn’t have to be an overwhelming process.

Read More »
Menu

English Garden Nurseries & Garden Centers Serve the Greater Clinton Twp., Dearborn Heights, Royal Oak, West Bloomfield, Eastpointe, and Plymouth Ann Arbor Michigan Areas

Providing garden centers complete with full service landscaping, seasonal holiday stores including their enchanting Christmas Stores, and most locations even offer a full service in house florist

English Gardens Detroit MI area nurseries & garden centers are not only the areas largest garden nurseries, but they offer the largest selection of products and services found anywhere in the Clinton Twp., Dearborn Heights, Royal Oak, West Bloomfield, Eastpointe, and Plymouth Ann Arbor Michigan regions providing full service garden centers, full service landscaping and landscape design, seasonal holiday stores including their enchanting Christmas Stores, the largest selection of Patio Furniture in Michigan, and most locations even offer a full service in house florist for flower arrangements for every day as well as those special occasions such as wedding flowers, event flowers, sympathy and funeral flower arrangements, prom flowers, and more!

Our nurseries and garden centers have the areas largest selection of plants, flowers, shrubs, annuals, perennials, and patio furniture. Garden supplies are in abundance, with everything from garden tools and accessories, to garden and potting soil, mulches, bagged garden stone, pots and so much more. We have everything you need for your outdoor gardening needs.

Landscaping? Count on the professional landscape contractors and designers at English Gardens to Make Your Property Beautiful! We offer both DIY landscaping assistance and full service landscape design and construction with our in house landscaping company.

Our floral designers can create perfect floral arrangements for weddings, events, funerals, proms and the like. Make the moment beautiful.

Our Christmas Stores in addition to being one of the areas best holiday experiences, are filled with live and life-like artificial Christmas trees, including flocked artificial Christmas trees, and those sometimes hard to come by 9 foot flocked artificial Christmas trees, as well as a large, ready to take home inventory, of 3 foot artificial Christmas trees, 4 foot artificial Christmas trees, 5 foot artificial Christmas trees, 7.5 foot artificial Christmas trees, 9 foot artificial Christmas trees and 12 foot artificial Christmas trees, and all of the other holiday items you need like Christmas lights, decorations, Christmas wreaths & garland of all types, and unique gifts. Make the Holiday beautiful!

English Gardens store by store offerings in the Clinton Twp., Dearborn Heights, Royal Oak, West Bloomfield, Eastpointe, and Plymouth Ann Arbor Michigan areas;

Clinton Twp. Garden Centers:

Dearborn Heights Garden Center:

Royal Oak Garden Center:

West Bloomfield Garden Center:

Eastpointe Garden Center:

Plymouth Ann Arbor Garden Center:

Be sure to visit any one of our Garden Centers for the largest selection of products and services the area has to offer. If you have any questions please call one of our stores directly in Clinton Twp., Dearborn Heights, Royal Oak, West Bloomfield, Eastpointe, and Plymouth Ann Arbor Michigan for friendly, prompt help.

Clinton Township, MI

Address
44850 Garfield Rd. at Hall Rd.
Clinton Twp., Michigan 48038

Phone Numbers
Phone: (586) 286-6100
Fax: (586) 286-0033

Dearborn Heights, MI

Address
22650 Ford Rd. at Outer Dr.
Dearborn Heights, Michigan 48127

Phone Numbers
Nursery: (313) 278-4433
Florist: (313) 565-8133
Fax: (313) 278-0459

Eastpointe, MI

Address
22501 Kelly Rd. at Nine Mile Rd.
Eastpointe, Michigan

Phone Numbers
Phone: (586) 771-4200
Fax: (586) 771-4894

Plymouth/Ann Arbor, MI

Address
9900 Ann Arbor Road W.
Plymouth, Michigan

Phone Numbers
Phone: (734) 453-5500

Royal Oak, MI

Address
4901 Coolidge Hwy,
Royal Oak, Michigan

Phone Numbers
Phone: (248) 280-9500
Fax: (248) 280-2688

West Bloomfield, MI

Address
6370 Orchard Lake Rd. at Maple
West Bloomfield Township, Michigan

Phone Numbers
Phone: (248) 851-7506
Fax: (248) 539-4738

Patio Furniture from English Gardens of Michigan

Patio Lounge Chairs
Patio Furniture Showrooms
Bistro Sets
Outdoor Dining Sets
Outdoor Sectionals

Make Life Beautiful! Come to English Gardens Today!

Don’t forget to come visit our enchanted Christmas Stores! We have by far the areas largest display of pre-lit and unlit Christmas trees, both Live and Artificial Life-Like Christmas trees in all sizes and varieties, the areas largest selection of Christmas lights in a variety of lengths, sizes, bulb types including energy efficient, and long lasting ,state of the art, LED Christmas lights, Christmas Garland, Christmas wreaths, Christmas decorations, and that perfect gift for that special someone!

Make Christmas Beautiful! Come to English Gardens This Christmas, It’s Fun For The Whole Family!

When it comes to the holidays other than Christmas, you won’t be disappointed, From July 4th, to Labor Day, Columbus Day, Halloween, Thanksgiving, Easter, Mothers and Fathers Day and more, you guessed it, you can count on English Gardens to Make the Holiday Beautiful!

Make the Holidays Beautiful! Come to English Gardens!

At the end of the day, we all enjoy putting a smile on our, and other’s faces, come to English Gardens at any one of our convenient locations and Make Today Beautiful!

Make Today Beautiful! Come to English Gardens!

Christmas at English Gardens

Where to Buy Frosted Christmas Trees in Michigan

The best artificial Christmas Trees in Michigan

Christmas Tree Sale

Where to Buy Mini Lit Christmas Trees in Michigan

Choose the right pencil Christmas tree this holiday season

Pre Lit Artificial Christmas Trees

Pre Lit Christmas Trees

White Lit Christmas Trees

Slim Flocked Christmas Trees

Slim Christmas Trees

Skinny Pre Lit Christmas Tree

Outdoor Lit Christmas Trees

Fake Christmas Trees