Garden Day for kids – a dozen ways
Gardens are wonderful spaces, which is why we’re encouraging everyone, no matter how young or old, to celebrate them this Garden Day. Here are some ways to help your kids to connect with nature and find pride in growing their own plants, flowers, and food in the lead up to and on Garden Day.
Make a mask
Make flower crowns together
Taste test
Draw an insect
Make a wormery
Plant some seeds
Garden scavenger hunt
Build a den
Go stargazing
Bird watching
Create twig frames
Make seed bombs
Click here to download a fox mask, print it on A4 white paper, cut out the creature and attach elastic to create the mask.
2. Make flower crowns together
It’s really easy to make crowns with fresh flowers and greenery from your garden:
Choose your flowers… A single variety used en masse is most effective.
Assist your kids with the tools needed: secateurs, florist’s wire, and rope.
Create small posies by tying bunches of blooms together with wire.
Attach the posies to the rope by facing stems in the same direction, overlapping as you go.
Leave the ends of the rope clear for an easily adjustable crown size.
3. Taste test
Herbs and leaves can be tasted and used in recipes for your Garden Day celebration. Experiment and explore the many unique and delicious flavours in your garden by getting everyone to select one edible root, stem, leaf, a flower, fruit or seed for your meal.
4. Draw an insect
Encourage kids to draw an insect, bird or animal before it scampers off.
5. Make a wormery
Layer a see-through glass container with soil and sand, add leaves for food, then find worms in your garden and place them in their temporary home. Watch them tunnel into the ground, and then release them back into your garden.
6. Plant some seeds
Give each child a small area of your garden where they can grow their own plants. Garden Day was proudly created by Candide, a gardening app that connects gardeners with fellow plant lovers. You can dig into Candide’s knowledge base of plants, plant identification, and growing tips when deciding on which plants to grow. Candide is free for download in the Google Play Store and Apple’s App Store.
7. Garden scavenger hunt
Give children a list of objects in your garden, and a prize for the first child to find everything.
8. Build a den
Use branches and leaves to build a hideaway to observe nature in your backyard. Who knows what animal will pop past?
9. Go stargazing
View the heavens in your garden on a clear night, and hopefully spot a planet or wish on a shooting star.
10. Bird watching
Watch birds fly, sing, chat and eat in your garden. Just be sure not to frighten or startle them.
11. Create twig frames
Look around your garden for twigs, seed pods and flowers to create your own wood frame.
12. Make seed bombs
Let your kids make mud, then help them add seeds and shape into balls. Place these on a tray and leave them in the sun to harden before planting these seed bombs in your garden.