Gardening for the Birds--and for Healthy Kids

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With spring on its way and my garden beckoning, I've been thinking about a conversation with Frances E. Kuo, director of the University of Illinois Landscape and Human Health Laboratory on her research on kids with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and time spent in nature.

Kids who spend more time playing outside, said Kuo, showed significantly improved focus, better ability to concentrate, complete tasks, and follow directions. The greener the outside play space, the more relief from their symptoms.

In fact, research by Kuo and her colleagues showed that time spent outside in green places worked as well for kids with ADHD as medications, and in some cases was more effective--with no side effects. So they've started a campaign to get all kids outside and into nature--for their health.

That has me thinking about gardening and kids, and combining the two to benefit birds and butterflies as well. One way to get kids outside is to have them plant their own garden. It doesn't have to be big--a couple of patio-sized pots would do. If "their" plants attract birds and butterflies they can watch, all the better.

It's probably easiest to start with annual plants, because they grow fast, providing quick results. Birds and kids love sunflowers (pick varieties bred for pots), scarlet runner beans (their red flowers are hummingbird magnets), and morning glories (another climber). For butterflies, easy annuals include zinnias, nasturtium, and dill or fennel.

If you've got a bit of ground, try a few native plants appropriate to your site. Search out plants with edible berries, seeds birds love, or nectar-bearing flowers. For hummingbirds, pick plants with red, tubular flowers (in my part of the world, penstemons and agastaches are better than feeders because they offer insects and roosting habitat too). For butterflies, look for flowers in oranges, yellows, and purples, the wavelengths that these fluttering nectar-sippers see best.

Start with a small plot or a few pots, four or five different species, and a few kids. Then add soil, organic compost or aged manure, water, and see what happens. Gardens can weave surprising magic!

Comments

Birding and Children

It's always a good idea to interest children in something that will last a lifetime. Anything with nature provides a great opportunity for now and the future. Thanks for the gardening idea.

Kid Roots

A popular reading program is named "roots and wings." Gardens give kids roots. Growing up in my kidhood, we had no choice...and it was hard, hard, hard work...that I yearned to escape...to practice my music...walk in the woods...and read. We had football-size gardens and that meant ballroom-size food preparations for winter. You can tell I have no nostalgia for my kid-gardening-days. Yet, I thoroughly believe in the grounding gardens give children...and think that approach preferable to drugs or video games.

Janet Riehl

Visit Janet at www.riehlife.com creating connections through the arts, across cultures and generations.

Roots and tubers in childhood

My roots in gardening come from a garden that I didn't appreciate at the time either. It wasn't football-field-sized, but it was big enough to be real work. And it included parsnips, a root vegetable that looks like an oversized white carrot and isn't harvestable until after the first hard frosts. I remember trying to dig parsnip roots out of the frozen soil and hacking away with a shovel. I think in the end my Dad had to dig them up. I still can't eat parsnips, but I love every other kind of garden produce imaginable! Gardening with kids has to be done on a scale that's not overwhelming for them, and it works best if they get to pick some things to plant just for their own. There's magic in the journey from seed to sprout that kids understand, because they're in the midst of that journey themselves. Susan Award-winning writer and Audubon contributor, rooted in the south-central Rockies http://susanjtweit.com http://communityoftheland.blogspot.com