9218 Roots Shoots Buckets and Boots

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T O P

ourds are Mother Nature’s all-purpose plants. From birdhouses to bath sponges, drums to dolls, a garden draped in gourds can supply children with endless hours of fun and discoveries. Small, ornamental mixed gourds are perfect hideout plants and will quickly engulf a playhouse or tepee with vines and a blaze of papery, star-shaped blossoms. One packet of seeds will produce colorful oddities that look like apples, pears, oranges, warty monsters, and strange crowns studded with thorns. Children “treasure hunt” for the ugliest, strangest, scariest, and prettiest offspring. Luffa gourds (or vegetable sponges) are shaped like giant cucumbers, and they have as many names as they have uses. Sepium, grown best in a half-barrel, is a small luffa that fits perfectly in a child’s hand. Plant a plot of bottle gourds and dipper gourds for a supply of winter craft projects. Tiny spoon gourds are child-size

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P L A N T S

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K I D S

eating utensils and giant bushel gourds make perfect toy baskets. Two gourd cups connected by a long string can be used as a natural “telephone” and the longhandled gourds make great back-scratchers.

orn is a source of wonder. Kids find it hard to believe that the needlelike seedlings that pierce the ground will someday produce exploding kernels or a whole harvest of jeweltoned ears. Small corns, such as ‘Strawberry’ popcorn and mini Indian corn, are content to grow in close quarters, in half-barrels, and in baskets filled with rich soil and compost. Giant ‘Six-Shooter’ corn can reach 12 to 15 feet. You’ll need to set aside at least a 10-foot plot of sunny ground for

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