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Gardening Teaches Life LessonsWritten on: 04/09/2009 19:05 by: Jason Parrish
As a child you probably remember the saying, "Early bird gets the worm." As you grow up, these simple lessons are complicated with fancy words like "First Mover Advantage." We planted a garden with the kids over Spring Break. We selected jalepenos, zuchinni, tomatoes, green beans, watermelon, pumpkin, and various herbs. To watch a seed sprout, break the soil, grow into a plant, and produce food for the table is an amazing experience for a child. Soon, the seeds started to sprout. Every day after school we went to the back yard to count how many new sprouts had surfaced... 11, 17, 31, 79, 108... The next morning, we were shocked to find a layer of ice floating in the dog's waterbowl. Life Lesson Taught. The seeds that worked their hardest and sprouted with gusto, beating out their weaker siblings for sunlight and moisture all were killed by the late freeze. Just the day before they were in the lead to be "kept" when the time came to "thin" our little garden. My "take away" from this little reminder of natures capricious antics is that gardening - like the stock market - like humanity at large - is a complex balance of hard work, luck, and timing. Often we confuse luck and timing as the same thing - but they are very different. Winning the lottery is luck. Winning the lottery on the $1M night versus the $100M night is timing.
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Tongue-in-cheek I've also heard that term explained "Its the early worm the bird gets". Lesson? Don't be the worm!
I absolutely agree with you 100%, gardening is a great way to also teach our youth to resepct the environment and learn about conservation. There is a program here in San Antonio through the food bank that teaches family lessons about gardening to provide supplemental food on the table. I hope the fruits of your hard labor make their way to your family's dinner table in the form of a delicous and nutritous meal!!!