SKU: 85363883449
best site to buy garden seeds

best site to buy garden seeds 6 Packs Kids Easy Vegetable Garden Seeds - Cucumber Radish Beans Peas Lettuce Basil

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Description

best site to buy garden seeds 6 Packs Kids Easy Vegetable Garden Seeds - Cucumber Radish Beans Peas Lettuce BasilHelp kids discover the joy of gardening with the Kids Easy Garden Seed Collection from Survival Garden Seeds. This curated set features six fast growing, beginner friendly vegetables and herbs that make it simple for children to explore planting, caring for, and harvesting their own food. Perfect for school projects, family gardening activities, or hands on science lessons, this collection helps build confidence and curiosity while producing delicious

Help kids discover the joy of gardening with the Kid’s Easy Garden Seed Collection from Survival Garden Seeds. This curated set features six fast-growing, beginner-friendly vegetables and herbs that make it simple for children to explore planting, caring for, and harvesting their own food. Perfect for school projects, family gardening activities, or hands-on science lessons, this collection helps build confidence and curiosity while producing delicious homegrown snacks.

Fun, Educational, and Beginner-Friendly
These kid-approved varieties sprout quickly, grow dependably, and offer plenty of opportunities to learn:

  • Provider Green Beans are productive bush beans that germinate reliably and offer crisp, tasty pods kids can pick straight from the plant.
  • Buttercrunch Lettuce forms tender, crunchy heads that grow well in containers or small garden beds.
  • French Breakfast Radish matures rapidly, giving kids quick results and mild, crunchy roots.
  • National Pickling Cucumber produces plentiful cucumbers ideal for snacking or making small-batch pickles.
  • Genovese Basil adds fragrance and flavor to the garden, teaching kids how to grow their own herbs for cooking.
  • Sugar Daddy Snap Peas create sweet, stringless pods that are easy to harvest and enjoy fresh.

Why Families Love the Kid’s Easy Garden Collection

  • Encourages hands-on learning, responsibility, and practical life skills
  • Fast-growing varieties ideal for young gardeners and short attention spans
  • Suitable for school gardens, science experiments, containers, or backyard beds
  • Produces real, edible food kids can pick, taste, and enjoy
  • Works well indoors under lights or outdoors throughout the growing season

How to Grow
Start seeds indoors in small pots or sow directly outdoors once the weather is favorable. Place plants in a sunny spot and water regularly to keep soil lightly moist. Many varieties grow well in containers, raised beds, or small garden spaces. Show kids how to check soil moisture, observe new growth, and harvest crops gently to encourage continued production.

Harvest & Use
Kids can pick beans, peas, and cucumbers when they reach full size. Radishes are ready in just a few weeks, making them perfect for quick results. Harvest basil and lettuce leaves as needed for salads, sandwiches, snacks, and kid-friendly cooking projects.

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SKU: 85363883449

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J. Edgar
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 4
How many trees do we have left?
In this book, the author takes a look at the downfall of civilizations. Yes, that's plural. There are several models of how civilization is progressing. One is that we're getting better and better as time goes by. Another, less popular one states that we are actually in decline, going down from some sort of golden age. You'll find many of these proponents in the old age homes and such. For them, the only disagreement is when we are declining from. Wright takes a look at the cyclical nature of the rise and fall of civilizations, taking examples from several once- prospering civilizations. This book stands as a call to action that something must be done to grow smartly and be careful on how we allocate the scant resources we have left. While he doesn't hit an anything new, this book's strength is its concise nature. The several examples are familiar and in that have more impact. The strongest example is one he visits several times to show an analogy of current times: Easter Island. This isolated speck in the Pacific was once a thriving mini-civilization with culture and art. And a lot of trees. These trees helped the islanders fish and raise their ceremonial head sculptures. However, these trees also were a poorly cultivated resource. Someone not too long ago cut down the last tree, and the island is now a wasteland and anthropological curiosity. We are doing the same thing. How many trees do we have left to cut?
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Reviewed in the United States on October 14, 2009
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W Lorraine Watkins
Draper, US
★★★★★ 3
Good on Review Short on Direct Experience
It is an extensive review of the literature on rise and fall of civilizations with observations on our's. Extremely well footnoted and referenced it however suffers from the author appearing to have little direct primary experience in the study of his topic. Nonetheless there is good information here and substantiation of the notion that cultures come and go, frequently going as a result of the lack of capacity necessary to change group behavior in response to certain challenges. He presents compelling evidence that those overwhelming challenges often revolve around irrational and compulsive exploitation of natural resources. Sadly I share the author's pessimism in regard to our global culture being likely to respond adequately to the ongoing destruction of our livable earthly environment. I fear the planet is headed for a massive kill off in the disturbingly near future.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 13, 2013
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phamv
Boise, US
★★★★★ 5
I hate to be the kind of person preaching on Doom's ...
This is an impressive quick read. I hate to be the kind of person preaching on Doom's Day, but I do find the definition of progress to be a multi-faceted, direct correlation to humanity, or as this book challenges, inversely related. As Le Corbusier once stated in Towards a New Architecture, "[Progress is] the study of minute points pushed to its limits." I think that we forget that limits do exist. On a sustainability level, we seem to forget that growth is bound to a carrying capacity which is only a constant. We exceed limits in population, in wealth, in energy consumption, and we are doing so blindly because we believe we are progressing. This is the first that I heard the term "progress traps" (which I think Wright may have coined himself), and I believe we seem to fall under the impression that distilling or expanding our limitations is an ultimate form of progress, when in fact, its lack in sustainability will only push us back. If you have the time, it's a pretty quick and enlightening read. If you are still on the fence with the concepts discussed in the book, I recommend finding it at a local library before committing to buy. For me, I recommend it. Also, if you are interested, there is a documentary based on this book called "Surviving Progress" (2011). I prefer the book so much more, but the documentary wasn't that bad.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 29, 2015
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MITCHELL T WEBB
Boise, US
★★★★★ 5
Negro Slave Bible
I like the large print. And, I appreciate the honest commentary.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2026
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joan williams
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
None
Format: Paperback
Great book, very informative
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Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2026

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