How does your garden grow?

There are several great kits that teach children the basics of gardening by Andrea Gollin

it's not often that one is saved by crocuses, even in literature. But that's what happens in Frances Hodgson Burnett's classic children's novel, "The Secret Garden." Mary is "as tyrannical and selfish a little pig as ever lived," and Colin is a spoiled semi-invalid who's fretting himself to death. Both are miserably unhappy children until they start hanging out in the garden, digging and weeding and breathing the fresh air. As the garden grows, so do the children, until both the neglected garden and the lonely children are blooming with health and vigor. "There is Magic in there -- good Magic," Colin says of the garden. And he's right, as any child who reads the book will surely conclude.

And readers inspired to claim their own patch of earth and watch the flowers grow can begin by taking a look at The Secret Garden Notebook, illustrated by Graham Rust, whose Victorian-style illustrations also grace a reprint of the novel. The notebook is a seasonally organized introduction to gardening, complete with instructions and a log to keep track of what grows when. ($18.95 for "The Secret Garden"; $12.95 for "The Secret Garden Notebook"; both for ages 10 and up, from David R. Godine, 800-344-4771)

There are several great kits that teach kids the basics of gardening. For those who don't have access to outdoor space, the Wee Enchanted Garden is a miniature scene in a 10-inch plastic planter. The kit comes with dirt, grass and bean seeds; accessories include a miniature house, rocks, plastic animals and a shell -- a whole neighborhood. You provide the windowsill. ($21.95; for ages 7 and up, from Creativity for Kids, 800-642-2288 ext. 3037)

For the more ambitious gardener-to-be, the Vegetable Garden and Flower Garden both come with indoor mini-greenhouses for germinating seeds before transplanting them to the great outdoors. These kits also contain information booklets and activity cards. ($17 each; for ages 7 and up, from ALEX, 800-666-ALEX)

Those with the most tools will, of course, grow the largest plants. Child-sized gardening implements do exist, and there probably isn't a kid alive who doesn't lust for a watering can -- not to mention a hand trowel, hand shovel and hand rake. ($4-5 for hand tools, $26 for watering can; for ages 4 and up, from BRIO, 888-274-6869)

For those who want to keep a close eye on what's growing, the Multiscope is a telescope-microscope-spectroscope kit that allows kids a different perspective on the leaves in your backyard; it also lets them spy on the neighbors' gardens. The assemble-it-yourself tool magnifies at 30X, and the telescope has a power of 4X. ($15.95; for ages 8 and up, from Educational Insights, 800-933-3277)

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