810-Lancaater Farming, Saturday, June 21, 1997 \ A * VO*--"* 1 “Who likes bugs?” Wilbur Siegrist asked. He Is the guy with the funny hat made from newsprint spray-painted green and decorated with a bird’s nest and bird In It. LOU ANN GOOD Lancaster Farming Staff BRICKERVILLE (Lancaster Co.) “Who likes to get your hands dirty?” Wilbur Siegrist asked about 100 youngsters on Tuesday. Cheers and a wave of hands answered in the affirmative. That’s exactly what the particip ants at Esbenshade’s Garden Cen ter got to do when they attended Kid’s Day. They examined good bugs and bad bugs. They listened as child ren’s author Toni Albert explained how to make a rain forest in a bottle. They planted a pot of flow ers to take home and even got to take a few good bugs home. “I liked the bugs best,” said Paige Carr of Lititz. So did a lot of other kids, but some didn’t like them at all. When Siegrist released a swarm of ladybugs considered good bugs some children shrieked Participants at the Kid’s Day event fed the goldfish in the water illy pond display at Esbenshades. ids Bugs, Dirt, Plants Fascinate Kids and covered their faces, but others greeted the advent with enthusias tic yells. Siegrist and other participants wore hats made from crumpled newsprint sprayed green. A bird’s nest and a bird perched in the moss wrapped around the hat’s brim. Ten-year-old Ashley liked lis tening to author Toni Albert talk about nature and the interesting ways to make “your own little garden.” “You can make a woodland gar den from things growing wild in the lawn and woods,” Ms. Albert said. “People call some of these plants weeds, but a weed is only a plant growing where it is unwanted. Weeds can be really pretty plants.” Ms. Albert suggested using con tainers such as an old shoe or an old tin in which to grow plants. You can make an ecopond by digging a hole, dropping an old dis hpan into it, and filling with water. But the highlight of Ms. Albert’s talk was her instructions on how to take a plastic green soda bottle and turn it into a miniature rainforest Ms. Albert planted one about nine months ago and has never needed to water it but it looks like it is raining inside and the plants are growing. “I am going to plant one when I get home,” several children said. Ms. Albert’s book, “The Remarkable Rainforest” includes many activities for those interested in rainforests. The book and 35 others that teach about nature and caring for the earth by the same author are available at bookstores. “Good bugs are like friends,” Siegrist said. Children yelled out the names of some good bugs that they knew. These included ladybugs, ants, praying mantis, bees, and butterflies. The praying mantis egg sac con tains about 200 eggs, but not all the orttetf'a The free event Included an opportunity for children to select flowers to plant In a pot to take along home with them'. eggs will hatch. When praying mantis are little, they eat small bugs, but as they grow, they keep eating larger bugs such as grasshoppers. You can buy good bugs to put in your garden to make it healthier. Soil with lots of earthworms and good bugs is usually a good place to grow a garden because they make holes in the soil that helps oxygen to enter the ground. The good bugs eat bad bugs that kill plants. Some of the bad bugs are so tiny that they can barely be seen. These include white fly and aphids. Jane Johnson helped the lads plant their own gardens. She told V them how plants need air, water, and food to survive. Each child was given a fiber pot They could select their own flow ers from a variety of petunias, mar igolds, dusty miller, and other kinds. They even got a garden stick with their name on it to mark the flowers. Esbenshade’s Garden Center, 546 E. 28 th Division Highway oedl Lititz plans to bold more events f< children. For more information, call (717) 626-7007. “Gardening can be a valuable learning tool if the child is left the responsibility to care for the plants,” Siegrist said. u.