WeeHands
in the Garden
In my classes and parent
presentations, I talk a lot about narrating your children’s day and labeling
sensory experiences. Now if playing in the garden isn’t a sensory experience
I don’t know what is. Remember though that for your crawling baby or
walking toddler, their gardening goals may be quite different from yours!

BERRY: Use this sign in the garden, in the kitchen or at the grocery store …
anywhere you see berries. If your baby is eating berries show her the
sign BERRY before she gets one, while she’s eating and when she’s all done with
her snack (paired with the sign for FINISH).
How to make the sign: Your non-dominant hand mimes twisting the end off of your
dominant hand’s little finger.
Hint: as if pulling off a small stem from the end of a berry.
DIRTY: Use this sign as you and your little
one dig in the dirt. Talk about, in positive ways, things being dirty:
your hands, the roots of plants, your shovel.
How to make the sign: Place the back of your dominant hand under your chin and
wiggle your fingers.
Hint: this sign comes for a version of the sign DIRT. One
way to remember it is to think of your chin in the dirt…it would definitely get
DIRTY!

SHOVEL: Use this sign before you pick up your
shovel and when your little one is playing with her toy shovel.
How to make the sign: Both hands mime holding a shovel; make sharp short
movements forward, and then turn back toward your shoulder.
Hint: this one’s easy; you’re miming holding a shovel!
Sara
Bingham is the author of The Baby Signing Book and the founder of WeeHands, a
baby sign language program with classes across North America. Illustrations
used with permission from Robert Rose Publishing from The Baby Signing Book by
Sara Bingham, copyright 2007. To learn more about the author and WeeHands
visit www.weehands.com.