Gopal was waiting for his mausi’s family to visit them. They will be coming the next day for their holidays. He was thinking about all the fun and nice food that he would have with his cousins. Just then his mother called out, “Gopal, before you sleep, remember to soak two small bowls (katoris) of chana (gram).” She was going to his Bua’s house and would return only in the morning.
As he was soaking the chana, Gopal thought, “How will two small bowls of this be enough for eight persons?”So he soaked another two bowls of chana. When his mother returned the nextmorning, she saw that the chana were overflowing from the vessel. “How much did you soak?” asked his mother. “How did that happen!” wondered Gopal.
“You soaked too much! Anyway it is good, now I will cook half of them, and leave the other half to sprout. I can send these to your aunt. The doctor has told her to eat sprouts”, mother said. She tied half of the soaked chana in a wet cloth, and hung them up to sprout.
Discuss-
-What things are soaked before cooking in your house? Why?
-What things do you eat after sprouting? How are they sprouted? How much time does it take?
-Has the doctor or someone you know ever told you to eat sprouts? Why?
Do this and find out-
Do you remember that in Class IV you did an activity with seeds? Now try another one.
-Take some chana and three bowls.
-Put five chana in the first bowl and fill it up with water.
-Put a damp piece of cloth or some cotton wool in the second bowl. Now keep the same number of chanas in it. Make sure that the cotton wool or cloth remains wet.
-Put the same number of chanas in the third bowl. Do not put anything else in it. Cover all the three bowls.
Observe after two days and note the changes in the bowls:
Project : Plant your seeds
Take a clay pot or a tin can with a wide mouth. Make a small hole at the bottom of the can. Fill your can with soil. Put four or five seeds of the same kind in the soil and press them gently. Different groups can plant different kinds of seeds,such as mustard (sarson), fenugreek (methi ), sesame (til ) or coriander (dhania).
Find out
-How long did it take for the plant to come out from the soil?
-What was the difference in the height of the plant on the first and second day?
-On which day did the height of the plant increase the most?
-Did new leaves come out of the plant every day?
-Was there any change in the stem of the plant?
Discuss
-Which seeds took the most number of days for the stem to come out of the soil?
-Which seeds took the least days to come out of the soil?
-Which seeds did not grow at all? Why?
-Did anyone’s plant dry up or turn yellow? Why did this happen?
-What would happen if the plants do not get water?
Straight from your heart
-What is inside the seed?
-How does a big plant grow from a tiny seed?
So many seeds!
How many types of seeds can you collect? Where will you find them? Each of you should try to collect as many different types of seeds as you can. After that, put all the seed collections together. Now observe these seeds carefully – their shapes,sizes, colours, textures (smoothor rough). Make a seed chart to put up in the class. You can start with a table like this.
Think
-Did you keep aniseed (saunf ) and cumin ( jeera) in your list?
-Which was the smallest seed and which was the biggest seed in your collection?
Make lists of
-Seeds that are used as spices in your home.
-Seeds of vegetables.).Seeds which are flat.
-Seeds of fruits
-.Light seeds (check by blowing them)
-Make more groups. How many groups of seeds did you make?
-Do you know any games that you can play with seeds? Discuss with your friends?
Wandering seeds
Plants cannot move around. Once they grow,they remain in the same place. But their seeds are great travellers! They can reach far and wide. Look at picture 1 on the next page and see the flying seeds.
-Have you ever seen any seed that can fly?
-What is it called in your area?
-Look at your seed collection. Guess how many of those could have travelled by flying.
Look at picture 2. This seed cannot fly, but it can still travel by sticking on to the fur of animals or on our clothes. In this way it gets a free ride! Did you get any new idea from these seeds? Read how the idea of Velcro came to George Mestral.
Look at the pictures given below and guess how the seeds travel and reach different places.
-Some plants spread their seeds over long distances. When the soyabean pods are ripe, they burst and the seeds are thrown out. Have you ever heard their sound?
-Think what would happen, if seeds did not spread and remained at one place only.
-Make a list of the different ways by which seeds are spread.
Who came from where?
Have you included human beings also in your list? Yes, we also carry seeds from one place to another, knowingly or unknowingly. We bring the seeds of plants that we find beautiful or useful, to grow them in our garden. Later the seeds of these plants spread to other places. Many years later people may not even remember that these plants did not grow here earlier. They were brought from somewhere else. Do you know from where chillies came to our country? These were brought to India by traders coming from South America. Today we cannot think of food without chillies!
Read this poem to know which plant came from where
Did you know this?
From South America long ago Came a tomato, a potato and a green chilli.
Do you know this?
A cabbage came from Europe, and also a pea From Africa came a coffee bean, and a green bhindi.They crossed the land. They crossed the sea.
Did you know this?
(Bhindi is also called okra, and methi is called fenugreek)
A mango sang, ‘Come in! Come in!’
An orange smiled inside its skin.
‘Welcome to India,’ a banana said the methi and spinach, brinjal and radish, nodded its head.
--What all was grown in India long ago? Were mangoes and bananas grown here? What came from other countries?
Imagine food without potatoes or tomatoes!