A Rainbow Garden Comes Alive – Magical Flower Song for Kids
Sing through a magical rainbow garden full of colourful flowers in bloom! This enchanting animated nature song teaches colours and flower names for children aged 2–7.
About This Video
The garden is asleep under soft winter earth — and then spring arrives all at once. This animated flower song follows the garden through an entire year: the first green spears of snowdrops pushing through in February, crocus in purple, yellow and white in March, daffodils in April, tulips in May, roses climbing in June, sunflowers towering in August, dahlias blazing in September and the last chrysanthemums in November before the frost. Every flower is named, coloured and shown at its peak — a complete flower calendar from first bulb to final bloom.
Perfect for children aged 2 to 7 learning flower names and the seasons. After watching, plant one bulb in autumn — crocus, daffodil or tulip — and wait together through winter for the first spring flower. Gardening patience and spring anticipation, all from one small bulb. Free.
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Parents' Questions
Which flowers appear through the year in the Rainbow Garden flower song?
This garden flower song follows the seasonal calendar through a full year of blooms. February: snowdrops (the first flowers of the year, small white bells pushing through frost). March: crocuses in purple, gold and white (often appearing through snow). April: daffodils (yellow trumpets in every garden and park). May: tulips in every possible colour. June: climbing roses and peonies. July: lavender buzzing with bees. August: sunflowers reaching over the fence. September: dahlias in spectacular pompon heads of red, orange and pink. October: cosmos feathery and pink. November: the last chrysanthemums before the frost arrives and the garden sleeps again.
How does the flower song help children connect plants to the seasons?
By following the same garden through twelve months of blooming, the song builds a clear, memorable seasonal map of flowering plants — which flowers signal spring, which summer, which autumn. Children who have watched this video notice and name flowers on every walk through the year: 'That's a crocus — so it must be March!' 'The sunflowers are out so it must be August now.' This seasonal plant awareness is one of the most deeply grounding connections a child can develop with the natural world — a gift that makes every park walk and every garden gate more interesting every year for the rest of their lives.
What garden activity pairs best with A Rainbow Garden Comes Alive?
Plant flower bulbs in autumn — the best time is October and November. Crocus, daffodil and tulip bulbs are cheap, robust and almost impossible to fail. Plant them in the garden or a pot of compost, water once and wait. Through December, January and February, remind your child the bulb is underground 'sleeping'. When the first green tip appears in February or March, go outside together and find it — the moment of discovery, knowing that you planted something that has been quietly growing all through the cold months, is one of the most powerful gardening experiences available to children aged 2 to 7.