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Hands-On Activities

7 Facts About the Inca Empire & Make a Fun Incan Ruins Model

July 26, 2023 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I have 7 facts about the Incan Empire and your kids will love this Incan ruins model hands-on activity. Also, you’ll love my Free South America Printable Lapbook and Fun Hands-on Unit Study Ideas.

In a learning journey to South America, you must be sure to visit the Incan Ruins with a fun hands-on activity or two.

We are making a unique Incan ruins model with a little paint and a handful of unfinished blocks.

7 Facts About the Inca Empire & Make a Fun Incan Ruins Model

Also, you’ll learn a few important facts about the ruins, and discover a few more activities to help your child know more about this culture that helped shape future civilizations.

While creating your Incan ruins you can watch a video about their history or talk about the architecture that they are well known for.

This is a culture rich with history, from its architecture to the symbols, traditions, food, and its rise and fall.

And this is an interesting period of early history that lends itself wonderfully to many crafts and activities.

 7 Facts about the Inca and the Incan Ruins

  1. At Machu Picchu, each stone was perfectly cut to fit together so tight that mortar was not needed to keep the walls standing.
  2. The Inca Empire lasted for just one century, with most scholars believing it started around the 13th century.
  3. The highly advanced Incan Road system, which is known as Qhapaq Ñan (“royal road” in Quechua) was over 25,000 miles long.
  4. The Incas had a unique communal concept Called Ayni, which translates today for you, tomorrow for me. They believed in an interdependent society and that every individual must give before receiving. The Inca pooled together all they had and made sure everyone was taken care of.
  5. The Incas were mostly vegan, only eating special meats for special occasions.
  6. Inca was the largest pre-Columbian empire in the Americas, it covered 770,000 square miles.
  7. The Inca Empire fell to the Spanish conquistadores under the rule of Francisco Pizarro in 1533 CE.

Next, add some of these books and resources to your South America unit study.

13 Resources for a Study of South America

Add some of these fun books and resources to your study of South America.

South America (Rookie Read-About Geography: Continents)

An incredible variety of climates and biomes span the territory of South America. As a result, the continent contains some of the greatest biodiversity on Earth.

Rookie Read-About: Continents series gives the youngest reader (Ages 3-6) an introduction to the components that make each continent distinctive and exceptional. Readers will get to know each continents' geography, history, and wildlife. In this book readers learn about the continent of South America, including the geography, native animals, people and more.

Ancient Civilizations: Aztecs, Maya, Incas!: With 25 Social Studies Projects for Kids (Explore Your World)

A full-color, compelling book for ages 7 to 10 offers a deep dive into the three sophisticated ancient civilizations of Mesoamerica―the Aztecs, Maya, and Incas― through hands-on STEAM projects, essential questions, and loads of fascinating facts!

Why were there more than 3,000 steps built at Machu Picchu? Why did the Aztecs roam Mexico for nearly 200 years before finding a place to settle? How did the Maya study the movements of the stars and the planets? Ancient Civilizations: Aztecs, Maya, Incas! With 25 Social Studies Projects for Kids takes kids ages 7 to 10 on a guided tour to experience the history, culture, economics, and daily life of the Aztecs, Maya, and Incas.

Biblioburro: A True Story from Colombia

A man, his burros, and his books bring joy to children in remote Colombian villages in this inspiring book based on a true story by celebrated picture book creator Jeanette Winter.Luis loves to read, but soon his house in Colombia is so full of books there’s barely room for the family. What to do? Then he comes up with the perfect solution—a traveling library! He buys two donkeys—Alfa and Beto—and travels with them throughout the land, bringing books and reading to the children in faraway villages.

Secret of the Andes (Puffin Newberry Library)

An Incan boy who tends llamas in a hidden valley in Peru learns the traditions and secrets of his ancestors. 

My Mama's Little Ranch on the Pampas

In the sequel to On the Pampas, the author recalls her first year on the small Argentinian ranch purchased and managed by her mother, in an account that includes a visual dictionary of the Spanish words and geographical terms used in the text.

Tales from Silver Lands

Atmospheric woodcuts illustrate this Newbery Award–winning collection of 19 South American folktales. Charles J. Finger heard the tales firsthand from native storytellers, whose fables of talking animals, witches, giants, and ordinary people in supernatural settings provide remarkable insights into regional values and culture. The first of the stories, "A Tale of Three Tails," tells of an age when the rat had a tail like a horse, the rabbit had a tail like a cat, and the deer's tail was plumed like the tail of a dog. "The Magic Dog" recounts an act of kindness to a stray animal that helps overcome a witch's curse. In "The Calabash Man," the creatures of the jungle assist a suitor in winning his bride, and in "El Enano," a greedy troll's insatiable appetite leads to his downfall. Packed with adventure and full of surprises, these and other stories emphasize the importance of hard work, courage, and loyalty.

Turn Right at Machu Picchu: Rediscovering the Lost City One Step at a Time

In 1911, Hiram Bingham III climbed into the Andes Mountains of Peru and “discovered” Machu Picchu. While history has recast Bingham as a villain who stole both priceless artifacts and credit for finding the great archeological site, Mark Adams set out to retrace the explorer’s perilous path in search of the truth—except he’d written about adventure far more than he’d actually lived it. In fact, he’d never even slept in a tent.

Journey to the River Sea

With the memorable characters and plot twists she brings to her best-selling fantasies, acclaimed author Eva Ibbotson has written a hair-raising novel, set in turn-of-the-last-century Brazil.Accompanied by Miss Minton, a fierce-looking, no-nonsense governess, Maia, a young orphan, sets off for the wilderness of the Amazon, expecting curtains of orchids, brightly colored macaws, and a loving family. But what she finds is an evil-tempered aunt and uncle and their spoiled daughters. It is only when she is swept up in a mystery involving a young Indian boy, a homesick child actor, and a missing inheritance that Maia lands in the middle of the Amazon adventure she's dreamed of. Readers of every generation will treasure Ibbotson's lush historical adventure that harkens back to the beloved classics of Frances Hodgson Burnett and Louisa May Alco

This Place Is Wet

Can you imagine living in a place where there is so much water some houses need to be built on stilts to protect them when the river rises? Or where it is so wet that some plants can grow on the sides of trees with their roots gathering water from the air? In This Place Is Wet, you'll find out all sorts of things about what it's like to live in the rain forest of Brazil. Try to imagine living there!

Bolivar: American Liberator

It is astonishing that Simón Bolívar, the great Liberator of South America, is not better known in the United States. He freed six countries from Spanish rule, traveled more than 75,000 miles on horseback to do so, and became the greatest figure in Latin American history. His life is epic, heroic, straight out of Hollywood: he fought battle after battle in punishing terrain, forged uncertain coalitions of competing forces and races, lost his beautiful wife soon after they married and never remarried (although he did have a succession of mistresses, including one who held up the revolution and another who saved his life), and he died relatively young, uncertain whether his
achievements would endure.

Ada's Violin: The Story of the Recycled Orchestra of Paraguay

Ada Ríos grew up in Cateura, a small town in Paraguay built on a landfill. She dreamed of playing the violin, but with little money for anything but the bare essentials, it was never an option...until a music teacher named Favio Chávez arrived. He wanted to give the children of Cateura something special, so he made them instruments out of materials found in the trash

Mayans Aztecs Incas Coloring Book: Coloring Pages of Ancient Mexico Civilizations for Adults and Teens

Mayans Aztecs Incas Coloring Book – Fun And Education For Adults and TeensMake the perfect gift for anyone who loves coloring! Enjoy this Mayans Aztecs Incas Coloring Book for Adults and Teens. Click the cover to reveal what’s inside!About this book:

  • 40 original pages drawings of Symbols, Warriors, Masks and Mandalas.

The Inca Empire (A True Book: Ancient Civilizations) (A True Book (Relaunch))

Explore the Inca empire, including how the Incas survived in the mountains, how the empire was built, and why it disappeared.

A True Book: Ancient Civilizations series allows readers to experience what makes each ancient civilization distinctive and exceptional as well look at its influence on the some of the practices of the modern world. This series includes an age appropriate (grades 3-5) introduction to curriculum-relevant subjects and a robust resource section that encourages independent study.

More Incan Empire and Ruins Resources

  • Watch The Rise And Fall of The Inca Empire to learn more about the Inca, this is a great video for late elementary through middle school.
  • How to Make Paper Mache Mountains to Celebrate Chimborazo Day
  • Another interesting video centers around Machu Picchu,  Guide to Machu Picchu for Children: Lost City of the Inca for Kids on YouTube.
  • 9 Free South America Country Reports for Kids Notebooking Pages
  • Make a simple Metal Foil Inca Sun as you learn about the importance of this symbol to the Incas.
  • 9 Free South America Country Reports for Kids Notebooking Pages
  • Appreciating the Culture of South America Through Dance
  • Make a Peruvian Weaving Project and learn how important the different patterns were to each tribe.
  • An important part of the Inca history was their textiles, which were called tocapus which had checkered layouts, filled with repetitive geometric patterns. Here is an example to color on Incan pattern coloring page.
  • These stuffed Crinkle Paper Llamas are perfect for preschoolers learning along with older kids.
7 Facts About the Inca Empire & Make a Fun Incan Ruins Model

Finally, look how to make a fun Incan ruins model.

How to Make an Incan Ruins Model

You will need:

  • Small unfinished blocks
  • Grey paint
  • Black Paint
  • Sand
  • Green cardstock or model grass
  • Cardboard or wood piece for the base
  • Paintbrush
  • Tacky glue or hot glue
7 Facts About the Inca Empire & Make a Fun Incan Ruins Model

Start with a rectangle of wood or cardboard for the base.

I had a scrap of long balsa wood I used. Cover with glue and press your model grass or green cardstock down over it.

7 Facts About the Inca Empire & Make a Fun Incan Ruins Model

Trim off the excess so it just fits the base.

7 Facts About the Inca Empire & Make a Fun Incan Ruins Model

Use library books or search Google to find an image of Incan ruins that you want to recreate.

We went for the Sacsayhuaman Terrace Gateway because it seemed easy and interesting enough to recreate with our wooden blocks.

You can use tacky glue which is a little quicker drying than school glue or hot glue to affix your “stones” in the design you have chosen.

7 Facts About the Inca Empire & Make a Fun Incan Ruins Model

Be sure to not only glue the top and bottoms together but to give it good structure add glue to at least some of the side touching pieces.

7 Facts About the Inca Empire & Make a Fun Incan Ruins Model

To create longer stones glue 4 or 5 pieces together and let them dry before placing them atop the doorway.

7 Facts About the Inca Empire & Make a Fun Incan Ruins Model

Mix up 3 parts gray paint to 1 part sand to get a gritty sandy texture.

7 Facts About the Inca Empire & Make a Fun Incan Ruins Model

Paint your mixture all over the structure you built with a heavy hand, allowing some to completely fill in the cracks.

7 Facts About the Inca Empire & Make a Fun Incan Ruins Model

You can brush off some of the excess when it’s partially dry.

Before the gray is completely dry dab on a bit of black paint to age it.

Allow everything to dry completely.

7 Facts About the Inca Empire & Make a Fun Incan Ruins Model

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: hands on history, hands-on, hands-on activities, handsonhomeschooling, history, history resources, homeschoolhistory, Inca, south america

How to Make An Adorable Trinket Dish Handcraft For Kindergarten

July 25, 2023 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, we’re making an adorable trinket dish handcraft for kindergarten. Also, grab my other tips, ideas, and crafts for kindergarten on my page Kindergarten Homeschool Curriculum.

There is nothing sweeter than a handmade craft using little ones’ literal hands.

This trinket dish handcraft for kindergarten is a wonderful way to keep those hands little forever.

I love all sorts of handprint crafts for toddlers, preschoolers, and kindergarteners.

How to Make An Adorable Trinket Dish Handcraft For Kindergarten

But there is something special about this one that can be used every day and will be a reminder for years to come of how sweet those hands were.

At this age, you are really beginning to see those lightbulbs go off in their head.

Kindergarten is such a sweet time and grade.

You are really beginning to see those lightbulbs go off in their head.

They are not babies but not yet adolescents.

15 Ways to Make a Handcraft for Kindergarten

School is fresh and new for them, and most projects are met with fun fresh eyes.

Besides the tutorial for the trinket dish, I gathered up 14 more fun ways to make a hand craft for kindergarten.

You will find paper crafts, more clay, hand towels, and lots of other neat ideas.

14 Ideas for Handcrafts for Kindergarten

Add a few of these handcrafts to begin your learning day or use some of them for back to school memories.

Photo Credit: thechirpingmoms.com

Flamingo Handprint with a Book & Snack Too!

 Collectively, flamingos are a favorite in our house, so this sweet book was an instant hit

Photo Credit: www.shared.com

Tiny Little Hands You Can Take Everywhere with You That Will Melt Your Heart!

Do your little ones come home from school with those adorable paper handprint crafts they make from time to time? Mine sure do! However, I must admit they sometimes end up in the back of a drawer or torn, which is why I must tell you about these fantastic shrinky dink handprint keychains!

Photo Credit: fromabcstoacts.com

All About Me Hand Print Book for Preschoolers

Even if they’re technically not in the reading stage just yet, creating a book that is all about them is such a fun way to get your preschooler excited about learning!

Photo Credit: www.artycraftykids.com

Autumn Handprint Tree

Autumn is a gorgeous, colourful season that never fails to get the creative juices flowing and if you’re looking for an opportunity to explore simple colour-mixing techniques within a seasonal theme, then this Autumn Handprint Tree art project is the one for you.

Photo Credit: theimaginationtree.com

Sand Clay Recipe and Handprint Keepsakes

Make some handprint keepsakes using this simple, homemade sand clay recipe for long-lasting memories and sweet gifts. Add shells and treasures collected on beach visits too, to incorporate holiday memories which will last.

Photo Credit: www.midgetmomma.com

Leaf Handprint towel

These cute DIY Leaf Handprint Hand towels are a cute way to dress up your kitchen for the fall season. Handprint crafts are such a fun and easy way to decorate and keep the memories of when the kids are little!

Photo Credit: www.avasalphabet.com

Homemade Handprint Garden Stones

Do you have someone in your life who uses their hands to care for others in all they do? When I reflect on this question, I instantly think about my mom. She loves to nurture her friends and family, plants and animals and all living things

Photo Credit: childhoodmagic.com

Cactus Handprint Craft An Easy Handprint Art Idea

  • Handprint art is fun and accessible for all ages of children. My elementary-age daughter enjoys these projects and they are great for babies and toddlers as well.
Photo Credit: myhomebasedlife.com

Mail A Hug |

Looking for an easy and thoughtful kid friendly craft to do for someone that you miss!? This mail a hug is the perfect activity. 

Photo Credit: www.gluedtomycraftsblog.com

Handprint Graduation Keepsake

Are you looking for a creative and meaningful way to commemorate your child’s graduation? Why not make something they can cherish forever- a keepsake handprint craft that doubles as décor or even a gift!

Photo Credit: www.thebestideasforkids.com

Handprint Suncatcher

There’s nothing better than a homemade craft that doubles as a keepsake. Today we have this adorable handprint suncatcher craft to share with you.

Photo Credit: www.messylittlemonster.com

Handprint Flowers - Paper Lily Handprint Craft

There's something so special about our children's handprints when they're little! We love making handprint crafts at home; it's such a lovely way to treasure childhood memories as our little ones grow.

Photo Credit: www.gluedtomycraftsblog.com

Handprint Fish Puppets - Craft Idea For Kids

This fun kids craft is perfect for a pretend “under the sea” show. All you need are some inexpensive materials and a little imagination!

Photo Credit: www.easypeasyandfun.com

Chicken Handprint Craft for Kids

Hand print arts and crafts were always popular with younger kids, I mean who doesn’t love to use their hand as a paintbrush?

Next, look at some more kindergarten homeschool rresources.

More Kindergarten Homeschool Resources

  • Shark and Oceans for Kindergarten Fun Sight Word Activity
  • 12 Easy Pick Up And Go Homeschool Kindergarten History Curriculum
  • How To Determine The Best Beginner Reading Books For Kindergarten & Recommendations
  • Kindergarten Crafts for Winter An Easy and Fun Polar Bear Fork Painting
  • How to Make A Fun ABC Flip Book Fingerprint Activity for Kindergarten
  • Homeschool Kindergarten Life Science – Hands-on Fun Nature Tree Study
  • 40 Awesome Earth Science Movies for Kindergarten
  • Growing a Seed Activity For Kindergarten Science Kids Activity
  • Native American Activities For Kindergarten Create A Fun Cradleboard Craft
  • Rainforest Science Activities For Kindergarten Amazing and Fun Living Terrarium
  • Pond Life for Kindergarten Activity Build a Fun Beaver Dam
  • Easy and Fun Pine Cone Snowy Owl Winter Craft for Kindergarten
  • 4 Fun and Engaging Bat Activities for Kindergarten
  • Native American Crafts for Kindergarten How to Make a Kids Pinch Pot
  • 10 Best Homeschool Phonics Curriculum For Kindergarten
  • 15 Fun Resources For History for Kindergarten Homeschool
  • 19 Fun Hands-on Rainforest Activities for Kindergarten
  • Rainforest Crafts for Kindergarten: Make an Easy Paper Plate Monkey
  • How to Create the Best Homeschool Schedule for Kindergarten (free printable)
  • 60 Favorite Top Homeschooling Materials for Kindergarten
  • 10 Affordable and Complete Homeschool Kindergarten Curriculum
  • How to Effortlessly Blend Kindergarten Homeschool Subjects & Life
  • BEST Free Kindergarten Homeschool Curriculum With A Gentle Approach (List)
  • Delightful Kindergarten Homeschool Curriculum Which Promote a Love of Learning
How to Make An Adorable Trinket Dish Handcraft For Kindergarten

Finally, look how to make this fun and adorable trinket dish for your precious little one.

How to Make a Trinket Dish Handcraft for Kindergarten

There are so many sweet ways you can use this keepsake trinket dish, from storing keys to spare change out of your pockets.

I enjoy using this type of clay with little ones because it is much less messy than other kinds and is so easy for them to work with.

You will need:

  • Crayola Model Magic
  • Craft Paint
  • Paint brushes
  • Clay roller /rolling pin
  • Clay cutter/ craft stick
  • Shallow bowl
How to Make An Adorable Trinket Dish Handcraft For Kindergarten

First, begin by having your child roll out their clay to about ⅓” to ½” thickness.

Handcraft for Kindergarten

Make the whole piece a little larger than their hand.

How to Make An Adorable Trinket Dish Handcraft For Kindergarten

Next, press their hand firmly into the clay. You will want to push on every finger and the palm to get a good impression.

How to Make An Adorable Trinket Dish Handcraft For Kindergarten

Too, cut a circle around it, you can cut freehand or use a bowl as a guide. Let them do as much as they are able.

How to Make An Adorable Trinket Dish Handcraft For Kindergarten

Next, lay it gently inside a bowl or basket to give it a slightly rounded shape,

Also, you should not need to press firmly and lose any detail, it should naturally curve into shape.

How to Make An Adorable Trinket Dish Handcraft For Kindergarten

Set aside to dry.

Have your child fashion a small heart from a leftover piece of model magic and press it a little flatter.

How to Make An Adorable Trinket Dish Handcraft For Kindergarten

Allow both pieces to dry, you will find that it is somewhat dry after 24 hours and will be completely dry after 72 hours.

Paint the heart and set it aside to dry.

How to Make An Adorable Trinket Dish Handcraft For Kindergarten

Paint the hand, I find that watering down your craft paint makes it flow much better and helps the details, like the ridges in the hand pop a little more.

How to Make An Adorable Trinket Dish Handcraft For Kindergarten

Carefully paint around the hand with contrasting watered-down paint.

How to Make An Adorable Trinket Dish Handcraft For Kindergarten

Glue the heart into the place and let it dry.

Once dry flip the dish over and write your child’s name and date on the back in permanent marker (especially if you have more than one child to keep track of!)

You can use your trinket dish to hold small toys, jewelry, paper clips, and other small items.

How to Make An Adorable Trinket Dish Handcraft For Kindergarten

Or your glasses on the side table…

How to Make An Adorable Trinket Dish Handcraft For Kindergarten

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: back to school crafts, crafts, kindergarten

7 Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys Facts And Kids Gun Holster Handicraft

July 23, 2023 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I have 7 Wyatt Earp and the cowboy facts and a fun gun holster handicraft. Also, your kids will love this Free American History Lapbook The Old West Through the Life of Wyatt Earp.

Too, today is a tribute to National Day of the Cowboy which is the fourth Saturday in July. It really began in the heart of Texas.

However, we’re also learning about Wyatt Earp.

One thing about Wyatt Earp and the cowboys is that they always had a gun in a holster at their side in the wild untamed west.

Many boys and girls love pretending that they are taming the Wild West, protecting their wagons, etc. So, I thought the perfect craft for this theme is a diy gun holster.

We are going to fashion a quick but serviceable holster with just felt and embroidery thread so our little gunslingers can get on the move.

7 Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys Facts And Kids Gun Holster Handicraft

But let’s learn more about Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys before we make our holster.

Grab your favorite add-on activities, games, and books from my resources below.

One side was lawmen, the other outlaws.

You have likely heard of the Gunfight at the Okay Corral in Tombstone, Arizona between them.

However, that was just one story in the long hard life of Wyatt Earp.

7 Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys Facts

  1. Wyatt Earp was larger than life indeed. He stood 6 feet when the average height was only about 5 feet 6 inches, his brothers were also tall.
  2. The 1881 Gunfight at the OK Corral in Tombstone is believed to only have lasted 30 seconds.
  3. Wyatt’s life was a restless one. At various times throughout his life, he held many different positions, such as a constable, city policeman, county sheriff, Deputy U.S. Marshal, Deputy Sheriff, teamster, buffalo hunter, saloon owner, gambler, mine owner, bouncer and a boxing referee.
  4. Earp was the last surviving participant of the OK Corral shootout, dying at home at the age of 80 years old.
  5. At just 17, Wyatt left his home and went to work hauling freight and grading track for the Union Pacific Railroad.
  6. After he left Tombstone, Wyatt Earp moved around the West, and he ended up settling in California with Josephine Marcus.
  7. At age 62, Earp was hired to work for the Los Angeles Police Department to perform tasks considered “outside the law”.

:

7 Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys Facts And Kids Gun Holster Handicraft

Next, look at more hands-on activities about Wyatt Earp and the cowboys.

More Activities for Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys

  • I think it would be really fun to also add this Printable Sheriff’s Badge craft to go along with your DIY holster.
  • For older kids, this version of Wyatt Earp on Amazon Prime might be a good option for your family.
  • You could also create your own “Wanted Poster” for crimes like stealing cookies from the cookie jar or unlawful noise level.
  • Free American History Lapbook The Old West Through the Life of Wyatt Earp
  • Set the mood with a little wild west backdrop in the form of a Desert Sunset Painting.
  • Free Printable History Board Game – American History Through the Life of Wyatt Earp
  • Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp – Hands-on Activities
  • I have a Children’s Encyclopedia of American History that had several wonderful pages on the expansion West, Wild West celebrities, and settling the West.

7 Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys Facts And Kids Gun Holster Handicraft
  • Not Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys specific but What Was The Wild West is a great supplement to learn all about the wild west.

Also, add some of these books and fun resources.

American History Through the Eyes of Wyatt Earp Resources

Add one or two of these books to your unit study about Wyatt Earp who lived between 1848 and 1929.

Wyatt Earp : U. S. Marshal (Landmark Books #67)

- Possibly the greatest gunfighter the Old West ever knew.

Tombstone: The Earp Brothers, Doc Holliday, and the Vendetta Ride from Hell (Frontier Lawmen)

On the afternoon of October 26, 1881, eight men clashed in what would be known as the most famous shootout in American frontier history. Thirty bullets were exchanged in thirty seconds, killing three men and wounding three others.The fight sprang forth from a tense, hot summer. Cattle rustlers had been terrorizing the back country of Mexico and selling the livestock they stole to corrupt ranchers. The Mexican government built forts along the border to try to thwart American outlaws, while Arizona citizens became increasingly agitated. Rustlers, who became known as the cow-boys, began to kill each other as well as
innocent citizens. That October, tensions boiled over with Ike and Billy Clanton, Tom and Frank McLaury, and Billy Claiborne confronting the Tombstone marshal, Virgil Earp, and the suddenly deputized Wyatt and Morgan Earp and shotgun-toting Doc Holliday.

History for Kids: The Life of Wyatt Earp

Of all the colorful characters that inhabited the West during the 19th century, the most famous of them all is Wyatt Earp (1848-1929), who has long been regarded as the embodiment of the Wild West. Considered the toughest and deadliest gunman of his day.

Earp symbolized the swagger, the heroism, and even the lawlessness of the West, notorious for being a law enforcer, gambler, saloon keeper, and vigilante. The Western icon is best known for being a sheriff in Tombstone, but before that he had been arrested and jailed several times himself, in one case escaping from prison, and he was not above gambling and spending time in houses of ill-fame.

Wyatt Earp Dots Lines Swirls Coloring Book: Wyatt Earp Stress Relief An Adult Color Puzzle Activity Book Creativity & Relaxation

This book is designed for anyone who loves Wyatt Earp. Put all of your stress behind, have a nice seat, then find out what will amaze you inside this fascinating coloring book!

This coloring book is a perfect collection of stunning images and perfect artworks of Wyatt Earp film. Besides that, bleeding is no longer a big problem in this book because all pages are printed on high-quality papers.

With a balance of design and simple elements, these images will satisfy adults and experienced colorists without being overwhelming to a beginner.

Wyatt Earp: Wild West Lawman (Best of the West Biographies)

A biography of the lawman who helped to bring order to "The Wickedest Town in the West," Dodge City, Kansas.

How to Make a Kids DIY Gun Holster

You will need:

  • Felt or leather sheets
  • Scissors
  • Cardstock
  • Embroidery floss
  • Embroidery needle or regular needle
  • Child’s belt
  • Toy gun for template
7 Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys Facts And Kids Gun Holster Handicraft

Start by laying your child’s toy gun on a sheet of cardstock, tracing around it leaving about 1 12/” of space all the way around.

You want the handle portion to stick out above the holster.

7 Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys Facts And Kids Gun Holster Handicraft

Next, cut out the cardstock template.

Now fold over your felt and lay the template on top.

7 Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys Facts And Kids Gun Holster Handicraft

Trace and cut out both layers.

7 Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys Facts And Kids Gun Holster Handicraft

On the back piece fold the felt over about 2” down from the top and cut two lines 1 1/2” or so apart. This is where they will thread the belt through.

7 Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys Facts And Kids Gun Holster Handicraft

It is totally up to you if you want to mark or let your child mark every ½” around for the thread holes or if you want to just let them sew it as near as they can.

But since you will be going in and out of each side you will need to do it on both sides. We just laid a ruler alongside and made a tiny pin mark.

7 Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys Facts And Kids Gun Holster Handicraft

Thread a long piece of embroidery thread through the needle.

Even though it is a bit harder to push through the felt I recommend using the dull embroidery needle with young or first-time sewers.

Kids DIY Gun Holster

Otherwise, you can just pull out 1 or 2 threads from the floss and put on a regular needle.

7 Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys Facts And Kids Gun Holster Handicraft

Be sure that both sides are lined up perfectly, you can hold it in place with a few pins if you like.

We are going to use a whipstitch to sew all the way around.

Don’t worry about perfection, this is a great beginning handicraft for young children to learn how to hold a needle and sew.

While they are running around the yard playing Wyatt Earp, they won’t notice their imperfect stitches.

Stitch from one corner all the way around, rethreading as you need, knotting, and cutting off excess each time.

7 Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys Facts And Kids Gun Holster Handicraft

Slide the belt through the loops you made in the back to secure it and it’s ready for action.

This activity could also be done with older children using a thin piece of leather, a piercing tool, and leather cording following the same directions but “threading” the cording through the holes by hand.

7 Wyatt Earp and the Cowboys Facts And Kids Gun Holster Handicraft

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: cowboy, handicraft, hands on history, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, history, homeschoolhistory, Wyatt Earp

100 Oregon Trail Homeschool History Resources

July 22, 2023 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, I have some fun Oregon Trail resources for a fun hands-on unit study. Also, you’ll love my BEST Westward Ho Unit Study and Lapbook.

Worn deep and wide by the migration of three hundred thousand people, lined by the graves of twenty thousand dead, witness of romance and tragedy, the Oregon Trail is unique in history and will always be sacred to the memories of the pioneers. Reaching the summit of the Rockies upon an evenly distributed grade of eight feet to the mile, following the watercourse of the River Platte and tributaries to within two miles of the summit of the South Pass, through the Rocky Mountain barrier, descending to the tidewaters of the Pacific, through the Valleys of the Snake and the Columbia, the route of the Oregon Trail points the way for a great National Highway from the Missouri River to Puget Sound: a roadway of greatest commercial importance, a highway of military preparedness, a route for a lasting memorial to the pioneers, thus combining utility and sentiment.
~Ezra Meeker~

I couldn’t think of a more appropriate opening for this huge list of resources to study the Oregon Trail than the words of Ezra Meeker, who was one of the original pioneer

100 Oregon Trail Homeschool History Resources

100 Oregon Trail Homeschool History Resources

THE WORLD’S GREATEST TRAIL

This roundup just touches the fringe of what could be studied in such a huge and diverse topic but I hope this list will enrich your study and you enjoy studying the Oregon Trail as much as we have through the years.

There is always something we find to rekindle our love for the spirit of the early pioneers.

Oregon Trail Lesson Plans and Free Teachers Guides

  1. Go West: Imagining the Oregon Trail
  2. On the Oregon Trail primary documents
  3. The Oregon Trail -4th grade
  4. The Oregon Trail  grade 7-12
  5. Landforms and the Oregon Trail
  6. Oregon Trail Art grade 2-4
  7. Life on the Oregon Trail grade 3-4
  8. Oregon Trail Resource Guide 48 pages
  9. Oregon Trail Facts for Kids
  10. Parts of Prairie Schooner
  1. If You Were a Pioneer on the Oregon Trail
  2. Wagons West using historical fiction
  3. Overland Trails To The West
  4. Apples to Oregon
  5. Forgotten Stories of the Oregon Trail: Trailblazing Business
  6. Wagons West
  7. Moving West grade grade 3-5
  8. The Covered Wagon with colored pictures
  9. Oregon Trail Map
  10. On the Oregon Trail
100 Homeschool History Resources for studying about The Oregon Trail. Scoot by and grab your copy! You'll love these resources to bring history alive.
  1. The Fur Trade Role in Westward Expansion
  2. Crossing the Oregon Trail
  3. Westward Expansion Vocabulary
  4. The Removal of the Cherokees in Relation to Westward Expansion
  5. The Oregon Trail – (nice) This site is brought to you by teachers Michael Trinklein and Steven Boettcher, creators of The Oregon Trail, the award-winning documentary film.
  6. Talking Without Words – Explores the use of non-verbal and symbolic communication by focusing on the ways of Native Americans.
  1. Nine Places Where You Can Still See Wheel Tracks from the Oregon Trail
  2. The Oregon Trail – Could We Survive It?
  3. 6 Covered Wagon Lesson Activities
  4. Pioneer Map Trails
  5. Westward Expansion: Image and Reality
  6. Living with an Indian Tribe
  7. Long Dogs Winter Count – Keeping History Alive.
  8. Oregon Trail Learning resources – Nice. Click around though because there are emigrant profiles, articles and grave marker information.
  9. Supply List For Traveling the Oregon Trail
100 Oregon Trail Homeschool History Resources

Books About the Oregon Trail

Next, add some of these books to your learning day.

Oregon Trail Books

Add some of these fun books about the Oregon Trail to your homeschool unit study.

If You Were a Kid on the Oregon Trail (If You Were a Kid)

Follow Josephine and Stephen along the trail as they camp in the wilderness, look out over incredible landscapes, and prepare for their new lives in the West.

As Josephine Jenkins sets off on the Oregon Trail with her mother and younger brothers to reunite with her father out West, she realizes that her beloved diary has gone missing. Meanwhile, her fellow traveler Stephen Byrd is sad to be leaving his friends behind as his family makes the move to Oregon. Readers (Ages 7-9) will follow Josephine and Stephen along the trail as they camp in the wilderness, look out over incredible landscapes, and prepare for their new lives in the West.

If You Traveled West In A Covered Wagon

If you traveled west in a covered wagon--Would you ride in the wagon for the whole trip?--How would you cross rivers when there were no bridges?--Without road signs, how would you know where you were?This book tells you what it was like to be a pioneer and travel west to Oregon in the 1840s.

Rachel's Journal: The Story of a Pioneer Girl

Traveling by covered wagon, young Rachel and her family follow the Oregon Trail from Illinois all the way to California. The terrain is rough and the seven-month trip is filled with adventure. Rachel's own handwritten journal chronicles every detail and features cherished "pasted-in" mementos gathered along the way.

Daily Life in a Covered Wagon

In 1853, the Larkin family loaded up their wagons and headed west in search of a new life. But how did they do it? What did they eat? How did they survive sickness, and attacks from cattle thieves? Drawing on diaries and letters, and illustrated with photographs of actual object from the past, Daily Life in a Covered Wagon explored what life was really like on the wagon trail.

Roughing It on the Oregon Trail (The Time-Traveling Twins)

What if you could close your eyes and open them to find you were amongst hundreds of pioneers in 1843, packing up your covered wagon to travel the 2,000 miles of the Oregon Trail? Meet twins Liz and Lenny and their unique grandmother, who, with the help of her magic hat, can transport the twins to any time in history. In their first journey, the twins spend eight months crossing the country on foot and by covered wagon, braving the mountain ranges and river valleys, battling floods and droughts, and cooking slam-johns and sowbellies over buffalo chips.

Ox-Team Days on the Oregon Trail (American Frontier Series) (Illustrated)

Ezra Meeker's famous recollections of life in the American wilderness are published here complete with the one hundred and twenty original photographs and illustrations.In his memoir, Ezra Meeker casts his mind back to his early years growing up in Indiana during the 1830s and 1840s. He recalls setting off for Iowa and Oregon along the long and winding Western trail; the Gold Rush, which fueled migration to the farthest reaches of the continent, is remembered with evocative clarity.

Across the Wide and Lonesome Prairie: The Oregon Trail Diary of Hattie Campbell, 1847 (Dear America Series)

Thirteen-year-old Hattie Campbell records the details of her family's harrowing migration to Oregon in a covered wagon and describes the many challenges, both joyful and tragic, that mark the journey.

The Oregon Trail 4-Book Paperback Box Set Plus Poster Map

In this boxed set, choose your own trail and complete the journey to Oregon City with all four paperbacks in this exciting series! It's 1850 and your first goal is to get your family, covered wagon full of supplies, and oxen to Chimney Rock on time. But hurry--you'll need to make it through the rugged mountains before winter snow hits. Plus, there are wild animals, natural disasters, unpredictable weather, fast-flowing rivers, strangers, and sickness that will be sure to stand between you and your destination!    Which path will get you safely across the unforgiving terrain--from Independence, Missouri to Oregon City? With twenty-two possible endings in each book, choose wrong and you'll never make it on time. Choose right and blaze a trail that gets you closer to your final destination--and don't forget to look at your map!

Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales: Donner Dinner Party

Discover the shocking and true story of the ill-fated Donner Party expedition with the New York Times bestselling graphic novel series!

Apples to Oregon: Being the (Slightly) True Narrative of How a Brave Pioneer Father Brought Apples, Peaches, Pears, Plums, Grapes, and Cherries (and Children) Across the Plains

When Papa decides to pull up roots and move from Iowa to Oregon, he can’t bear to leave his precious apple trees behind. Or his peaches, plums, grapes, cherries, and pears. Oh, and he takes his family along too. But the trail is cruel. First there’s a river to cross that’s wider than Texas, then there are hailstones as big as plums, and then there’s even a drought, sure to crisp the cherries.

On to Oregon

John Sager was never any help to his family on the Oregon trail. Then his parents die, leaving John in charge of his younger brother and sisters. Will he be able to lead them through the perils ahead? "Will capture and hold the attention of every boy and girl".--"Saturday Review". B&W illus.

More Oregon Trail Resources

BEST Westward Ho Unit Study and Lapbook!
  1. Rocky Mountains Oregon Trail Fun Large Diorama Craft for Kids
  2. National Bison Day: Make Fun Oregon Trail Bison Jerky With Kids
  3. Little House on The Prairie Unit Study and Fun Punched Tin Lantern
  4. Westward Expansion Puzzles and Activities
  1. 7 Educational Movies for Kids About Westward Expansion
  2. 10 Westward Expansion History Fun Coloring Pages
  3. Laura Ingalls Wilder/The Westward Movement
  4. Free Pioneer Printables and Montessori Inspired Pioneer Activities

Also, your kids will love these fun history coloring pages!

Here is what the 10 page download contains. I put a few key words to explain each picture on the page. This way you can use the coloring pages as title pages too.

Page 3:  Native American on horseback,
4: Lewis and Clark Trek,
5: Lewis and Clark and The Piegan,
6: Lewis and Clark Exploring Rivers,
7: The Plains Indians,
8: Pioneer Life,
9: Moving West,
10: Westward Ho,
11: Settlers, and
12: Fur Trappers and Mountainmen

Grab your fun copy below!

  • 0. Westward Expansion History Fun 10 Coloring Pages

    0. Westward Expansion History Fun 10 Coloring Pages

    $1.75
    Add to cart

Oregon Trail Landmarks

  1. Independence, MO landmark
  2. Scotts Bluff – Gering, NE landmark
  3. Three Island Crossing – Glenns Ferry, ID
  4. Roadschool Trip to Chimney Rock + Oregon Trail

Hands-on History for Studying about the Oregon Trail

  1. Pioneer Bread
  2. Diy Pioneer Journal
  3. Oregon Trail Snacks:Making Pemmican
  4. 19 Pioneer Recipes That Survived The Oregon Trail
  5. Make a simple 9 patch quilt
  6. Candle Making For Kids
  7. We Were There on the Oregon Trail
  1. Make Pioneer Permisson Pudding
  2. Covered Wagon Cookie
  3. Free File Folder Oregon Trail Game
  4. Build a Salt Dough Map of the Oregon Trail
  5. Cardboard Covered Wagon
  6. Bonnet Tutorial
  7. How to Make Corn Husk Dolls
  8. Make hand dipped candles

More Interactive Oregon Trail History

  1. Pioneer Trivia Quiz
  2. 10 Westward Expansion Hands-on History Activities
  3. Covered Wagons of the Oregon Trail YouTube
  4. How Would You Die on the Oregon Trail quiz
  5. Experience the Trail – We put you in the action! You become part of a pioneer wagon company headed West so get ready to take a 2,000 mile journey along the Oregon/California Trail – in just one hour!
  1. Westward Expansion: Crash Course US History YouTube
  2. 10 Westward Expansion History Fun Coloring Pages
  3. Westward Expansion Postcard – beautiful image
  4. Nine Places Where You Can Still See Wheel Tracks from the Oregon Trail
  5. Pioneer Homes
  6. 7 Educational Movies for Kids About Westward Expansion
100 Oregon Trail Homeschool History Resources

Hugs and love ya,

100 Oregon Trail Homeschool History Resources @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

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2 CommentsFiled Under: Geography, Hands-On Activities, History Resources Tagged With: 100, hands on history, hands-on, hands-on activities, handsonhomeschooling, history, history resources, historyspine, homeschool, homeschoolhistory

Why Is a Toad An Amphibian And Pondlife Facts & Make a Fun Toad House

July 21, 2023 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Why is a toad an amphibian may be one of those questions your curious learner asks about those creaking pond creatures. Also, look at my Toads – Amphibians page. Also, you’ll love my Above & Below: Pond Unit Study, Hands-on Ideas, & Lapbook.

 And there will be many more questions like what is the difference between a frog and a toad.

Why do some birds swim and dive in the water and others just wade? Where do ponds come from?

Along with all this wonderful pond information, we are also going to create a welcoming toad house for your croaking friends.

Why Is a Toad An Amphibian And Pondlife Facts & Make a Fun Toad House

During the heat of the day, toads will seek out a cool and shady spot to burrow down into the cooler ground and conserve moisture.

Creating a toad house for the garden gives them an inviting place to stay.

Why is a Toad an Amphibian Resources

Nature Anatomy is a phenomenal resource to use when you are learning why is a toad an amphibian and other pond facts.

 It is full of beautiful illustrations and broad coverage of so many topics.

 In just a quick thumb through the book, I found topics like frogs vs. toads, birds, butterflies, wildflowers, butterflies, grasses, bugs, trees, and fish.

Why Is a Toad An Amphibian And Pondlife Facts & Make a Fun Toad House

As well as a wonderful image and description of the ecosystem of a pond.

What Is a Pond

It is shallow standing water where light penetrates to the bottom, with less than 30% of its surface covered by “emergent vegetation”, meaning plants growing out of the water.

A pond usually covers no more than a few acres of land.

Then add some of these pond resources to your collection of wonderful books.

11 Fun Pond Life Resources for Kids

Add one or two of these resources to you learning day or to a pond unit study.

Over and Under the Pond: (Environment and Ecology Books for Kids)

In Over and Under the Pond, readers will discover the plants and animals that make up the rich, interconnected ecosystem of a mountain pond. Over the pond, the water is a mirror, reflecting the sky. But under the water is a hidden world of creatures—minnows darting, beavers diving, and tadpoles growing.  
These secrets and many others are waiting to be discovered over and under the pond in this sweet children’s book from Kate Messner and Christopher Silas Neal, the latest in their beloved series that offers kids a peek into hidden ecosystems.

Natural and Earth Science Educational Flash Card

This set of 48 cards features a colorful illustration on one side and informational facts on the other side.

CARD SIZE: 4.5 x 6 inches. Each card is double-sided and durable.

Rivers, Ponds, and Lakes (Collins Nature Explorers)

Have you ever wondered:

  • How to find life in a puddle?
  • What lives in your local river?
  • How to make a micro zoo?
  • How pond snails breathe?

Now you can become an expert nature explorer and learn fantastic facts to impress your friends and family!

You'll love that these hands-on books contain straightforward and safe step-by-step projects, allowing you to help your children discover the natural world. They are ideal supplements to school science projects and the perfect activities for weekends and vacations.

Pond Life: Revised and Updated (A Golden Guide from St. Martin's Press)

This guide describes and illustrates, in full color, the plants and animals that live in or near ponds, lakes, streams, and wetlands. It includes surface-dwelling creatures as well as those of open water, the bottom, and the shore and tells how various animals and plants live together in a community.Plus suggestions for:Where and when to lookObserving and collecting specimensMaking exciting discoveries

Photo Credit: ourjourneywestward.com

Peaceful Ponds

Using Peaceful Ponds, you’ll have so much fun learning about pond plants and animals, as well as earth science topics as they relate to ponds. 

Lakes and Ponds!: With 25 Science Projects for Kids

Imagine the smooth, glasslike surface of a pond, the water mirroring a bright moon or a crystal blue sky. The water appears perfectly calm and still. What’s going on underneath the surface?

Lakes and Ponds! With 25 Science Projects for Kids invites kids ages 7 though 10 to investigate the bodies of water that might look calm from the shore but which are teeming with life and activity! Through fun facts and engaging content, readers explore the plants and animals living in lakes and ponds, from fish darting about to dragonfly nymphs gestating in the shallows to algae and aquatic plants converting sunlight into energy through photosynthesis. Discover fun facts about the duckweed, water lilies, and cattails growing in and around the waters of lakes and ponds. It’s a busy place!

Keystone Species that Live in Ponds, Streams, & Wetlands (Kid's Guide to Keystone Species in Nature)

The same thing is true in nature. Certain species of animals and plants are so important to their ecosystems, that if they disappear, the whole system may collapse. They are called keystone species.

Frogs and Toads and Tadpoles, Too (Rookie Read-About Science: Animals)

What's the difference between a frog and a toad? The natural world comes alive for young readers (Ages 6-7) with Rookie Read-About "RM" Science! With striking, full-color photos and just the right amount of text, this series immediately involves young readers as they discover intriguing facts about the fascinating world around them.This book discusses the likenesses and differences between frogs and toads.

Amphibian

Frogs, toads, newts, salamanders, and the rare caecilians come in a stunning array of colors, shapes, sizes, and habitats. They live both in water and on land and move in a variety of ways from swimming to hopping and even flying. With a series of specially commissioned photographs, DK Eyewitness Books: Amphibian takes a close look at the fascinating natural history of these creatures from the bright green, red-eyed tree frogs to dull, burrowing, wormlike caecilians; from startling black and yellow fire salamanders to tiny transparent glass frogs.

Pond Life: A Folding Pocket Guide to Familiar Plants & Animals Living in or Near Ponds, Lakes & Wetlands (Wildlife and Nature Identification)

So many people get their start in nature study by exploring ponds. These small bodies of calm, standing water are fascinating living laboratories of plant and animal life at all scales, from microscopic algae to iconic birds like Great Blue Herons or ecosystem engineers like Beavers. To better understand how a pond ecosystems functions, it helps to get familiar with its living parts, namely its flora and fauna. The portable reference Pond Life is an excellent tool to bring on your next pond study, as it includes beautiful illustrations of 140 common and familiar birds, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, fishes, insects, and other invertebrates as well as trees, shrubs, and wildflowers. Laminated for durability, this lightweight, waterproof, 12-panel folding pocket guide is the perfect tool for educators, learners, naturalists, botanists, and wildlife enthusiasts to use the next time they go searching for minnows, tadpoles, or dragonfly nymphs at their local pond.

Pond Wildlife (Adventures in Nature)

Get ready to take a leap into the water in this exciting exploration of pond habitats. This volume examines different kinds of pond habitats, and the creatures that are found both in the water and on its edge, from bass to grass snakes to herons. Readers will learn about life cycles, ecosystems, and conservation, which are important curricula-based science topics. This volume pairs compelling text with vivid color photographs to bring readers on a nature walk they won’t soon forget. Diagrams, activities, and quizzes provide greater opportunities for exploration. This book is perfect for nature-enthused readers to get their feet wet identifying creatures and understanding the wonder of pond wildlife!

What Lives In A Pond

Common creatures you may find in and around a pond include mammals such as water voles, beavers, and water shrews.

 Birds like ducks, herons, and kingfishers. Amphibians like frogs, toads, and newts. Small fish, reptiles, and various types of bacteria and microscopic creatures.

Why Is A Toad An Amphibian

Amphibians are small vertebrates that need water, or a moist environment, to survive.

They spend part of their lives in water and part on land.

This includes frogs, toads, salamanders, and newts. All of these can breathe and absorb water through their very thin skin.

What Is The Difference Between A Frog And A Toad

Frogs have long legs, much longer than their head and body. They are made for hopping.

Toads, however, have much shorter legs and they prefer to crawl around rather than hop.

Toads have dry, wart-covered skin while frogs have smooth, somewhat slimy skin.

Why Is a Toad An Amphibian And Pondlife Facts & Make a Fun Toad House

Moreover, here are some pond facts to “ponde-er”.

5 Pond Facts

  1. Claude Monet produced a series of about 250 oil paintings depicting the lily pond in his garden during the last 30 years of his life.
  2. You can find ponds in many places, in most countries and continents, except for Antarctica.
  3. Experts have estimated that there are around 500 million ponds and lakes around the world with the largest being as big as a lake-Great Pond in Maine.
  4. A single drop of pond water can contain more than a million microscopic organisms in it.
  5. The main predators in a pond biome are hawks and owls because they can scoop fish out of the water as well as frogs and mammals from in or around the water.
Why Is a Toad An Amphibian And Pondlife Facts & Make a Fun Toad House

Finally, look how to make this adorable toad house.

DIY Toad House

Toads are not only found in ponds.

They are terrestrial amphibians, which means that while they spend their early lives underwater as eggs and tadpoles, they can spend the rest of their life on land.

Also, they are found in all parts of a landscape, not just near water.

So, let’s make a cool, moisture-holding home for them to hang out in.

You will need:

  • 4” Terra cotta pot
  • Moss
  • Small pebbles
  • Craft paint
  • Paintbrushes
  • A hammer
Why Is a Toad An Amphibian And Pondlife Facts & Make a Fun Toad House

This cute little toad house is a great addition to your vegetable or fairy garden and can be decorated in any style you like.

Gently tap on the side of the terra cotta pot, hitting slightly harder until it cracks. Hit it again if you need to crack it down another side, you want enough to create a little “door”.

Why Is a Toad An Amphibian And Pondlife Facts & Make a Fun Toad House

Put the broken piece aside.

Paint the entire outside any way you wish, you can paint it to look like a mushroom, a little house, or like we did, to camouflage it into its surroundings.

Why Is a Toad An Amphibian And Pondlife Facts & Make a Fun Toad House

Once the paint is dry use tacky glue, not hot glue because it will separate in the heat. Too, add small pebbles to decorate it.

Why Is a Toad An Amphibian And Pondlife Facts & Make a Fun Toad House

Add moss to help it blend into its natural surroundings as well, this is some we purchased from Dollar Tree but you will find soon enough the real stuff will start growing on it.

Take your toad house outside and place it in a shady area of the garden that gets plenty of watering. You want it in an area that stays moist and cool.

Add a little potting soil inside to help retain the moisture.

Why Is a Toad An Amphibian And Pondlife Facts & Make a Fun Toad House

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: amphibian, hands-on, hands-on activities, handsonhomeschooling, homeschoolscience, life science, science, toad

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