I’m sharing some ways learning farm activities that can be fun and educational. Too, I have a free printable farmyard explorers farm discovery journal.
Paring this farmyard journal with hands-on activities makes learning about a farm meaningful. Let’s face it, many of us love chickens and goats maybe pigs too.
However, not all of us have a small farm outside our backdoor. This journal gives your kids a chance to explore and discover.

And one of the best reasons I love doing a farm study is that you can include multiple ages. Although I gear this printable toward the elementary grades, you can include other subjects for multiple ages.
For example, language arts can be a story of animals or a well-researched science paper on animals, plants, life cycles or seasons.
Science can be animal husbandry and math can be graphing, counting eggs or notice and drawing life cycles.
History and geography can include learning about early farming, how products support our community and helping kids understand where our food comes from.
RESOURCE & BOOKS FOR A FARM UNIT STUDY
Next, add some of these resources and books to your day for a fun farm unit study.
Too, I prefer living books when I can find them.
9 Farming Resources and Books
Add some of these fun books and resources to create your own curriculum about farming or for a homeschool unit study topic about farming.
Learn the difference between a farrow and a barrow, and what distinguishes a weanling from a yearling. Country and city mice alike will delight in Julia Rothman’s charming illustrated guide to the curious parts and pieces of rural living. Dissecting everything from the shapes of squash varieties to how a barn is constructed and what makes up a beehive to crop rotation patterns, Rothman gives a richly entertaining tour of the quirky details of country life.
Some Pig. Humble. Radiant. These are the words in Charlotte's Web, high up in Zuckerman's barn. Charlotte's spiderweb tells of her feelings for a little pig named Wilbur, who simply wants a friend. They also express the love of a girl named Fern, who saved Wilbur's life when he was born the runt of his litter.
While Laura Ingalls grows up on the prairie, Almanzo Wilder is living on a big farm in New York State. Here Almanzo and his brother and sisters help with the summer planting and fall harvest. In winter there is wood to be chopped and great slabs of ice to be cut from the river and stored. Time for fun comes when the jolly tin peddler visits, or best of all, when the fair comes to town.
Almanzo wishes for just one thing—his very own horse—and he must prove that he is ready for such a big responsibility.
Twelve-year-old Sophie Brown feels like a fish out of water when she and her parents move from Los Angeles to the farm they’ve inherited from a great-uncle. But farm life gets more interesting when a cranky chicken appears and Sophie discovers the hen can move objects with the power of her little chicken brain: jam jars, the latch to her henhouse, the entire henhouse.... And then more of her great-uncle’s unusual chickens come home to roost. Determined, resourceful Sophie learns to care for her flock, earning money for chicken feed, collecting eggs. But when a respected local farmer tries to steal them, Sophie must find a way to keep them (and their superpowers) safe.
Strawberries—big, ripe, and juicy. Ten-year-old Birdie Boyer can hardly wait to start picking them. But her family has just moved to the Florida backwoods, and they haven't even begun their planting. "Don't count your biddies 'fore they're hatched, gal young un!" her father tells her.
Making the new farm prosper is not easy. There is heat to suffer through, and droughts, and cold snaps. And, perhaps most worrisome of all for the Boyers, there are rowdy neighbors, just itching to start a feud. The land was theirs, but so were its hardships.
Explore the workings of a small-scale, organic family farm and experience the rhythm of farm life. In the spring, visit the chicken coop, till the fields, and tour the farm machinery. When summer comes, plant corn, meet the pollinators, and head to the county fair. In the fall, make pies and preserves, harvest pumpkins, and put the fields to sleep. Winter activities include trimming and pruning the orchard, seed shopping, and baking bread.
A young girl delights in her grandmother’s stories of days gone by, sparked by keepsakes and simple questions, Grandma shares marvelous stories of mischief , discovery, and laughter, such as the time she accidentally lost the family buggy. Part of the bestselling Grandma’s Attic series, these charming tales—updated with delightful new illustrations—will whisk you away to another time and place.
Caddie Woodlawn is a real adventurer. She'd rather hunt than sew and plow than bake, and tries to beat her brother's dares every chance she gets. Caddie is friends with Indians, who scare most of the neighbors—neighbors who, like her mother and sisters, don't understand her at all.
Fill bushel baskets with figures representing veggies, from corn and broccoli to onions and pumpkins
Playmat with farm signs includes images of essential colors and shapes
Additionally, look at some of these fun activities about farms.
LEARNING FARM ACTIVITIES FOR KIDS
- Fun And Easy Egg Carton Farm Animals: A Crafting Adventure
- Tot School Milk the Cow..so cute!
- Fascinating Science: Popcorn And Milk Experiment From Farmer Boy
- Farmer Boy Unit Study and Make a Fun Hand Loom Craft
- How to Create Homeschool Farming Curriculum and Adorable Clothespin Sheep Craft

Too, I have How To Make An Adorable Rocking Chick Easy Chicken Craft, Free Homeschool Chicken Unit Study and Anatomy of an Egg Felt Activity & Worksheet, and Free Chicken Life Cycle Worksheet For Kids & Hands-on Activity.
This is a subscriber freebie.
HOW TO GET THE FREE FARMYARD EXPLORERS FARM DISCOVERY JOURNAL
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