Creating a LEGO duck pond is a wonderful hands-on activity for preschool and early elementary homeschoolers. Also, look at my page From Simple to Spectacular: Easy LEGO Ideas for Everyone.
It invites imaginative play while quietly building science knowledge, observation skills, and vocabulary.
Ducks are familiar animals for many children, yet there is so much to learn about them, especially one of the most common and recognizable ducks of all: the mallard.

For preschoolers, you might focus on sounds and movements, encouraging children to waddle like ducks or say “quack.” For early elementary students, you can add simple science discussions about habitats, feathers, and migration.
Add in a few more activities and engaging books, and you have yourself a wonderful unit on these fascinating aquatic birds.
MORE EASY LEGO IDEAS
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- How to Make a LEGO Solar System That Educates & Entertains
- How to Create a LEGO Duck Pond: Step-by-Step Guide
- How To Make A DIY LEGO Turkish Design Craft
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LEGO IDEAS FOR KIDS
Also, look at these other building ideas.
Lego Ideas for Kids
Use one of these LEGO ideas in your homeschool. Besides, LEGO are great hands-on crafts to teach with.
Never before have Shakespeare’s plays been depicted in LEGO bricks, and now Brick Shakespeare: The Tragedies—Hamlet, Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet, and Julius Caesar and Brick Shakespeare: The Comedies—A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Tempest, Much Ado About Nothing, and The Taming of the Shrew are available in one extraordinary hardcover.With over two thousand color photographs depicting the most well-known scenes in some of Shakespeare’s most well-known plays, this bind-up is the perfect gift for your LEGO- and Shakespeare-loving friends and family!Fall in love with LEGO Juliet on her balcony as Romeo proclaims his love. See the full effect of Lady Macbeth’s manic “Out, out, damn spot!” in a whole new way. Laugh along with LEGO Puck as he mischievously hassles the lovers in the woods. Cast a storm with brick Prospero as he strands his usurping brother on his deserted island.
Enter the magical world of fairy tales retold through LEGO bricks! Filled with creative and whimsical settings built from this universally celebrated toy, this book presents an all-new retelling of the original Grimm’s fairy tales of Cinderella, Rapunzel, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Hansel and Gretel, and more! With one thousand color photographs, this inspired adaptation uses intricately designed brick sets to present some of the most cherished and widely told stories of all time.Watch the clock strike twelve as Cinderella leaves her glass slipper behind at the ball, and see just how long brick Rapunzel’s hair can grow as she waits in her tower. Watch the seven dwarfs plot against the evil Queen and her brick looking glass, and try to find your way home with Hansel’s path of brick breadcrumbs
- Dr Jane Goodall + Chimps
Your LEGO duck pond can become more than just a build. It can be a learning space where children practice:
- Simple storytelling about a day at the pond
- Naming colors (green head, brown feathers, blue water)
- Counting ducks in the pond
- Sorting ducks by size or color
- Pretend play with duck families
WHAT IS A DUCK
Ducks are water birds that live near ponds, lakes, rivers, and wetlands. They are known for their webbed feet, flat bills, and waterproof feathers.
Webbed feet help ducks swim by pushing water behind them, much like paddles. Their feathers are coated with natural oils that keep them dry, even when swimming all day.
Ducks can walk on land, swim in water, and fly in the air. This makes them a great animal to study with young children, since they show how animals can move in different ways depending on their environment.
We used Nature Anatomy to look at duck images, as well as a great pond overview.

Next, look at different kinds of ducks.
DIFFERENT KINDS OF DUCKS
There are many kinds of ducks around the world; some live mostly on calm ponds and lakes, while others prefer rivers or coastal waters. A few examples you may want to talk about while building your LEGO duck pond include:
- Muscovy Ducks – Larger ducks with red markings on their faces,
- Mallards – The most well-known duck, often seen in parks and ponds.
- Wood Ducks – Colorful ducks that like wooded wetlands.
- Pekin Ducks – White ducks are often found on farms.
- Mandarin Ducks – Brightly colored ducks native to Asia.

MEET THE MALLARD DUCK
Mallards are the most common ducks in North America and are often the first ducks children learn to recognize. They live near ponds, lakes, marshes, and even city parks. Mallards are very adaptable and can live near people as well as in the wild.
One of the easiest ways to identify a mallard is by looking at the male, called a drake. Male mallards have bright green heads, yellow bills, white neck rings, and brown chests.
Female mallards are mostly brown with speckled feathers, which helps them blend into tall grass and reeds when nesting. This coloring keeps them and their eggs safe from predators.
Mallards are omnivores, meaning they consume both plants and animals. Their diet includes:
- Snails
- Seeds and grains
- Aquatic plants
- Small insects
- Worms
When building your LEGO duck pond, you can add pretend plants, bugs, or small pieces to represent food. This opens the door to discussions about habitats and how animals find what they need to survive.
Mallards live anywhere there is fresh water. They like ponds with plants around the edges because plants provide food, shelter, and safe nesting spots. Female mallards often build nests on the ground near water using grass and feathers.
Many mallards migrate, flying south in the winter to warmer places where water does not freeze. This is a great opportunity to gently introduce the idea of seasons and animal movement to young learners.
DUCK RESOURCES
HOW TO CREATE A LEGO DUCK POND: STEP-BY-STEP GUIDE
This simple activity reminds us that learning does not have to be complicated. Sometimes, a small pond, a few LEGO bricks, and a curious child are all you need. Change up your duck pond by researching different ducks and changing out the brick colors to demonstrate the various colorings.
You will need:
- Blue LEGO baseplate
- Assorted LEGO bricks

Of course, we will start with a blue baseplate for the water.
Next, add on some flat brown, tan, and or green pieces for the land at the edge of the pond. You can do this all the way around or just create a little land to talk about nesting, etc…

If you have them, add in some greenery for both aquatic and land plants.

Maybe some cattails at the edge of the water?

Include a lilypad or two in the water.

To create a mallard duck, start with a 2×4 tan brick.

Add a flat black 2×4 brick hanging halfway off the back to give his body some black and create a little tail.

Place a 2×2 green brick in front of that to make the neck and start of the head and a 2×3 tan brick on top of the black.

Continue creating the head by using a slanted yellow 2×4 brick for the bill. If you don’t have one, you can just use a square 2×2 brick to get the same idea. Behind that place is a 1×2 green brick.

Finally, add a 2×2 green brick.

Or if you have some eyes like this that come with several of the basic animal kits, you can use them.

Repeat to create as many ducks as you like and put them in your pond.


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