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hands-on activities

Flowers in the Amazon Rainforest & How To Make Fun Paper Orchids

November 22, 2025 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Let’s explore a few fascinating flowers in the Amazon rainforest and then create a beautiful paper orchid craft inspired by one of the rainforest’s most stunning plants. Also, look at my pages Rain Forest – Animals of the Amazon, Rain Forest – Amazon, and Rainforest Activities for Kids for more ideas.

The Amazon Rainforest is one of the most amazing places on Earth. It’s home to more plant species than anywhere else, including thousands of unique and colorful flowers. 

Flowers in the Amazon Rainforest & How To Make Fun Paper Orchids

Learning about these tropical blooms helps kids understand how plants survive in such a humid, wet, and shaded environment.

Rainforest flowers have special adaptations, such as bright colors, strong scents, and unique shapes that enable them to survive and attract pollinators in their damp, shaded environment.

Studying these adaptations is a fun way to combine botany and environmental science lessons

AMAZON RAINFOREST BOOKS & RESOURCES

First, look at these books and resources about the Amazon rain forest.

16 Rain Forest Animals For Kids Books & Resources

Add these rain forest animal books, games, and toys to round out your study of the animals of the rain forest.

All the Way Down: Amazon Rainforest

This book explores the rainforest layer by layer and the creatures that make their home in each part of the rainforest.

Rainforest Animals (Who Am I?)

Which rainforest animal is a frog that uses its eyes to help it swallow its food? Which rainforest animal is a bird with a big, colorful bill? Let's learn more about rainforest animals such as sloths, poison dart frogs, toucans, and more! Read With You's Who Am I? series encourages children to be more curious about the world around them as they learn fun facts about animals from across the globe.

Over and Under the Rainforest

Part of the critically acclaimed Over and Under series that includes Up in the Garden and Down in the Dirt and Over and Under the Snow!Under the canopy of the rainforest hundreds of animals make their homes, but up in the leaves hides another world. Turn the pages of this beautiful and educational book to discover in words and mesmerizing illustration:

Animals like the slender parrot snake and the blue morpho butterfly.

The canopies where toucans and pale-billed woodpeckers chatter and call.

Capuchin monkeys who swing from vines and slow-moving sloths who wait out daily thunderstorms.

In the Rainforest (Let's-Read-and-Find-Out Science 2)

The rainforest is home to millions of plant and animal species. Some animals live high up in the trees, some crawl across the forest floor, and some tunnel underground, but they all depend on one another and the rain to survive. With colorful illustrations and fascinating diagrams from author-illustrator Kate Duke, In the Rainforest is a lively look at the most vibrant ecosystem on our planet. 

Anacondas (Rain Forest Animals)

This book introduces readers to the largest snake in the world: the anaconda. Readers learn about the life cycle, behavior, physical characteristics, and habitat of anacondas

Learn to Draw Rainforest & Jungle Animals

Expanding the popular collection of animal books in the Learn to Draw Series, Learn to Draw Rainforest & Jungle Animals will teach kids how easy it is to draw a variety of exciting and exotic creatures from around the world. Each project starts with a basic shape and progresses with simple-to-follow steps to a finished realistic final colored artwork. While they’re learning, kids will also discover fun facts about each featured animal.

The Rainforest Grew All Around

Imaginations will soar from the forest floor, up through the canopy and back down again, following the circle of life in this clever adaptation of the song “The Green Grass Grew All Around.” The jungle comes alive as children learn about a wide variety of the animals (jaguars, emerald tree boas, leafcutter ants, sloths, poison dart frogs, toucans, and bats) and plants (kapok trees, liana vines, and bromeliads) living in the lush Amazon rainforest. Delve even deeper into the jungle using sidebars and the three-page “For Creative Minds” educational section.

Wildlife Anatomy: The Curious Lives & Features of Wild Animals around the World

While it covers more than just the rainforest this is a fabulous resource to have on your shelves. You will find plenty of great pictures and information on many animals that live there- crocodiles, harpy eagles, monkeys, tapir , sloths,Jaguarundi, and the food web.

The Great Kapok Tree: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest

Tells a story of a man who came to cut down a kapok tree and encounters many of the beautiful and exotic native creatures who make their home in the Amazon Rainforest.

Professor Noggin's Reptiles and Amphibians Trivia Card Game

FUN FACTS: How about Reptiles versus Amphibians?!  That's just one of the topic cards in this kids card game.  Find out more fun facts from Eggs to the Komodo Dragon!

Hello, World! Rainforest Animals

This bright and exciting Hello, World! board book teaches toddlers all about the amazing world of a rainforest—with easy-to-understand facts about the incredible animals who make their home there.

Where Is the Amazon?

Human beings have inhabited the banks of the Amazon River since 13,000 BC and yet they make up just a small percentage of the "population" of this geographic wonderland. The Amazon River basin teems with life—animal and plant alike.

Canopy, Card Game, Features 25 Unique Species of Rainforest Animals and Plants

Compete to grow the most bountiful rainforest! Carefully select what grows in your forest, and give rise to a thriving ecosystem.

Afternoon on the Amazon

Vampire bats and killer ants? That's what Jack and Annie are about to run into when the Magic Tree House whisks them away to the Amazon River. It's not long before they get hopelessly lost. Will they be able to find their way back to the tree house? Or are Jack and Annie stuck forever in the rain forest?

Red-eyed Tree Frog (Scholastic Bookshelf)

NatureI n a tropical rain forest in Central America, a red-eyed tree frog spends the night looking for food while avoiding potential predators. Award-winning photographer Nic Bishop's larger-than-life, gorgeous images document the hunt, which ends happily with the frog settling down in the leaves to spend his daylight hours sleeping! Joy Cowley's simple, readable text makes the frog's story fun, interesting, and accessible to young readers.

Protecting the Amazon Rainforest (Saving Earth's Biomes)

Explores the richness of the Amazon rainforest, how humans have damaged it, and efforts being taken to protect it. Clear text, vibrant photos, and helpful infographics make this book an accessible and engaging read.

Then, look at these flowers of the rainforest.

FASCINATING FLOWERS OF THE AMAZON RAINFOREST

1. Orchids- There are more than 25,000 species of orchids worldwide,  and many live in the Amazon. Some orchids grow high on trees (these are called epiphytes) so they can get more sunlight. They collect water from the air and rain rather than from the soil. Amazon orchids come in dazzling colors- pink, purple, yellow, and white and some even have patterns that mimic insects to attract pollinators.

2. Bromeliads- These bright, spiky plants have colorful leaves and sometimes hold small pools of water in their centers where frogs and insects live. They can grow on tree branches or the forest floor and are perfectly adapted to life in the rainforest.

3. Heliconia (Lobster Claw Plant)- Known for their bright red, orange, and yellow “claws,” heliconias attract hummingbirds. Their unique shape protects the nectar from rain, making it easier for birds to find food.

4. Passion Flowers- These exotic purple and white flowers have amazing curly tendrils and a sweet scent. They attract bees, butterflies, and bats, which help pollinate them.

5. Rafflesia- This is one of the world’s largest flowers; it can grow up to 3 feet across! It has no leaves or stem and smells like rotting meat to attract flies that help it reproduce. Weird, but it plays an important role in the rainforest ecosystem.

Flowers in the Amazon Rainforest & How To Make Fun Paper Orchids

And look at more resources.

FLOWERS IN THE AMAZON RAINFOREST CRAFTS AND RESOURCES

  • Rainforest Diorama- Create a cardboard rainforest scene with paper trees and animals, and add your orchids.
  • Find the Amazon Rainforest on a world map and mark where orchids are likely to grow.
  • Rainforest Science Activities For Kindergarten Amazing and Fun Living Terrarium
  • The Great Kapok Tree is full of pages of incredible flora and fauna of the Amazon Rainforest.
  • Watch botany and Plant ecology of the Amazon rainforest.
  • 10 Plant Life in The Amazon Rainforest Facts and Make a Fun Rafflesia Arnoldii.
  • Consider taking a trip to your local nursery or home improvement store with a garden center. They often carry a wide variety of orchids so that you can see them in person.
  • Make another beautiful, exotic plant from the Amazon rainforest with this Heliconia tutorial.

HOW TO MAKE FUN PAPER ORCHIDS

Bring the beauty of the Amazon into your craft time with this simple paper orchid project. It’s great for fine motor skills, exploring colors, and fostering creativity.

You will need:

  • Colored paper (pink, yellow, white)
  • Long skinny sticks
  • Green paper
  • Scissors
  • Glue stick or tacky glue
  • Pencil
  • Small paintbrush or marker
Flowers in the Amazon Rainforest & How To Make Fun Paper Orchids

Draw three petals connected at the center; they don’t have to be perfect. Remember, imperfections will make it look more natural.

Then draw two connected petals with a short connecting strip in the middle.

Flowers in the Amazon Rainforest & How To Make Fun Paper Orchids

Cut these two sets of petals out and then use them as a template to cut out two or three more, each one slightly smaller than the last.

To do this, I just traced it and cut a little extra off the edges.

Flowers in the Amazon Rainforest & How To Make Fun Paper Orchids

Use a marker or small brush to add dots, stripes, or patterns on the center of the petals for both layers. Orchids often have colorful spots or veins.

Flowers in the Amazon Rainforest & How To Make Fun Paper Orchids

Use your fingers or a pencil to gently curl the ends of each petal all the way around, especially on the tops. Ruffle them slightly to give them a realistic 3D look.

PAPER ORCHID FLOWER CRAFT

Orchids often have curved petals that look delicate and slightly ruffled.

Flowers in the Amazon Rainforest & How To Make Fun Paper Orchids

Cut two long leaves.

Flowers in the Amazon Rainforest & How To Make Fun Paper Orchids

Curl the end of the leaves around a pencil  to give them a bit more of a natural appearance.

Flowers in the Amazon Rainforest & How To Make Fun Paper Orchids

Depending on which type of orchid you were making, cut out the center, which is called the lips.

It reminds me of the outline of a bull’s head and horns. Make enough centerpieces for each flower on your orchid stem..

Flowers in the Amazon Rainforest & How To Make Fun Paper Orchids

Now begin layering, adding glue to the center of the three petals and stacking the two on top of

Press firmly into the glue and then add glue to the two petals and put your colorful piece in the center.

Flowers in the Amazon Rainforest & How To Make Fun Paper Orchids

Cut a small piece of pipe cleaner or just colored paper to make the center for the stamen.

Flowers in the Amazon Rainforest & How To Make Fun Paper Orchids

Glue each completed flower to the stem (long skinny stick)

Flowers in the Amazon Rainforest & How To Make Fun Paper Orchids

Glue the leaves in place along the bottom of your stem.

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: amazon rain forest, flowers, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschool, orchids, rainforest

How to Create An Adorable Pipe Cleaner Squid Craft

November 21, 2025 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I want to show you how to make an adorable pipe cleaner squid craft that can be used to teach your child all about squid anatomy. Also, look at my page Oceans Unit Study and Lapbook for more hands-on ideas.

I’m always looking for hands-on ways to bring science lessons to life. Ocean animals are a favorite in our home, and few creatures are as fascinating as the squid.

How to Create An Adorable Pipe Cleaner Squid Craft

This simple pipe cleaner squid craft combines art, creativity, and marine biology in one fun activity.

Kids can twist, shape, and design their own deep-sea creature while learning about how real squids live, move, and hunt. It’s the perfect mix of learning and play.

Read the facts aloud as your child builds their squid to teach them all about this amazing cephalopod, you will also find more ideas to expand your study from a basic craft into a mini unit.

MOLLUSKS BOOKS FOR KIDS

And because a squid is in the mollusk family, look at these other books.

8 Books About Mollusks

Add some of these books to your home library or to your unit study for the day.

About Mollusks: A Guide for Children

The book uses simple, easy-to-understand language to teach children what mollusks are, how they look, how they move, what they eat, and where they live. The beautifully detailed, realistic paintings of noted wildlife illustrator John Sill introduce readers to a variety of mollusks—from the small garden snail to the giant Pacific octopus. An afterword provides more details about the animals in the book.

Giant Squid (Robert F. Sibert Informational Book Honor (Awards))

The giant squid is one of the most elusive creatures in the world. As large as whales, they hide beyond reach deep within the sea, forcing scientists to piece together their story from those clues they leave behind.An injured whale's ring-shaped scars indicate an encounter with a giant squid. A piece of beak broken off in the whale's belly; a flash of ink dispersed as a blinding defense to allow the squid to escape-- these fragments of proof were all we had . . . until a giant squid was finally filmed in its natural habitat only two years ago.In this beautiful and clever nonfiction picture book about the giant squid, Candace Fleming and Eric Rohmann explore, both visually and poetically, this hidden creature's mysterious life.

Matisse's Magical Trail

A young snail's artistic trail inspires a whole class of children to be creative too!

The snail's spell

"Brilliant illustrations and a short text invite an unnamed sleeping, pajama-clad child into a garden teeming with wildlife. The boy gradually shrinks until he is so small he experiences things as a snail would. The incredibly detailed drawings and the idea of shrinking to enter another world should capture children's imaginations

Escargot

Escargot is an adorable French snail who only wants two things: 1) To be your favorite animal, and 2) To eat the delicious salad at the end of this book. Except this delicious salad has a carrot in it. And Escargot hates carrots. But when he finally tries one―with a little help from you!―he realizes that it’s not so bad after all.

The Snail House

Here is the story Grandma tells one evening on her wide veranda steps. It has Michael and Hannah and the disappearing baby in it, a tigerish bird, raindrops like sacks of water, and the hugest apple you ever saw. Oh yes . . . and the Snail House. So gather round, climb up now into Grandma’s lap. Darkness is falling, the air is still, and the story is just about to begin.

Snail in the woods (A Nature I can read book)

A snail's life from the time it is hatched to the time it lays its own eggs.

The Biggest House in the World

A young snail dreams of having the biggest house—or shell—in the world. Then one day, his wise father tells him the story of another snail with the same dream. He grew and grew, adding bright colors and beautiful designs, until he found that his house came at a terrible cost. The young snail decides that a small, easy-to-carry shell might be best for a life of adventure and exploration.

Then, look at these squid facts.

SUPER SQUID FACTS

Squids are cephalopods, a group that also includes octopuses and cuttlefish. The word cephalopod means “head-foot,” because their arms are attached directly to their head.

There are around 300 species of squid in the world, ranging from tiny finger-sized squids to the enormous giant squid that can grow longer than a school bus.

Squids move by jet propulsion! They pull water into their body cavity and then shoot it out quickly through a tube called a siphon. This helps them zoom through the water like little torpedoes.

They can change colors! Squids have special skin cells called chromatophores that let them change colors instantly for camouflage or communication.

Squids are clever hunters. They use their two long tentacles to catch prey and bring it toward their sharp beak-like mouth, hidden beneath their arms.

They have blue blood. Unlike humans, who use iron to carry oxygen in their blood, squids use copper, which makes their blood look blue.

Squids squirt ink when they’re scared or trying to escape predators. The ink creates a dark cloud in the water that confuses enemies while the squid swims away to safety.

How to Create An Adorable Pipe Cleaner Squid Craft

Then, look at more cephalopod activities.

CEPHALOPOD CRAFTS AND ACTIVITIES

Don’t stop with squid, take a look at the amazing lives of other cephalopods like the cuttlefish and octopus.

  • Under the Sea Science Activities With Amazing Disappearing Octopus Ink
  • Blue Squid Bottle Craft and Science
  • Octopus Yarn Craft – Yarn Octopus Instructions
  • DIY Ocean Squid Windsocks
  • The Creative Colorful Classroom: Octopus Art Project

While our pipe cleaner squid craft is great and can be quite educational on its own, consider expanding on the activity by adding in one or more of the following activities to expand it into several subjects.

Compare Squids and Octopuses-Draw a Venn diagram comparing their similarities and differences. Which one has an internal shell? Which one is faster?

Explore Squid Anatomy- Label a picture or your pipe cleaner model of a squid’s body parts- including fins, mantle, arms, tentacles, and siphon.

Watch a Nature Video- Look for documentaries or short educational clips showing squids in their natural habitat. Seeing them in motion helps kids understand how they swim and hunt.

Creative Writing Prompt- Ask kids to write a short story about their pipe cleaner squid exploring the ocean. What creatures does it meet? What adventures does it have?

Math Connection- Count all the arms and tentacles together (10 total) and use it as a fun opportunity to practice addition or multiplication facts.

HOW TO CREATE AN ADORABLE PIPE CLEANER SQUID CRAFT

  • 3 colors of pipe cleaners – 4 of one, 2 of another, 2-3 of the third
  • Googly eyes
  • Glue or hot glue
  • Scissors
How to Create An Adorable Pipe Cleaner Squid Craft

I used 3 colors for our squid- one color for the 8 arms, another for the 2 longer tentacles, and a third to create the head.

Take 4 pipe cleaners of one color and fold it in half.

How to Create An Adorable Pipe Cleaner Squid Craft

Bend a different color in half around the bundle, going in the opposite direction. This will be part of the head, but first, we are going to use it to anchor everything.

How to Create An Adorable Pipe Cleaner Squid Craft

Take 2 more pipe cleaners in a third color and put them on either side of the bundled ones in the center. Wrap each around the single pipe cleaner several times until secure.

You want to make sure these stay longer than the arms so they are obvious tentacles.

How to Create An Adorable Pipe Cleaner Squid Craft

Bend up your anchor pipe cleaner and form it into a pointy oval shape to form the head.

How to Create An Adorable Pipe Cleaner Squid Craft

Ball up any color and place in the center.

How to Create An Adorable Pipe Cleaner Squid Craft

Take a pipe cleaner the same color as the anchor piece and wrap it from the open base up to the top. You will need at least 2 to cover it completely.

How to Create An Adorable Pipe Cleaner Squid Craft

With 2-3, you should have a little extra left at the end; use this to bend into the fins on the top of the head.

Glue googly eyes on either side of the head.

How to Create An Adorable Pipe Cleaner Squid Craft

Finally, so that they do not stick straight, arrange the legs and tentacles into a more natural wavy shape.

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, marine animals, ocean

Fun And Easy Egg Carton Farm Animals: A Crafting Adventure

November 20, 2025 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

How cute are these egg carton farm animals made from egg cartons?

Get ready for a fun trip to the farm without ever leaving your kitchen table. In this creative, hands-on craft, kids will make their very own egg carton farm animals using recycled materials.

It’s an adorable and eco-friendly way to learn about farm life while practicing fine motor skills, creativity, and even a bit of animal science.

Fun And Easy Egg Carton Farm Animals: A Crafting Adventure

Farm animals are one of the first themes that we introduce to our little ones. From what does the cow say to a fun field trip to a local farm to learn where milk comes from, it’s a great topic

I have gathered up some of the best books, games, facts, songs, and more activities for you to enjoy a mini or full farm unit with your little farmer.

Enjoy the simplicity of farm animals while going a little deeper into the topic, teaching animal roles, needs, life cycles, and more.

Here are some topics you can cover with your child related to the farm.

BOOKS ABOUT FARMING FOR KIDS

Next, look at these books about farming.

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.

Farm Anatomy: The Curious Parts and Pieces of Country Life

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.

Charlotte's Web: A Newbery Honor Award Winner

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.

Farmer Boy (Little House, 2)

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.

Unusual Chickens for the Exceptional Poultry Farmer

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.

Strawberry Girl

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.

The Farm That Feeds Us: A year in the life of an organic farm

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.

In Grandma's Attic

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

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.

Veggie Farm Sorting Set

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

Next, look at the role of animals on the farm.

ANIMAL ROLES ON THE FARM

Discuss how each animal helps people.

  • Cows give milk for cheese and butter.
  • Chickens provide eggs.
  • Sheep give us wool for warm clothes.
  • Pigs help with food scraps and are raised for meat.
  • Horses and goats help with work and transport in some places.

ANIMAL NEEDS AND CARE

 Talk about what every living thing needs to stay healthy: food, water, shelter, and kindness.
 You can ask questions like:

  • What do you think a cow eats?
  • Why do sheep need a barn in winter?
  • How does a farmer keep chickens safe from predators?

LIFE CYCLES AND BABY ANIMALS

 Learn the names of baby farm animals-calf, piglet, chick, and lamb- and how they grow.  You can even draw pictures or make mini versions of the baby animals from leftover egg carton pieces.

SOUNDS AND COMMUNICATION

 Kids love to make animal noises; teach them that animals communicate, too.

  • Horses neigh and whinny to greet each other or call out when they’re lonely. They also use ear movements and body language to “talk” without making a sound.
  • Cows moo to call their calves or let the farmer know it’s milking time.
  • Chickens cluck softly to their chicks and squawk loudly if danger is near.
  • Sheep bleat when they’re looking for their flock or calling for their lambs.
  • Pigs grunt and squeal to show excitement, hunger, or playfulness.
Fun And Easy Egg Carton Farm Animals: A Crafting Adventure

Finally, look at how to make fun and easy egg carton farm animals.

HOW TO MAKE FUN AND EASY EGG CARTON FARM ANIMALS

You will need:

  • Egg carton cups
  • Pipe cleaners
  • Paint (white, black, pink, yellow, brown)
  • Pom poms
  • Googly eyes
  • Tacky glue or hot glue
Fun And Easy Egg Carton Farm Animals: A Crafting Adventure

First, start by disassembling your egg cartons, and cut out each cup using scissors or a box cutter. A blade like a box cutter is easier to use, as it crushes the cups a little less.

Fun And Easy Egg Carton Farm Animals: A Crafting Adventure

Paint each cup the base color of whatever you wish to create-white for a chicken, brown for a cow, a pink pig, etc.  Set aside to dry.

Fun And Easy Egg Carton Farm Animals: A Crafting Adventure

While that is drying, cut small bits from the flat lid of your egg carton for a beak, ears, snouts, and wings.

Fun And Easy Egg Carton Farm Animals: A Crafting Adventure

Paint these as well in your desired colors.

Fun And Easy Egg Carton Farm Animals: A Crafting Adventure

Use pipe cleaners to fashion a pink curly tail for your pig by wrapping them around a pencil or paintbrush handle. Bend a fun little red comb for the chicken, and cut feet or add any other details you want.

Fun And Easy Egg Carton Farm Animals: A Crafting Adventure

Once all your paint is dry, begin attaching everything with a good tacky glue that holds well until dry or use hot glue for a faster set.

Add googly eyes to finish it off, and your barnyard pals are ready for play.

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: elementary science, farm, farming, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschool, homeschoolscience, life science, science

How To Build A Snowman Using Wooden Spools

November 19, 2025 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

We’re learning how to build a snowman using fun wooden spools.Also, grab more ideas and a free lapbook for winter fun on my page Winter Season Unit Study.

Besides, some of the best lessons come wrapped in creativity with a little bit of craft paint. And this wooden spool snowmen craft is just that adorable. And later you can use it for decor in your learning area or home.

Building a snowman using wooden spools is the perfect blend of art, fine motor skills, and educational connection.

How To Build A Snowman Using Wooden Spools

Wooden spools leftover from sewing projects or craft kits make a fun base for building snowmen.

And painting tiny wooden spools, gluing buttons, and tying miniature scarves all help develop fine motor control for your littles. It’s such a fun family project, your oldest child can do it alongside your littlest.

And you can make it it a mini art lesson because you decide how to decorate. You can see the list of materials we used at the bottom.

BOOKS ABOUT WINTER FOR KIDS

Next, look at some of these books about winter and snowmen for kids.

I prefer living books when we can find them.

13 Snow, Snowman, Animals, and Winter Books

Add one or more of these books to your learning day if you're learning about snow, snowflakes, winter or just for fun.

Winter Cottage

Immerse Yourself in This Story of Love and Companionship Amidst Deprivation

It is the fall of 1930, and America has plunged into the Great Depression. On a remote dirt road deep in the snowy woods of northern Wisconsin, misfortune forces the impoverished Sparkes family to take desperate measures.

A wayfaring quartet consisting of thirteen-year-old Araminta (nicknamed Minty), her recently unemployed father-a poetry-quoting widower called Pops-and her younger sister, Eglantine (known as Eggs-a dreamer like Pops), and their dog, Buster, are on their way to Minneapolis to live with the curmudgeonly Aunt Amy. When their car breaks down and they are unable to fix it, the homeless four stumble upon a vacant summer cottage by a lake. In desperate straits, they decide to settle in.

1. The Story of Snow: The Science of Winter's Wonder

How do snow crystals form? What shapes can they take? Are no two snow crystals alike? These questions and more are answered inside this exploration of the science of snow, featuring photos of real snow crystals in all their beautiful diversity. Perfect for reading on winter days, this book by a nature photographer and a snow scientist will inspire wonder and curiosity about the marvels of snow. 

2. Sneezy the Snowman

B-R-R-R-R! AH-CHOO! Sneezy the Snowman is cold, cold, cold. To warm up, he drinks cocoa, sits in a hot tub, stands near a warm fire–and melts! But the children know just what to do to build him up again–and make him feel “just right”.

3. Snowmen at Night

Have you ever built a snowman and discovered the next day that his grin has gotten a little crooked, or his tree-branch arms have moved? And you've wondered . . . what do snowmen do at night? This delightful wintertime tale reveals all!

4. The Biggest Snowman Ever

When the mayor of Mouseville announces the town snowman contest, Clayton and Desmond claim that they will each make the biggest snowman ever. But building a huge snowman alone is hard! They work and work, but their snowmen just aren't big enough. Soon they have an idea. As the day of the contest approaches, Clayton and Desmond join forces to build the biggest snowman ever.

5. Over and Under the Snow

Over the snow, the world is hushed and white. But under the snow lies a secret world of squirrels and snow hares, bears and bullfrogs, and many other animals making their winter home under the snow. This beloved nonfiction picture book exploring the subnivean zone reveals the tunnels and caves formed beneath the snow but over the ground, where many kinds of animals live through the winter, safe and warm, awake and busy, but hidden beneath the snow.

A Hat for Minerva Louise

"Stoeke's second book about that intrepid screwball, Minerva Louise, is a rare find."—The Horn Book, starred review. The other chickens hate snowy mornings. But not Minerva Louise! To her a snowy day—like everything else—is an adventure. But this chilly, chipper hen needs something to keep her warm. What she finds—and how she finds it—will keep young readers cackling.

6. How to Catch a Snowman

Our heroes' entry for the snowman contest has magically come to life―and ran away! Can YOU help catch it? Get ready for snow much fun as you travel through a winter wonderland with running, skating, and bouncing through trap after trap to catch the snowman and claim the winning prize. Will the snowman teach our heroes a lesson they'll never forget?

The Big Snow

When the geese begin to fly south, the leaves flutter down from the trees and the cold winds begin to blow from the north, the animals of the woods and meadows, big and small, prepare for the long, cold winter ahead when the countryside is hidden under a deep blanket of snow. They gather food and look for warm, snug places in the ground, trees, caves or thickets, where they can find protection against the icy winds.It might have been hard for the birds and animals of the hillside to survive when the Big Snow came if their good friends, who lived in the little stone house, had not remembered to put food out for them.Here, in many beautiful pictures, the Haders show how winter comes to the woodland as the busy animals make their preparations.

7. Curious About Snow (Smithsonian)

The Smithsonian does things right and this Curious About Snow book is a
great introduction for curious kiddos with real images and simple explanations.

8. Animals in Winter

This is a clear and appealing book for early elementary age kids, both at home and in the classroom. Introduce kids to basic science ideas as part of discussions about the seasons and animals.

9. Arctic Figurines, Including A Harp Seal, Husky, Caribou, Arctic Rabbit, Killer Whale, Walrus, Arctic Fox, Beluga Whale, Igloo, And Polar Bear

SET OF 10 FUN AND FRIGID FIGURES – It’s hard to stay warm at the North Pole, but you can discover its wonders in your home with these frigid friends. This TOOB includes a Harp Seal, Husky, Caribou, Arctic Rabbit, Killer Whale, Walrus, Arctic Fox, Beluga Whale, Igloo, and Polar Bear.

10. Nature Anatomy: The Curious Parts and Pieces of the Natural World

See the world in a whole new way! Acclaimed illustrator Julia Rothman combines art and science in this exciting and educational guide to the structure, function, and personality of the natural world. Explore the anatomy of a jellyfish, the inside of a volcano, monarch butterfly migration, how sunsets work, and much more. Rothman’s whimsical illustrations are paired with interactive activities that encourage curiosity and inspire you to look more closely at the world all around you.

And then look at more activities about snowmen to include in your winter learning unit studies.

MORE SNOWMAN ACTIVITIES AND IDEAS

  • How to Make an Easy Build a Snowman Kid’s Game (free printable cube)
  • W Is For Winter Craft Easy Snowman Oobleck Activity
  • Fun Paper Cup Snowman Game Matching Upper and Lowercase Alphabet Letters
  • Cute and Simple Snowman Story Stones Winter Art Activities For Preschoolers
  • How to Make an Adorable Q Tip Painting Snowman
  • 8 Cool Winter Crafts for Middle School | Craft a Snowman Bead Necklace
  • Fun Styrofoam Snowman Art Activity & 5 Facts About The Wonders of Winter
  • How to Make an Adorable Toilet Roll Snowman for Winter Crafts
  • Snow and Snowflake Facts for Kids and Fun Hands-on Exploding Snowman
How To Build A Snowman Using Wooden Spools

Finally, look at how to make this adorable wooden spool snowman.

WOODEN SPOOL SNOWMEN CRAFT

Three wooden spools from the craft store transform into cute snowman with craft paint, fabric, and twine to create snowy home decor.

This snowman goes together in just about 30 minutes with limited supplies.

Look at this list of supplies:

  • Wooden Craft Spools
  • Buttons, Black – Dollar Store
  • Fabric, Plaid – Dollar Store
  • Craft Felt – Orange
  • Craft Paint – White, Black, Pink
  • Glue Gun and Glue Sticks – Dollar Store
  • Paintbrush
  • Scissors
How To Build A Snowman Using Wooden Spools

STEP ONE

Gather all supplies.

Basecoat the three wooden spools with white acrylic craft paint. Let the paint dry, and apply a second coat, if necessary.

How To Build A Snowman Using Wooden Spools

STEP TWO

Using scissors, cut out a carrot shape from orange craft felt.

Colored cardstock, heavy fabric, or craft foam would work for this project as well.

How To Build A Snowman Using Wooden Spools

STEP THREE

Attach the craft felt carrot nose with a glue gun and glue sticks

How To Build A Snowman Using Wooden Spools

STEP FOUR

Create a cheek by dotting with the end of a paintbrush and pink acrylic craft paint.

How To Build A Snowman Using Wooden Spools

HOW TO BUILD A SNOWMAN

Stamp two eyes and a mouth onto the snowman by dipping the end of a paintbrush black acrylic craft paint. Let dry.

STEP FIVE

Select three small black buttons, and attach to the second and third spools with a glue gun and glue sticks.

How To Build A Snowman Using Wooden Spools

STEP SIX

Snip and rip plaid fabric into one strip that is approximately 1” wide by 8” long. Cut into the edge of the fabric ½” with scissors, then tear the fabric into strips.

This will produce a frayed edge.

How To Build A Snowman Using Wooden Spools

STEP SEVEN

Tie the fabric in a knot about 1” from the end.

Gather the opposite end of the fabric strip and thread the spool with one button on first.

How To Build A Snowman Using Wooden Spools

STEP EIGHT

Tie the fabric in a knot above the first spool. Thread on the spool with two buttons on second.

Tie the fabric in a knot above the second spool and thread on the snowman’s head third.

Secure all three spools with an additional knot.

How To Build A Snowman Using Wooden Spools

STEP NINE

Measure and cut a 12” length of natural jute twine and tie around the snowman’s neck to create a scarf.

To finish secure the twine in a bow and trim any long ends with scissors.

How To Build A Snowman Using Wooden Spools

Your family and friends will never know how quick and easy this trendy wooden spool snowman was to create.

Perfect for your snowy home décor or your winter tiered tray.

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, snowman, winter crafts, winter season

How Cacti Drink: A Fun and Easy Desert Science Experiment

November 18, 2025 | Leave a Comment
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Try this fun and easy desert science experiment using a simple household item and find out fantastic facts about cacti.

Deserts are some of the most fascinating places on Earth. They may look dry and empty at first glance, but they’re full of amazing plants and animals specially designed to survive extreme heat and very little rain.

One of the most incredible things to not only survive but thrive in the desert is the cactus.

How Cacti Drink: A Fun and Easy Desert Science Experiment

Even though months may pass without a drop of rain, cacti can stay alive and healthy because they have a secret ability…to store water deep inside their thick, sponge-like stems.

I have an easy and fun science experiment that lets kids see how cacti absorb and hold water using an everyday object you already have at home -a sponge

This experiment is an excellent way to introduce younger learners to biology topics like plant structures, habitats, and adaptation.

BOOKS ABOUT THE DESERT FOR KIDS

Next, look at these books about the desert.

18 Desert Books & Resources for Kids Who Love Reading and Being Read To

Add some of these living books and references books about the desert to your library.

The Seed & the Giant Saguaro

Children's reader on the subject of deserts and what lives there Large book with very large kid friendly illustrations

Cactus Hotel (Rise and Shine)

It is another hot day in the desert. Birds and other animals scurry about looking for food. When they get tired they stop to rest at a giant cactus. It is their hotel in the desert!Many different animals live in the cactus hotel. It protects them; and they protect it, by eating the pests that could harm the cactus.The cactus grows larger and larger and will live for about two hundred years. When one animal moves out, another moves in. There is never a vacancy in the cactus hotel.This story--about a desert, a giant cactus, and the animals who live in it--is one that even the youngest child will understand and enjoy.

Desert Giant: The World of the Saguaro Cactus

A venerable saguaro cactus stands like a statue in the hot desert landscape, its armlike branches reaching fifty feet into the air. From a distance it appears to be completely still and solitary--but appearances can be deceptive. In fact, this giant tree of the desert is alive with activity. Its spiny trunk and branches are home to a surprising number of animals, and its flowers and fruit feed many desert dwellers. Gila woodpeckers and miniature elf owls make their homes inside the saguaro's trunk. Long-nosed bats and fluttering white doves drink the nectar from its showy white flowers. People also play a role in the saguaro's story: each year the Tohono O'odham Indians gather its sweet fruit in a centuries-old harvest ritual.

Where Is the Sahara Desert?

Imagine over three million square miles of sand dunes that are as tall as a ten-story building. That place is real -- it's the Sahara Desert! Vast, yes! And home to fascinating creatures such as ostriches and fennec foxes as well as amazing plant life. The shallow roots of the mesquite tree can grow almost 200 feet across to absorb water. Readers will also learn about the famous trade routes of the past with caravans of up to 10,000 camels, European explorers to the region (some very unlucky ones), and native populations like the Berber and Tuareg, the faces of the men are blue from the dye in the veils they always wear.

Where Is Antarctica?

Antarctica, the earth's southernmost continent, was virtually untouched by humans until the nineteenth century. Many famous explorers journeyed (and often died) there in the hope of discovering a land that always seemed out of reach. This book introduces readers to this desert--yes, desert!--continent that holds about 90 percent of the world's ice; showcases some of the 200 species that call Antarctica home, including the emperor penguin; and discusses environmental dangers to the continent, underscoring how what happens to Antarctica affects the entire world.

A Desert Scrapbook: Dawn to Dusk in the Sonoran Desert

In the early morning hours, an artist stirs. Gathering her paints and notebook, she heads into the Arizona Sonoran Desert to explore its treasures. Sketching, painting, and writing, she records all that she sees and as night falls, she spreads out her pictures to make this scrapbook of her day, from dawn to dusk.

This Place Is Dry: Arizona's Sonoran Desert

Surveys the living conditions in Arizona's Sonora Desert for the people and unusual animals that live there. Also describes the engineering accomplishment of Hoover Dam.

Desert Solitaire

In Desert Solitaire, Edward Abbey recounts his many escapades, adventures, and epiphanies as an Arches National Park ranger outside Moab, Utah. Brimming with arresting insights, impassioned arguments for wilderness conservation, and a raconteur’s wit, it is one of Abbey’s most critically acclaimed works.   Through stories and philosophical musings, Abbey reflects on the condition of our remaining wilderness, the future of a civilization, and his own internal struggle with morality. As the world continues its rapid development, Abbey’s cry to maintain the natural beauty of the West remains just as relevant today as when this book first appeared in 1968.

Coyote Raid In Cactus Canyon

While the rest of the animals hide from view from a group of rambunctious coyotes, the fearless gang takes full advantage of the open space of Cactus Canyon and participates with great zeal in an array of nighttime activities, but an unexpected encounter with a rattlesnake quickly puts an end to the coyotes fun as they are sent running for cover, too!

Roxaboxen

Marian called it Roxaboxen. There across the road, it looked like any rocky hill—nothing but sand and rocks, and some old wooden boxes. But it was a special place. And all children needed to go there was a long stick and a soaring imagination.

Why Oh Why Are Deserts Dry? All About Deserts

n this latest installation of the Cat in the Hat's Learning Library, the Cat takes Sally and Dick to explore different kinds of deserts around the world,  from the hot, dry Sonoran and Mojavi to the bitter cold Gobi and Antarctica. Young readers learn why deserts are dry, and how plants and animals—including cactus, kangaroos, camels, penguins, roadrunners, and many others—have adapted to survive the unforgiving climate. Also included: how sand dunes are formed; the reason we see mirages, and how shallow water beneath the surface of the ground can create an oasis. Fans of the new PBS preschool science show The Cat in the Hat Knows a Lot About That! (which is based on the Learning Library series) won't want to miss this hot new addition to the series!

One Day in the Desert

‘A wounded mountain lion moves from his mountain habitat to a Papago Indian hut in Arizona’s Sonoran desert during a record-breaking July day. All creation adapts to the blistering heat until a cloudburst causes a flash flood. With a measured yet vivid style, this introduction to desert ecology makes a memorable impact."

Deserts

This intriguing yet simple description will captivate young readers who have an interest in the unfamiliar.

A Walk in the Desert (Biomes of North America)

Take a walk through the desert. This hot, dry biome of the southwest is full of life. How do plants and animals of the desert live? As you wander through the desert, discover how each and every plant and animal relies on the others to live and grow.

Wildlife of the Southwest Deserts

Learn about the fascinating creatures of the desert Southwest including: Venomous Animals Insects and Arthropods Rattlesnakes, Lizards, Desert Tortoise The Roadrunner and other Birds Bighorn Sheep, Kit Fox, Coyote.

Indian Uses of Desert Plants

Now in its fourth edition, this is a beautiful book with both historical and contemporary images showing the most important plants used by Native Americans. Medicinal, food resources, tools and shelter are just some of the uses discussed. Plants shown and described are among the most widespread plants in the desert Southwest.

Desert Snakes

Learn all about desert snakes with the beautiful book by James W. Cornett.

The Namib Desert

An excellent introduction to the natural history of the Namib Desert of southwest Africa. At its heart, second only to the Atacama Desert of Chile and Peru as the driest place on Earth. Also, it is the oldest desert on our planet and the only desert with a megafauna including elephant, giraffe, and rhinoceros. The lofty orange dunes, highest in the world, are also shown and discussed.

Also, look at these facts about cactus.

THE AMAZING WORLD OF THE CACTUS

Cacti are the champions of survival in the desert. They live in some of the driest regions on Earth, places where rain might only fall once or twice a year. To thrive in such a harsh environment, they’ve developed special adaptations:

  • Thick, waxy skin that prevents water from evaporating in the hot sun.
  • Spongy inner tissues that can store large amounts of water.
  • Shallow, spreading roots that quickly absorb water when rain comes.
  • Spines instead of leaves, which reduce water loss and provide shade.

Our sponge cactus acts as a model for these adaptations. The sponge represents the cactus’s water-storing tissue, and the plastic spines show how it protects itself and collects moisture.

To make this more than just a quick experiment, ask your child some questions that make them think, and recall what you have already talked about.

  • How does the cactus’s design show God’s wisdom in creation?
  • How do the cactus’s spines help it survive in the desert?
  • What would happen if a cactus had big leaves instead of spines?
  • Why do you think a cactus stores water instead of using it all right away?
How Cacti Drink: A Fun and Easy Desert Science Experiment

Next, look at these other desert activities.

DESERT ACTIVITIES FOR KIDS

  • How To Make A Desert Diorama With Free Printables
  • How To Create An Engaging Desert Sensory Bin For Hands-On Play
  • Check out these 8 Desert Craft Ideas | How To Make Egg Carton Cactus to focus a bit on the flora of the desert biome.
  • 7 Desert Crafts For Kids: How To Make A Clay Cactus Jewelry Holder
  • Exploring Edible Cactus: Hands-on Learning (The Desert)
  • Easy Desert Animal Crafts And A Scorpion Creation
  • Explore 3 completely different desert habitats and learn How to Make A Desert Triorama About the Gobi, Sahara, & Antarctica to display the flora and fauna of each.
  • While you are learning about snakes of the desert here is a fun craft Celebrate Snakes | How To Make A Fake Snakeskin Snake Craft Preschool to learn about this aspect of snakes.
  • Make a Hygrometer: Day 1 Hands-on Learning (Humidity in the Desert)

Finally, look at how cacti drink.

HOW DO CACTI DRINK DESERT SCIENCE EXPERIMENT

You will need:

  • Several clean sponges (green ones look most cactus-like)
  • Scissors
  • A shallow dish or tray
  • Water
  • toothpicks
  • sand, small rocks
How Cacti Drink: A Fun and Easy Desert Science Experiment

First, take a sponge and use a marker to draw the shape of a cactus. You can make a tall saguaro with “arms” or a short, round barrel cactus.

Encourage kids to be creative with their shapes; no two cacti are exactly alike in the wild.

Use scissors to cut it out of shape.

How Cacti Drink: A Fun and Easy Desert Science Experiment

Insert small bits of toothpicks into your sponge cactus to simulate its spines. Talk about how cactus spines are not just for protection; they also provide shade and help collect moisture from the air.

How Cacti Drink: A Fun and Easy Desert Science Experiment

To make it more realistic add sand and small rocks in the bottom of the shallow dish. Explain that most deserts have sandy or rocky soil that drains water quickly, which is why cactus roots must act fast when it rains.

How Cacti Drink: A Fun and Easy Desert Science Experiment

Place your cactus in a shallow dish.

How Cacti Drink: A Fun and Easy Desert Science Experiment

Now, pour a small amount of water around the base of your cactus. Watch as the sponge quickly soaks up the water. This demonstrates how cactus roots absorb every drop of rain the moment it hits the ground.

How Cacti Drink: A Fun and Easy Desert Science Experiment

You can see the water line here as it draws the water up.

How Cacti Drink: A Fun and Easy Desert Science Experiment

After a few minutes, feel the sponge. Although the outside may feel dry, the inside is still damp. Just like the sponge, a real cactus holds water deep inside its stem.

How Cacti Drink: A Fun and Easy Desert Science Experiment

You can even gently squeeze the sponge to “release” the stored water—like a cactus would use its reserves during dry times.

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: cactus, desert, earth science, elementary science, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschool, homeschoolscience, science

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