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Easy Peru Crafts For Kids And Unit Study Outline

July 25, 2025 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I have some fun and easy Peru crafts for kids. Also, look at my page South America Unit Study Resources for more ideas about South America.

Too, I have a Ancient Peru Unit Study outline that you can grab at the bottom.

Peru is a beautiful country with at least three geographical regions and much history to explore.

Easy Peru Crafts For Kids And Unit Study Outline

For example, the ruins of Machu Picchu, an ancient city built by the Inca people are still standing.

Too, Peru has part of the amazing Amazon rainforest which is filled with an abundance of flora and fauna to learn about.

But too from the sky you can see the mysterious Nasca drawings which are patterns and some shaped like animals.

BOOKS FOR KIDS ABOUT SOUTH AMERICA

Next, look at some of these books to add to your study of Peru and South America.

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.

Also, look at more activities about the continent of South America.

MORE SOUTH AMERICA ACTIVITIES FOR KIDS

  • 9 Free South America Country Reports for Kids Notebooking Pages
  • Geography Salt Dough Map + Printable Pennants
  • South America Unit Study resources
  • How to Memorize the Countries of South America & Mountain Climate Zones Minibooks
  • Appreciating the Culture of South America Through Dance

Next look at these Peruvian crafts for kids.

10 PERU CRAFTS FOR KIDS

  1. Llama Love And Creative Machu Picchu Crafts for Kids
  2. Easy Llama Mini Piñata Craft
  3. Trek back to ancient Meso-American and Make Stunning Salt Dough Incan Jewelry | Incan Crafts for Kids.
  4. Llamas with Peruvian Textiles
  5. Check out these great free Peru color pages.
  6. Create your own colorful felt landscape with my How to Make a Felt Mountain Craft | 7 Andes Mountain Facts For Kids.
  7. Easy Nazca Lines Craft for Kids
  8. Peru crafts: Weaving
  9. Peru – Bird Gourd Craft
  10. Traditional Gourd Carving

Finally, look at this homeschool Ancient Peru unit study outline.

ANCIENT PERU UNIT STUDY OUTLINE

My Ancient Peru Unit Study Outline is a handy tool to help you teach or for child led learning.

There are many advantages to a unit study outline instead of a fully fleshed out study.

For example, look at these ways an outline guides your study.

  • Outlines give you a clear structure.
  • They help break down big tasks into manageable steps.
  • Extensive lessons plans can make some kids lose focus.
  • And outline keeps the main topics to be learned on topic.
  • In addition, you can go down rabbit trails IF you want to. However, for some kids it can be overwhelming. You have the option to go deep or stay on topic with an outline.
  • Looking at the outline at a glance is a super roadmap. Again, you can go straight to your destination or facts or stay longer on an objective.
  • By listing an objective it guides you as the teacher to add your own slant.
Easy Peru Crafts For Kids And Unit Study Outline

Also, look at the topics covered in this outline.

  • Introduction
  • Geography and Environment
  • Ancient Peruvian Civilizations
  • Agriculture and Food
  • Arts and Crafts
  • Religion and Beliefs
  • Communication and Writing
  • Exploration and Discovery
  • Culminating Activity
  • Resources and References

HOW TO USE THE OUTLINE

Each topic has two or three topics or objectives for the subject. You decide which ones to use.

And if you stay on 1 topic per week and cover all 9 topics it would equal a 9 week unit study.

Additionally, only use the objectives on the topic your child is interested in and move on to other unit studies. This would make a shorter unit study.

For example, cover the introduction and perhaps the Peruvian culture for younger children.

Then save the other topics for when your children are older.

You will like this unit study outline if:

  • you want the freedom to flesh out topics and not be tied to day to day lesson plans
  • you prefer to flesh out day to day lesson plans or do not prefer them at all and
  • you want a guide for topics to study so you have a sweeping overview of the unit.

You will not like this unit study outline if:

  • you want to day to day lesson plans guiding each day and worksheets and
  • you don’t want to teach all your kids together.

HOW TO GET THE ANCIENT PERU UNIT STUDY OUTLINE

You can download the printable Peru Unit Study Outline now!

All my products are digital. You will not receive a physical product for anything in my store.

Downloads are INSTANT. When you pay, you will receive an email with a download link INSTANTLY. Depending on your internet connection, the email could be just 30 seconds or so, or a bit longer. The point is it will be soon, not a week later,etc.

Easy Peru Crafts For Kids And Unit Study Outline
  • Learning Made Easy: Ancient Peru Unit Study Outline

    Learning Made Easy: Ancient Peru Unit Study Outline

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The email with the download link will go to the email you used for paypal. If you used your husband’s paypal, your downloads will go to that email. Please check that email and your spam before emailing me telling me you can’t find it.

Please put my email tina @ tinasdynamichomeschoolplus dot com (take out the space and substitute the right symbol for dot) in your address/contact list so that your product does not go to spam.

MY GUARANTEE: To treat you like I want to be treated which means I know at times technical problems may cause glitches, so I will do everything possible to make your experience here pleasant.

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: ancient, ancient civilizations, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, history, homeschool, Peru, south america

Fun Facts About Peregrine Falcons & How To Paint Them In Watercolor

July 24, 2025 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I have some fun facts about peregrine falcons for you to use in your unit study. Also, grab my Peregrine Falcon Unit Study and Lapbook for more ideas.

The peregrine falcon is one of the most fascinating birds of prey, known for its incredible speed, keen eyesight, and presence around the world.

We are going to explore the life, behavior, and habitat of peregrine falcons while incorporating creative learning through watercolor painting.

Fun Facts About Peregrine Falcons & How To Paint Them In Watercolor

Ideal for upper elementary through high school homeschoolers, this study can be adapted to various learning levels. Peregrines are incredibly adaptable.

They live in mountains, coastal cliffs, deserts, and even urban areas; you will find them on every continent except Antarctica.

In cities, they often nest on tall buildings or bridges, using them like cliffs. This adaptability helped them make a remarkable comeback after being endangered in the mid-20th century due to pesticide use (especially DDT).

For fun and science exploration we are going to do a simple watercolor painting of a Peregrine Falcon.

I am not claiming to be a watercolor expert, I am a mom who had to learn some things herself to teach my own child. Plus, it’s just downright fun for me as well!

BOOKS ABOUT BIRDS OF PREY

Next look at these books about birds of prey.

Bird Of Prey and Peregrine Falcon Resources

Add these books and resources to your unit study about bird of prey or peregrine falcons.

My Side of the Mountain by Jean Craighead George

Great book for any boy or girl who wants to live outdoor and experience nature.

The Hawk of the Castle: A Story of Medieval Falconry

Join a young girl and her father, the falconer at a medieval castle, as they experience the joys of taking a goshawk out for a training flight

Peregrine Spring: A Master Falconer's Extraordinary Life with Birds of Prey

Peregrine Spring, Nancy Cowan’s memoir of her thirty years living intimately with raptors, gives us a new perspective on the relationship between humans and the natural world. Cowan shares her experiences running a world-famous falconry school, and the lessons she's learned from her birds.

Call of the Osprey (Scientists in the Field)

This meticulously researched and photographed account follows three University of Montana scientists and their interdisciplinary work with osprey: fish-catching birds with gigantic nests and a family that functions with teamwork and cooperation.

Talons: North American Birds of Prey (Pocket Nature Guides)

Talons: North American Birds of Prey by M. Miller & C. Nelson, present color illustrations along with names, size, range, & description of these predators.

Thunder Birds: Nature’s Flying Predators

Acclaimed naturalist and illustrator Jim Arnosky helps birds and imaginations take glorious flight in this breathtaking nonfiction picture book with six giant gatefolds.Arnosky will draw out kids'
inner explorer as he explains why there are no feathers on a vulture's head, which bird is the deep-diving champ, what makes an owls's wings perfectly silent in flight, and much more.

100 Facts Birds of Prey

Great book for beginners.

But before that let me give you some facts and fantastic activities to fill out this mini unit and help your child soar through it.

7 FUN FACTS ABOUT PEREGRINE FALCONS

  1. Peregrine falcons mate for life. Both peregrine parents care for the chicks, but the female is larger and does most of the brooding. The male (called a tiercel) is smaller and faster, making him the better hunter during nesting season.
  2. The word “peregrine” means “wanderer” which is fitting, since some migrate thousands of miles.
  3. Falconry is the practice of training birds of prey and often uses peregrines due to their speed and intelligence.
  4. Peregrine falcons are aerodynamic masters. When diving to catch prey, their wings tuck tight to their bodies, reducing drag and increasing speed. Their top recorded dive speed is 242 mph, faster than a Formula One car or a skydiver.
  5. A peregrine’s eyesight is about 8 times better than a human’s. They can spot a pigeon from over a mile away. Their eyes are protected by a nictitating membrane, a third eyelid that acts like goggles while diving at high speed.
  6. Peregrines have been used in falconry for over 3,000 years, even ancient Egyptian pharaohs trained them. In WWII, trained peregrines were used in the UK to intercept enemy carrier pigeons.
  7. Adults have a blue-gray back, barred underparts, and a dark head with that famous “moustache” mark. Chicks and juveniles are browner and have streaky, rather than barred, chests to help them blend into their surroundings.
Fun Facts About Peregrine Falcons & How To Paint Them In Watercolor

Next, look at more peregrine falcon activities and resources.

PEREGRINE FALCONS ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES

  • My Side of The Mountain is a great read aloud or independent reading book that talks about falconry.
  • Don’t forget to grab my Peregrine Falcon Unit Study and Lapbook for an in depth look at these beautiful and fierce birds of prey.
  • Print a world map and mark places peregrine falcons are found. Include- Urban nesting sites (like New York City skyscrapers), cliffs in the Grand Canyon, coastal regions in Alaska or the British Isles.
  • Learn How to make paper mache PEREGRINE FALCON for a beautiful display.
  • Another fun read is Falcon Vs Hawk Who Would Win?
  • Get step by step directions for How to Draw a Peregrine Falcon.
  • Watch this quick video Here’s Why Peregrine Falcons Are the Top Guns of the Sky.

For a STEM challenge- Build a paper glider that mimics a falcon’s wing shape. Test how wing design affects speed and dive angle.

PEREGRINE FALCON WATERCOLOR

As they paint their Peregrine falcon have your child focus on the following features:

  • A harp beak with a special “tomial tooth” for killing prey.
  • Long, pointed wings for fast flying.
  • Large eyes that can spot prey from over a mile away.
  • Dark “moustache” marks help reduce sun glare.

You will need:

  • Watercolor paper
  • Sharpened pencil
  • Watercolors
  • Small paintbrushes
  • Permanent black marker
  • Water
  • Inspiration photo or figure
Fun Facts About Peregrine Falcons & How To Paint Them In Watercolor

Begin by drawing out a loose outline of your peregrine inspiration. I grabbed this Peregrine Falcon Figurine I had because I loved the pose but there are many wonderful pictures online or in books you can choose to use as a model.

Once you are happy with it, erase the lines until you can just barely see them so that they don’t show through your watercolor.

Fun Facts About Peregrine Falcons & How To Paint Them In Watercolor

Paint the inside of your outline with just plain water, once it is wet begin adding the lightest color and spreading it around the image inside the lines.

Fun Facts About Peregrine Falcons & How To Paint Them In Watercolor

Allow to dry and then use a small brush to dab darker spots all over the falcons chest and wings.

Fun Facts About Peregrine Falcons & How To Paint Them In Watercolor

Next, you can move on to the yellow parts like the beak and claws as they are not touching the still wet parts.

Fun Facts About Peregrine Falcons & How To Paint Them In Watercolor

Now paint a light wash of blue all around your falcon to make it stand out. You can paint directly onto the dry paper or use a wet on wet technique by painting it first with plain water and then a light wash of color.

Fun Facts About Peregrine Falcons & How To Paint Them In Watercolor

Use a black marker to add more details like eyes

Fun Facts About Peregrine Falcons & How To Paint Them In Watercolor

And claws..

Fun Facts About Peregrine Falcons & How To Paint Them In Watercolor

To extend this lesson you can also have your child label the different features of the Peregrine Falcon, here is a great Falcon (Peregrine) fact page with a simple labeled anatomy image.

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: birds, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschool, life science, peregrine falcon, science

Make Easy Tea Sandwiches Mad Hatter Craft

July 23, 2025 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

There are many fun and whimsical Mad Hatter craft ideas to create a wonderful tea party and unit study based on Lewis Carroll’s beloved classic, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.

These quick unit study ideas are for elementary and middle school students.

And it brings together literature, history, art, and life skills ending with an unforgettable Mad Hatter Tea Party complete with your very own cucumber tea sandwiches.

Make Easy Tea Sandwiches Mad Hatter Craft

Published in 1865 by Charles Lutwidge Dodgson under the pen name Lewis Carroll, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland follows a curious girl named Alice.

She tumbles down a rabbit hole into a fantastical world of talking animals, riddles, and topsy-turvy characters including the insane Mad Hatter.

Grab a copy of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and get ready to fall into a world of madness and fun as you read, craft, enjoy a wild tea party, and more.

LEWIS CARROLL ALICE ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND

Alice in Wonderland

Your kids will love the adventures of Alice.

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

Commemorating the 150th anniversary of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland with a deluxe oversized hardcover edition, illustrated in full color by Anna Bond of Rifle Paper Co.'That curious, hallucinating heroine Alice, friend of Cheshire cats and untimely rabbits, is turning 150 years old. But she doesn’t look a day over a decade in a special new edition of Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland . . .  And what a perfect match, in tone and whimsy, found in Rifle Paper Co.’s Anna Bond, who has illustrated every page of the book."--Vanity Fair

Jabberwocky: A Pop-Up Rhyme from Through the Looking Glass

Text and pop-up illustrations present the classic nonsense poem in which the burbling Jabberwock is slain.

Next, look at some fun ideas to make this book a quick study.

WHO IS THE MAD HATTER

One of the most iconic characters from Wonderland is the Mad Hatter known for his eccentric behavior, wild tea parties, and nonsensical riddles.

He appears in the chapter titled A Mad Tea-Party.

5 FUN MAD HATTER FACTS

  1. Inspiration– The Mad Hatter may have been inspired by real-life eccentric personalities Carroll encountered while at Oxford.
  2. Why “mad”? The phrase “mad as a hatter” comes from 18th-century hat makers who used mercury, causing tremors and hallucinations.
  3. The Hatter’s Riddle- “Why is a raven like a writing desk?” It was meant to be nonsense—but later, Carroll suggested the answer: “Because it can produce a few notes, though they are very flat; and it is never put with the wrong end in front.”
  4. The 10/6 tag- On his hat is a price tag reading “10/6” — ten shillings and sixpence, the cost of the hat.
  5. Different Names- In Through the Looking-Glass, the Hatter returns as “Hatta,” a servant.

Then, look at these other ideas.

PLAN A MAD HATTER TEA PARTY

Recreate the magic with a whimsical homeschool tea party inspired by the Mad Hatter’s chaotic charm.

This is great for hands-on learning, social skills, and etiquette practice.

Invite friends or family to your tea party. Assign each child a character.

Use all the skills you’ve learned—cooking, crafting, acting, and etiquette.

End the day by reading a favorite passage from the book and reciting original riddles or poems.

TEA PARTY MENU

  • Cucumber Tea Sandwiches. Look at the bottom of this post for the recipe.
  • Mini scones with jam
  • Fruit skewers
  • Sugar cubes and herbal tea (or lemonade for kids)
  • Fruit Tarts

DECORATIONS

  • Mismatched teacups and saucers. Tip: You can buy them at Goodwill.
  • Pocket watches, playing cards, and teapots.
  • Signs that say “This Way,” “That Way,” and “Wrong Way”.

DRESS-UP IDEAS

  • Mad hats made from construction paper or thrift store finds.
  • Bow ties, vests, aprons, or pinafores.
  • Face paint for whiskers or rosy cheeks.

ETIQUETTE AND LIFE SKILLS

  • Practice polite conversation and napkin folding.
  • Learn how to serve and pour tea.
  • Talk about table manners and hospitality.

QUICK STUDY IDEAS

Take your unit to another level and dive into every subject.

  • Literature- Read Jabberwocky from Through the Looking-Glass and decode the nonsense words.
  • History- Explore Victorian England—how people dressed, what they ate, and what children did for fun.
  • Science- Study mercury poisoning in history and how hat making led to the term “mad as a hatter.”
  • Math- Practice fractions by dividing sandwiches and measuring tea ingredients.
  • Art- Illustrate your favorite character or scene from the book.
Make Easy Tea Sandwiches Mad Hatter Craft

Then, look at these fun mad hatter craft ideas.

MAD HATTER CRAFT IDEAS

  • Make your own Alice in Wonderland Card Soldiers for a fun and easy decoration.
  • Hands-On Literature: Make Alice in Wonderland Easy Cupcakes
  • Make your own wonderland clock. Use paper plates, markers, and brads to design a crazy clock that tells Wonderland Time (where it’s always tea time!).
  • This DIY Flamingo Croquet would be not only a fun craft idea but a wonderful activity for a Mad Hatter Tea Party.
  • Learn How to Make a Fun Mad Hatter Headband Craft in Literature to add a touch of style to your unit.
  • Play “Riddles and Rhymes” Have everyone write their own nonsense riddle or poem and share it at the table.

Finally, look at how to make these fun tea sandwiches.

MAKE EASY TEA SANDWICHES MAD HATTER CRAFT

You will need:

  • 8 slices of bread
  • 4 oz. cream cheese
  • 2 Tablespoons mayonnaise
  • English cucumber
  • 2 Tablespoons fresh dill
  • Salt and pepper to taste
Make Easy Tea Sandwiches Mad Hatter Craft

Chop dill until it is fine, if you would rather use dried dill instead of fresh that will work as well.

Make Easy Tea Sandwiches Mad Hatter Craft

Stir together cheese, mayonnaise, lemon juice, and dill until well combined.

Make Easy Tea Sandwiches Mad Hatter Craft

Slice cucumbers very thin, you can use a mandolin to quickly get uniform slices but I like to use this as an opportunity to work on knife skills.

Make Easy Tea Sandwiches Mad Hatter Craft

Spread the mixture on each slice of bread all the way to the edges.

Make Easy Tea Sandwiches Mad Hatter Craft

Cover 4 slices of coated bread with rows of thinly sliced cucumber.

Make Easy Tea Sandwiches Mad Hatter Craft

Place the other 4 slices of bread on top and cut off the crusts all the way around.

Make Easy Tea Sandwiches Mad Hatter Craft

Cut into triangles by slicing diagonally through the middle.

Make Easy Tea Sandwiches Mad Hatter Craft

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: books, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschool, literature, literature crafts, mat hatter

Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

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

Viking activities are a fabulous way to teach your child about the exciting world of seafaring raiders..Also, I have this Vikings Lapbook Unit Study and Hands-on Activities.

The Vikings are one of the most fascinating groups in history—seafaring warriors, skilled craftsmen, daring explorers, and clever traders.

For homeschoolers in elementary through middle school, studying the Vikings is an exciting way to explore history, geography, culture, and even strategy games.

Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

The Vikings were Norse people from what we now call Norway, Sweden, and Denmark.

From about 793 to 1066 AD, they sailed across Europe, raided villages, traded goods, and settled new lands like Iceland, Greenland, and even parts of North America (long before Columbus!).

The word “Viking” actually refers to the activity of raiding or exploring by sea.

BOOKS ABOUT VIKINGS FOR KIDS

Next, look at these books about Vikings to add as reading.

12 Viking Resources & Books for Multiple Ages

Grab some of these books and resources for multiple ages about Vikings.

Viking Adventure

Sigurd, a Viking boy, cannot see the value of learning to read and write. All he can think of is adventure. But then he has an adventure that he cannot help but tell. And to do that, he decides, he must learn to write. A fine story for young readers.

Guts & Glory: The Vikings (Guts & Glory, 2)

From battle-axe-wielding tribes plundering the greatest cities of Europe to powerful kings and queens ruling their dominions with iron fists, the Vikings were some of the most feared and fearless figures in European history. Find the bravest heroes, the most menacing villains, and unbelievably awesome facts and myths inside this action-packed overview that will amaze kids with tales of a people so incredible...it's hard to believe they were real.

Viking: Discover the Story of the Vikings―Their Ships, Weapons, Legends, and Saga of War

The most trusted nonfiction series on the market, Eyewitness Books provide an in-depth, comprehensive look at their subjects with a unique integration of words and pictures. Loaded with superb color photographs of Viking ships and swords, clothes and shields, memorial stones and beautiful brooches, this revised and updated edition of Eyewitness: Viking offers a unique view into the lives of the Norse people and their outstanding achievements.

LEGO Creator Viking Ship

Kids can experience thrilling adventures on land and sea with this 3in1 set featuring a toy Viking ship, Viking house and Fenris wolf figure

A Child's Introduction to Norse Mythology: Odin, Thor, Loki, and Other Viking Gods, Goddesses, Giants, and Monsters

The newest book in the best-selling, award-winning A Child's Introduction series explores the popular and captivating world of Norse mythology. Organized into two parts, part one introduces characters like Odin, the leader of the Norse gods; Thor and his mighty hammer Mjollner; Frigg, weaver of the destinies of humans and gods; frost and fire giants; cunning dwarves like Brokk and Eitri; and many more. Part two tells the stories of the suspenseful myths themselves including The Creation of the Cosmos, The Aesir-Vanir War, Loki Bound, Thor's Hammer and many more.

Renegade Game Studios Raiders of The North Sea,Multi-colored

Play Raiders of The North Sea, a worker-placement board game where players work to assemble a crew and outfit a longboat to raid settlements for gold and fame.(For 2-4 players)

Odd and the Frost Giants

Odd, a young Viking boy, is left fatherless following a raid. In his icy, ancient world there is no mercy for an unlucky soul with a crushed foot and no one to protect him. Fleeing to the woods, Odd stumbles upon and releases a trapped bear…and then Odd's destiny begins to change.

The eagle, bear, and fox Odd encounters are Norse gods, trapped in animal form by the evil frost giant who has conquered Asgard, the city of the gods. Now our hero must reclaim Thor's hammer, outwit the frost giants and release the gods…

Viking Quest Series Set of 5 Volumes Including Raiders From the Sea, Mystery of the Silver Coins, the Invisible Friend, Heart of Courage, and the Raider's Promise

Raiders from the Sea: Viking raiders capture Bree and her brother Devin and take them from their home in Ireland. After the young Viking prince Mikkel sets Devin free on the Irish coast far from home, Bree and Devin embark on separate journeys to courage. Readers will be captivated by the unfolding drama as Bree sails to Norway on the Viking ship and Devin travels the dangerous road home.

Black Fox of Lorne

Set in 1005 AD, twins Brus and Jan go a-Viking with their father Harald Redbeard and all their household. They plan to settle in England with Danish relatives there. But, their ships are caught in a fierce gale on the North Sea, and they are taken far off course to the western shore of Scotland. Held captive by a cunning Scottish Laird, Jan and Brus must navigate the political intrigue of chieftain, clan, and king without the help of their father, who has been killed and their mother, who is believed lost at sea. They follow adventure after adventure until they earn their freedom and find a home in Scotland at last.

Make This Viking Settlement (Usborne Cut-Out Models)

Printed on stiff card, this book contains templates to cut out and construct a model of a Viking settlement crammed with authentic detail. The base of the completed model measures 61 x 46cm, and includes 16 houses with doors and windows that open to reveal the details inside, and two Viking trading ships. It contains over 40 cut-out figures including merchants, traders and towns people to recreate scenes of everyday life in a bustling riverside settlement.

Who Were the Vikings Internet-Linked (Starting Point History)

Answers questions about the everyday life of the Vikings, including clothing, homes, religion, medical care, food, entertainment, ships, shops and towns, government, warfare, and the travels of the Northmen in Asia and the North Atlantic.

Viking Ships At Sunrise (Magic Tree House, No. 15)

"Beware of Vikings!" warns Morgan. Then Jack and Annie are whisked back to ancient Ireland. They land on a cliff on a misty island. How will they find the story they are looking for? It will take a Viking invasion, the help of a jolly monk, and a lot of courage for Jack and Annie to succeed in Viking Ships at Sunrise.

Though Vikings are often portrayed as fierce warriors in horned helmets (which they didn’t actually wear), they were also farmers, blacksmiths, weavers, shipbuilders, and traders.

Families lived in longhouses, kept animals, and followed Norse mythology, which included gods like Odin, Thor, and Freya.

They were also excellent storytellers. Much of what we know about their beliefs and adventures comes from sagas—long stories that were told aloud and eventually written down.

With hands-on activities, historical games, and exciting tales, a Viking unit is a fun and meaningful way to bring ancient history alive.

Whether you’re sailing longships or writing in runes, the spirit of discovery and adventure will inspire your homeschooler’s imagination.

VIKING ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES TO EXPLORE FURTHER

Next, look at these other activities to learn more about Vikings.

  • 10 Viking Explorer Project Ideas and Make a Trollen Wheel Viking Braid
  • Try a simple Viking meal using ingredients they might have used- oatcakes or flatbread, stew with root vegetables, dried fruits and nuts.
  • Cardboard box Viking shield. – This Crafty Family – Crafts for kids
  • The Vikings wrote using runes, a symbolic alphabet called the Elder Futhark. Teach students a few basic runes and let them write secret messages or even their names by learning how to Make Viking Runestones.
  • STEM and Geography: How to Build an Ancient Viking Ship
  • Have your student choose a Norse god or legend and turn it into a Norse comic strip or short graphic novel. For example, the story of Thor losing his hammer or Odin trading his eye for wisdom.
  • The BEST Viking Unit Study for Homeschooled Kids
  • Using a blank map of Europe and the North Atlantic to mark Viking homelands (Norway, Denmark, Sweden), trace Viking routes to England, France, Iceland, Greenland, and North America, and Identify where major raids or settlements occurred.
  • The Best Free Viking Lapbook and Hands-on Ideas
  • Bring It all together by ending your unit with a viking day- dress up in DIY tunics and belts, present the comics or longship models you made, serve viking food, tell a long story around a fake fire.
Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

Then learn how to play this fun Viking game.

LEARN TO PLAY HNEFATAFL (VIKING CHESS)

Hnefatafl (pronounced nef-ah-tah-fel) was a strategic board game played by the Viking. It is similar to chess but with different rules and goals.

The game involves a king trying to escape attackers.

How to Play:

  • The board is a grid (11×11 or 13×13).
  • One player is the attacker, with more pieces.
  • The other is the defender, with fewer pieces and a king in the center.
  • The goal is for the king to escape to the corner squares, while attackers try to trap him.

Printable boards and pieces can be found online.

Or you can make your own using a checkerboard and small objects (like coins, buttons, or LEGO pieces).

But today we are going to create a replica of Hnefatafl using air dry clay, paint, and an inexpensive board. Continue all the way to the bottom of this post for those directions.

Here is a great video I found on YouTube giving directions for Hnefatafl game play.

Then look at how to make Hnefatafl.

HOW TO MAKE A CHESS HNEFATAFL GAME

You will need:

  • Air dry clay
  • Craft paint
  • 12×12 wood board
  • Cup of water
  • Paintbrushes
  • Paint pen
Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

First, roll air dry clay into long snakes, about 1/2” thick.

Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

Cut into 24, 1” pieces-opposing forces.

Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

Wet your fingers and smooth out and shape each piece into a barrel shape, pressing to flatten the bottom so that it stands on its own.

Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

Repeat to make another 12 but this time you will wet your finger and shape the top into a point-kings guard. Again press the bottoms flat so they will stand well.

Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

Finally take one last piece of clay and make a slightly thicker and taller shape, we tried to give ours a crown shaped top to create a king.

Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

Allow clay to dry for 24 to 72 hours until completely dry.

Paint the painted shapes and the king one color and the barrel shapes another color.

Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

Once the paint dries you can use a paint marker to draw runes on your pieces if you like.

Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

While the clay is drying you can create your board. Start by marking off 11 spaces slightly larger than 1” on all sides with a ruler.

Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

Use the straight edge of the ruler and a pencil to draw lines vertically and horizontally on the board to create an 11×11 grid.

Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

Now go over your lines with a paint pen or permanent marker to darken them.

Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

Mark off the 4 corners with an X or a rune, these are the spots only the king can go.

Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

Finally place your prepared pieces like this, king in the center, king’s gourd around the king, and opposing forces on the 4 sides, 5 in back and one centered in the front.

Explore Viking Activities | How To Make A Chess Hnefatafl Game

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: Ancient HIstory, hands on history, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, history, homeschool, Vikings

Dale Chihuly Art Projects For Kids Who Love Color

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

This faux blown glass project is a wonderful way to recreate a fun Dale Chihuly art projects for kids idea without a 2,000℉ kiln. Also, look at my Free Glassblowing Unit Study and Lapbook.

Glass blowing is a perfect example of how science, history, and art can come together in a beautiful and meaningful way.

From ancient Syria to modern studios, this craft has captivated people for over 2,000 years and it continues to inspire artists and learners today.

Dale Chihuly Art Projects For Kids Who Love Color

Glass is literally all around us. It is used for windows, drinking glasses, light bulbs, smartphone screens, and more. But have you ever wondered how people shaped glass into such beautiful and useful objects, especially before machines did it for us?

One of the most fascinating ways to shape glass is called glass blowing. It is an ancient technique still practiced today by skilled artisans.

Glass blowing is the art of shaping molten glass by blowing air into it through a long metal tube. When the glass is heated to very high temperatures (about 2,000°F), it becomes soft. It can be inflated like a balloon.

Artists use special tools to shape and cool the glass, creating everything from bowls and bottles to intricate sculptures and ornaments.

GLASSBLOWING & DALE CHIHULY BOOKS FOR KIDS

Glass Blowing and Dale Chihuly Resources for Kids

Add some of these resources and books to your unit study about glass blowing.

Chihuly Art Kit Activity Book

This spiral-bound hardcover is an absolute necessity for those who like to travel creatively.

USA America Tacoma Chihuly Bridge of Glass Jigsaw Puzzles for Adults Kids

There is letter identification area behind the puzzle to assist in completing the puzzle. The finished puzzles can be used as artwork display and home decoration. Good travel souvenirs and gifts.

Chihuly: 365 Days

Dale Chihuly is renowned as the most prolific living artist working in glass, with hugely popular exhibitions in major museums around the world. Chihuly: 365 Days is a richly illustrated photo survey of his entire four-decade career, with more than 500 pictures showing all facets of his work—from intimate smaller pieces to the tremendous outdoor installations that have thrilled millions of visitors

Bonnie Fitzgerald's Guide to Mosaic Techniques: The Go-To Source for In-Depth Instructions and Creative Design Ideas

This complete resource of mosaic techniques and design ideas is sure to become your go-to reference. With clear step-by-step sequences, mosaic artist Bonnie Fitzgerald shows how to draw up an idea, cut and arrange tiles, and lay designs successfully.

Stained Glass Projects for Beginners: 31 Projects to Make

31 step-by-step projects for copper foiled and leaded window panels, candle holders, mirror and picture frames, light catchers, and more

One of the most famous modern glass artists is Dale Chihuly. Born in 1941 in Washington State, Chihuly studied art and design before falling in love with the medium of glass.

DALE CHIHULY: A MODERN GLASS LEGEND

He became a pioneer in studio glass, an art movement where artists work in small studios rather than factories.

He creates massive, colorful glass installations. They often look like undersea creatures, flowers, or twisting vines. He is known for his use of bright, bold colors and organic shapes.

His glass work is often displayed in gardens, museums, and public buildings around the world.

  • Chihuly Garden and Glass in Seattle, Washington, where visitors can walk among glowing glass sculptures in an indoor and outdoor gallery.
  • The ceiling installation at the Bellagio Hotel in Las Vegas, made up of over 2,000 glass flowers.

Even though Chihuly lost sight in one eye and later stopped blowing glass himself, he still designs and leads teams of skilled glass blowers to bring his visions to life.

As you learn about blown glass and Chihuly grab my Free Glassblowing Lapbook filled with facts, vocabulary, images to color, and loads of information.

Dale Chihuly Art Projects For Kids Who Love Color

Just print, color, cut, and paste into place and then fill in whatever additional information you like.

Dale Chihuly Art Projects For Kids Who Love Color

Next, look at these Dale Chihuly crafts.

DALE CHIHULY ART PROJECTS FOR KIDS WHO LOVE COLOR

  • Make a 30 Minute Chihuly Chandelier.
  • Can you say CHIHULY?!!!!! Coffee Filter Art.
  • Chihuly Inspired Sculpture using permanent markers and plastic cups.
  • Create a Plastic Bottle Wind Spiral Mobile to enjoy.
  • Look at these Easy Chihuly Inspired Sculptures for Kids.

Finally, look at how to make a faux blown glass Chihuly resin bowl.

Dale Chihuly Art Projects For Kids Who Love Color

FAUX BLOWN GLASS CHIHULY RESIN BOWL

You will need:

  • Epoxy resin
  • Resin ink
  • Silicone mat
  • Silicone mixing tools- cup, stirrer
Dale Chihuly Art Projects For Kids Who Love Color

First, follow the directions on your part A and part B resin to mix it together, which is typically 2 parts resin to 1 part of the hardener.

Dale Chihuly Art Projects For Kids Who Love Color

You are now going to slowly and carefully pour your epoxy mixture out to form an irregular circle on the silicone mat.

Dale Chihuly Art Projects For Kids Who Love Color

Drip ink colors throughout the resin to create a design, you can also use toothpicks to drag your colors around.

Dale Chihuly Art Projects For Kids Who Love Color

Continue adding dye as it spreads until you are happy with it.

Dale Chihuly Art Projects For Kids Who Love Color

After 6-8 hours the epoxy is no longer wet but it is malleable. Flip it into a bowl.

Then gently bend it to create fluted edges. You can even make it asymmetrical so it looks more like a natural piece of blown glass.

Dale Chihuly Art Projects For Kids Who Love Color

Be sure to push the bottom flat so it will sit well.

Allow the bowl to cure and harden over 2-3 days until fully firm and then remove from the mold bowl.

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: glass blowing, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschool

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