Adventures With Earthworms

Many happy days were spent stalking bugs when I was a little child.  I had an array of bug catchers and I knew where all the good places were to find a new pal.  My often caught favorites were roly polies.  I also sought after treasured lady bugs, butterflies and caterpillars which were hard to come by and when I would find one, I would be enchanted with my imagination completely sparked.  So, can you guess what one of my favorite things to do with kids?  Play with bugs of course!  Many, many summer days have found my girls and I “hunting bugs” and going on “roly poly” walks with bug catchers in hand. a wormy friend

The Helpful Earthworm

The preschool I teach at has a wonderful garden that the kids help to grow every summer.  They get to help plant, water and even pick food for the healthy lunches and snacks we serve. This spring we spent a couple weeks studying a couple beneficial friends for our garden, lady bugs and worms!  Naturally when we were done learning and reading we added some lady bugs and worms to help our garden grow.  Worm in it's new home

“Ms. Angela!  Did you know worm poop is dirt?”

After a nice little discussion about earthworms and how they help enrich our soil enabling plants to grow healthy and strong, we continued our study of worms by making a worm farm.  There are a large number of sites to find information on making your own worm farm, with much more detail than what we did.  Here is a quick run down of what we did if you want to make something super simple.

MYO Worm Farm

Materials ~

  • Earthworms:  I got a huge amount at our local garden centers ~ more than enough to make 2 worm farms which we did, one for school and one for home.  
  • Dirt
  • Sand
  • Worm Food: Things like grass clippings, leaves, food bits, oatmeal, tea leaves and coffee grounds, shredded newspaper.
  • Water
  • Container For the Farm:  We used a salad green container.  You know the kind that has washed lettuce in it?
  • Dark Paper

Instructions ~

Layer the dirt and sand in your container to make distinct layers so you can see the soil get all mixed up by the worms.  We even used oats for layering at home because we didn’t have sand.

DSCN4364

Add the food bits to the top of your worm farm.

Here we used a bit of old grass clippings and dandelion flowers.

food bits

Dump your worms in and watch them bury themselves deep into your farm.

Check it out, so very many worms!

adding the worms

Give your farm enough water to keep it moist but not water-logged.

Put a lid on your farm making sure to poke holes in the top so the worms and the farm can breathe.

Cover the sides of the farm with dark paper to encourage the worms to come to the sides of the container.  If you are lucky, you may see the dirt/sand layers get mixed up and little worm tracks along the sides.  We got to see lots of worm tracks one year, but sadly not this year.

Keep your farm in a nice coolish place (but not too cool) and check periodically to see what your worms are up too and to make sure they have enough water and food.

When you are done enjoying your farm, release the worms into your garden!

worm being released into the garden.

We also read this wonderful book to help us learn more about worms:

Diary Of A Worm by Doreen Cronin

This book offers a humerous way to look at worm life and learn about worm facts as well as how worms help our planet.

Wishing you lots of wormy fun!

For more buggy fun visit Playing With Lady Bugs

Shared On:  The Kid’s Co-op, Eco-Kid’s TuesdayIt’s Playtime, Kid Lit Blog Hop, Tender Moments, Friday’s Nature Table

Categories: Gardening, Insects, Lesson Plans For Preschool And Home, Science Exploration, Science Investigation | Tags: , , , , , | 9 Comments

Natural Living Monday

Welcome to Natural Living Monday where we share all our natural living tips, tricks, and fun ideas.

 

Your Hosts:

Amanda from Natural Living Mamma

Katie from Nourishing Simplicity

Angela from Mama Rosemary

Andrea from Homemade for Elle

Last weeks most popular posts were:

10 Apple Cider Vinegar Cures by Rockin the Green Life

How Gardening Can Make You Healthy by Livin In The Green

Tame Unwanted Hair Growth by Oatmeal With A Fork

No-Fail No-Pound Sauerkraut by Phoenix Helix

Congratulations on being featured! These amazing posts (and a few others) will be tweeted, shared on my Facebook page and pinned on my Pinterest boards!

Are you ready to link up?

From this week forward the list is in random order!

Here are the rules: Your blog article must fit these categories: sustainable living, homesteading, DIY, herbs, home-made body and skin care, real food (no processed ingredients, Weston A. Price Foundation guidelines are a good place to start to define “real food”), and all things “natural“.

Link back to this week’s blog hop post so that everyone can see the other amazing posts.

Show some love! Go check out and see what others have posted. Share the hop and the posts you love!

Not required but I would love it if you would grab the button and share!

 

What are your best natural living posts this week?

 

Please Note:  

To add a post and see all the wonderful posts linked up this week, please choose “Click here” below!  

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Thank you for joining us on Natural Living Monday!

Natural Living Mamma

 

Categories: Herbal Medicines, Natural Living Monday Blog Hop | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

In The Middle

Soft windy air swirling feeling wonderful on my skin, not accustom to the sun.  The sky is full of billowing Spring clouds backed by bright blue.  As I walk with my dog Cinnamon around our neighborhood into balmy winds, I find myself pondering as I often do on walks.  I ponder how long we will live in our current house, thinking of the wonderful schools my children go to and will go to in the very near future.  I ponder where I lived as a child and my friends’ homes, realizing that none of their parents live in my friend’s childhood homes any longer.

floweringtreepath

“Um, I wonder how long until we can move, if we choose to do so, until the kids are through school?”  I find myself thinking such thoughts for the first time…

And I realize that eleven years is the answer.  Eleven years until my youngest graduates from high school.  That is not really very long.  Eleven years ago I had a newborn baby, I was a new mom.  My life completely turned upside down as I started on this path of raising kids.  And it hits me, that I am in the middle.  In the middle of what I think of as hardcore parenting.  The kind of parenting when you have to literally be ready for anything at any moment.  Over the past couple of years I watched this mile stone coming.  I knew it would get here and probably arrive sooner than I wanted it too.  I still see my youngest as a very small child yet when I come home from teaching at the preschool, I can’t help but see her growing into a big girl, a girl who is changing so fast, and quickly loosing all those last vestiges of toddlerhood.  My oldest is set on the edge of blooming into a teenager which is almost mind-boggling as well as completely beautiful.

I am in the middle.

The middle of motherhood.

The middle of life.

Wow.

reflectionechinancea

From here I can see my past particularly through the lens of my own motherhood, I see my childhood and I grow.  I learn those lessons I missed and change.  I appreciate more my own parents and my life.  Of course I can’t see the future yet I feel myself letting go of the desire to fix everything and make it all as it should be.  Rather I want to let things be and experience.  I am in the middle and excited to experience the ride from here.

Shadows climb up
the garden wall
Upon the green
the first leaf falls
It’s the prime of life
and the king and queen
Step out into the sun…

…It’s the prime of life,
where the spirit grows
And the mirror
shows both ways

~ Neil Young

Shared On: The Sunday Parenting Party

Categories: Adventures And Stories, Parenting | Tags: , , , , , | 7 Comments

Natural Living Monday

 

Welcome to Natural Living Monday where we share all our natural living tips, tricks, and fun ideas.

Your Hosts:

Amanda from Natural Living Mamma

Katie from Nourishing Simplicity

Angela from Mama Rosemary

Andrea from Homemade for Elle

 

Last weeks most popular posts were:

Each Day by Like Mama Like Daughter

 

25 Rainy Day Books and Activities for Kids by Modernish Homemaker

 

How does she do it all? by Brown Thumb Mama

 

Growing Massive Amounts of Food the Natural Way by Live Ready Now

Congratulations on being featured! These amazing posts (and a few others) will be tweeted, shared on my Facebook page and pinned on my Pinterest boards!

Are you ready to link up?

From this week forward the list is in random order!

Here are the rules: Your blog article must fit these categories: sustainable living, homesteading, DIY, herbs, home-made body and skin care, real food (no processed ingredients, Weston A. Price Foundation guidelines are a good place to start to define “real food”), and all things “natural“.

Link back to this week’s blog hop post so that everyone can see the other amazing posts.

Show some love! Go check out and see what others have posted. Share the hop and the posts you love!

Not required but I would love it if you would grab the button and share share share!

What are your best natural living posts this week?

Please Note:  

To add a post and see all the wonderful posts linked up this week, please choose “Click here” below!  

 

Powered by Linky Tools

Click here to enter your link and view this Linky Tools list…

Thank you for joining us on Natural Living Monday!

Natural Living Mamma

Categories: Herbal Medicines, Natural Living Monday Blog Hop | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

MYO Flower Fairies

These make the perfect little friend for playing with in the garden!

Over the years I have crafted many wee fairy friends with my daughters, my daughters’ friends and my little friends at preschool.  Each fairy is as unique as the child who made it, right down to their hand-drawn faces. featherrainrosy We have even created elves using silk leaves and hot glue to make clothing.  There is really no end to this project and what you can do, just look around for tiny accessories, tools and anything else that strikes your fancy!  Right now I am thinking tiny birds perched on little fairy hands could be fun!  When you are done making your fairy, create a home-grown fairy garden or fairy house for your fairy!

This project originally comes from Spoonful, thank you Spoonful for the great idea!

3fairies

Materials ~

  • Wooden Beads
  • Chenille Stems (assorted colors)
  • Silk Flowers that can be easily pulled apart
  • Embroidery Floss (assorted colors)
  • Fairy Accessories ~ little hats, tiny flowers, small insects, jewels, ribbons, acorn hats, feathers, and tiny garden tools etc…
  • Scissors
  • Glue Gun
  • Glue Stick
  • Sharpies or Markers

Instructions ~

This project is fun for little kids and big kids alike.  Little children will need lots of help with each step.  An adult should do the hot gluing.  Older kids can make these fairies all by themselves once they know the steps and are safe using the glue gun.  In fact yesterday afternoon both my girls (age 11 and 7) spent the afternoon together crafting fairies!

~ The Face~

Start by having the child draw a face if so desired on the bead.  Make sure that the holes on the bead line up with the top and bottom of the fairy’s head.  You can also rub the fairy’s head with the glue stick and attach glitter for a sparkly fairy dust face.   

~ Hair and Body ~

Have the child choose a chenille stem for the body and embroidery floss for the hair.  Wrap the floss around your fingers to form a large loop of floss, going around many times.  Go around more fingers to make longer hair and less fingers for shorter hair.

creating hair

Then take the chenille stem and bend it in half around the loop of embroidery floss.  You can either bend the stem around the middle of the floss or closer to one end of the floss bundle which will create longer hair and potentially little bangs!attaching the hair

~ Attaching the Head to the Body ~

Once you have bent the stem around the floss, simply thread both ends of the chenille stem through the wooden bead.  Now you have the hair at the top of the head and the two ends of the chenille stem will create the body and legs.

attaching the head

happy fairy

~ Hair Style ~

At this point you can take some time to style your fairy’s hair if you wish.  You can cut the loops of the embroidery floss to create loose hair ends. and you can give you fairy a braid, pony tail or even a hair cut!  

fairy haircut

Fun accessories to consider are little crowns and hats decorated with tiny flowers and ribbons.  Check out the little hat we decorated.

garden hat

Happy fairy

I usually secure the hair to the head by rubbing a glue stick on the back of the fairy’s head and then pressing the embroidery floss into the glue.  And if we make bangs I do the same at the top front of the head.  This step really helps to hold everything together.

~ Arms and Wings ~

To make the arms have the child choose another chenille stem and cut it in half.  Then center this little half piece underneath the two chenille stems that extend out from the bottom of the wooden bead and wrapping right at the base of the bead, go around from front to back 1 or 2 times until the arms are the length you want them to be.  You can create little hands by folding the poky sharp end of the chenille stem in on it’s self 1 or 2 times.  creating arms

Creating the wings is very similar, using yet another chenille stem.  Look for sparkly stems for sparkly fairy wings!  To make the wings take the chenille stem you are using and center it on underneath the arms.  Starting from the front just like you did with the arms, wrap the chenille stem around those two chenille stems (which extend from the base of the bead) and twist into a wing shape.  You can also hot glue feathers to the fairy’s body to create wings!

wings

wings

 ~ Skirt and Clothing ~

Take a silk flower and pull it apart until you have little circles of petals with a hole in the center.  Then simply thread the two chenille stems that create the body through the hole.  

fairy skirt

Now you have a skirt!  You may want to twist the chenille stems under the skirt a little to hold the skirt on more tightly or even glue the flower on.  You can take petals from several different flowers and layer them to create a full colorful skirt if you want.  My daughter added feathers to her fairy’s skirt by hot gluing the feathers to flower petals.  feather fairyAnother variation is to take some of the leaves from the silk flowers and using a hot glue gun fold them around the legs to make pants!  You can create little feet by folding the poky sharp end of the chenille stem in on it’s self 1 or 2 times.

 ~ Now Your Fairy Is Done ~

Consider giving her or him a flower or crystal to hold, a butterfly friend to perch on a wing or a garden hoe!

fairyrain

wings from the back

Wishing You Lots Of Magic Fairy Fun!

More Fairy Fun ~

Shared On These Wonderful Blogs: The Kid’s Co-op, Eco-Kid’s Tuesday, It’s Playtime!, Kid’s Get Crafty, Friday’ Nature Table

Categories: Fun Crafts, Lesson Plans For Preschool And Home, Spring, Summer | Tags: , , , , | 3 Comments

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