This
project was almost too major - I almost threw them out in frustration. With Troy's dinosaur, I stopped
after only half finishing the paper mache and then the balloon
shrunk, so I had to do reconstruction and fixing. I also left them out at another stage and it rained - so more reconstruction. But in
the end I was glad I hadn't given up because the dinosaurs had alot of character despite
being imperfect.
For a smaller project, make smaller dinosaurs (blow up the balloons less). Or don't stop the paper mache halfway through - or leave them out in the rain!
We got this idea from a book based on the kids TV program called Art Attack by Neil Buchanan (ISBN 9781405307451). These dinosaur banks were called "beastly banks".
Stage 1. Paper mache using white (PVA) glue and water.
Georgie and Troy (7), and Lucan (5). Although he loved the banks, Luke didn't yet have the patience to make one.
Blow up a balloon, and tape on rolled up printer paper for the neck and tail. Tape on toilet paper rolls which have been cut in half for the feet. For extra structural strength, also wrap and twist wire to support head and neck - we found it essential and both dinosaurs were later supplemented with wire. I also glue-gunned the wire construction to the dinosaur. Get the children to tear up alot of newspaper, and get a small bucket with PVA glue (white glue) mixed with some water. Dip the strips in the glue solution and cover dinosaur. This is the time to "go with" the character of your dinosaur, bringing it out. You can add ridges to the back with folded newspaper.
Tip: You can create a reptilian wrinkly texture for the skin by adding toilet paper to the wet surface. But don't touch it too much or it will ball up and tear away!
Coin slot and cork hole underneath
When you are done the paper mache and it is dry, cut a coin slot in the top, and a circular hole underneath in the belly, the same size as the cork you are using. Coil up a piece of wire around your cork to size it, and paper mache the metal ring to act as a hole liner to give it the hole strength. (I originally gluegunned in a plastic tube, but since it rose up too high with its ridge inside the money couldn't get out - so I had to cut it out and do this later with a glue gun and fabric. It would have been far neater to do it at this stage. Photo below.)
Stage 2: Paint with white primer.
Tips: We used really good quality white primer paint (usually as a prep for walls). This paint provides a great base for decorating and fills in and seals the sculpture.
Stage 3: Decorate your dinosaur bank using acrylic paint and/or paint store samples.
Get the kids to mark out their designs with a marker first, and then they can start filling in. After they have done what they can handle, help them finish it off nicely so they'll be proud of their dinosaurs.
When they are done, they are like characters - encourage the kids to name them. Polka-dot and Tiger are friends - as the girls who made them are.
1. Make bread dough they can make creatures out of - which they can eat after.
Number One on my list because this is my kids (and their friends) favourite thing to do at our house. It's actually really simple to make basic bread dough. Here is my no-measuring method. As long as you have some of all the ingredients below - and enough flour, you can't really go wrong: First, get about 3 cups of warm water in a mixing bowl. Then, sprinkle yeast (any kind) over the top of the surface. Sprinkle some sugar to feed the yeast. After a minute or so, it will start to foam up.(You don't have to wait, but you can.) Then, add a sploosh of oil(optional, but this added fat will make it more of a treat, and also decrease stickiness).Add a large pinch of salt. Don't stress about doing it perfectly - as long it all the elements are there, you will have dough.
At this point you have the brew to make the dough. Mix it with a wooden spoon (or any spoon you have), then start pouring flour in, slowly. It will at first make a sticky soup. At the point where it becomes hard to stir, get your clean hands in, stir and mix around with your hands, adding more until it's - just barely - no longer sticky, or only just. Try to get it to cleave all together as one mass.
The kids may or may not be waiting on you. You can do this ahead of time and place a dish cloth over it so it will rise up - but you can also whip this up on the spur of the moment and give them a chunk to play with. It will still have the same educational and creative value! (And it will still taste fine.) After all their playing, and the time it sits in a greased pan, it will have risen enough.
Anyways, make sure when you give the kids their handful of dough that you keep the surface on the table in front of them sprinkled with flour as they won't be able to deal with very sticky dough. You can keep a bowl or cup on the table for sprinkling the dough or table as needed.
Ideas for making things - start them making balls or sausages. Cookie cutters and child sized rolling pins to use. If they aren't afraid to make things, just let them go, but their experience will be much improved by you participating and showing them how to make things. After they are rolling, you can let them go.
You can use pinto beans to make great eyes - but limit their use of them - they are hard and not really edible.
It's important to set a greased pie pan or baking pan beside them for them to place their finished, focused creations into as it gives them a sense of accomplishment when they can see what they've made.
Have the oven heating up to 160 degrees C (or 360 F). Even little kids can brush butter and sprinkle sugar over top their finished creatures.
Troy made me laugh as I was filming her and Luke for my blog, she just started hosting her own video tutorial on how to make a dough critter. I didn't stop her - their video is below.
2. Make things out of junk or scrap materials. ie houses, cars, animals, whatever they want to build.
Josh (above) loved making armour and and a sword for his clay creature out of a bottlecap, wire, cloth, a toothpick, bit's he'd found. The monkey guy also has a drum set made out of bottlecaps.
It may look scrappy to us - but their imaginations are firing away. Get a glue gun - wire, pliers, use a drill to make holes in plastic things, or just sew things together with a big needle (even cardboard). Double sided tape, card, old interesting objects you come across - save them in some designated area (if you can mentally handle the chaos). Real order can come out of the right amount of chaos. Too much and you are a hoarder. Too little, and you are a fusspot. Get the right balance for craft activities as you go!
I still remember the endless possibilities I imagined when I found a neat object.
It's so cool to hear their ideas come out.
3. Make your own toy out of clay
Sculpey
Craft stores sell a type of clay that hardens when you cook it in the oven ("Sculpey" in NZ, "Fimo" in North America). Sculpey even sellsglow-in-the-dark modelling clay! A bit expensive- around $7 for one block from Spotlight ($5 if you're a member) - but worth it for a special gift, as plasticine which stays squishy forever quickly gets ruined. I did have Troy practice on squishy plasticine first -
The dog in the photo below has glued on felt eyes as the eyes Troy made didn't stand out. Always fix screw-ups in a positive way - it teaches the kids that lesson. We
named him "Snifter" - as apparently he likes sniffing rear ends. The
horse I helped Troy with in your hand on the left we named "Spirit".
He glows green-white brightly in the dark.
3. Take them to the library
They need fuel to fire their imaginations. They won't have anything in their heads, ideas of what to make, without stories.
I remember when my mother first introduced us kids to the library - and all the worlds that were in there to be found. She just took us there and let us choose whatever we wanted, but also at times introducing us to great books.
Let the kids choose anything they are interested in. My mother would occasionally show me something she had heard of that was supposed to be good - famously, to me, C. S. Lewis's Narnia series. This series ended up being one of my ultimate favourite.
This is not a small idea - this idea is essential.
4. Make a creature or animal out of paper mache, then paint it.
The polka
dots on the dinosaur bank on the right (named "Polkadot") were all drawn
by Georgie (7) and painted by her. Then Troy painted the green back
ridges for Georgie, and added glitter. I was able to tie it all
together for her by filling in around the polka dots neatly, painting
with a bright sample of wall paint.
For
the dinosaur bank on the left ("Tiger"), I admit I took over and
painted it after Troy (7) got frustrated with marking the stripes. But
she gave lots of input. I mixed red acrylic paint in to the blue-green
colour I was using to shade the belly and feet. This project will definitely need your help. But there is lots for the kids to do themselves (like ripping up paper - and helping with paper mache - and painting). In the paper mache "piggy banks"
above (they have slots cut in their tops, and corks under their bellies) the kids have helped paper mache them with strips of newspaper dipped in PVA glue (white glue) and water. The base was a balloon, with toilet paper roll feet cut in halves. The neck is rolled and scrunched paper. Some wire was needed to provide structure and support to the
long neck and long tail. For more details on how we did it, click here.
We got this idea from a book based on the kids TV program called Art Attack by Neil Buchanan (ISBN 9781405307451). These dinosaur banks were called "beastly banks".
I have been slowly and slyly converting all of our family's batteries over to rechargeable, over the past year.
Yes, they most definitely cost more at the time - but it's that long term benefit that I can see that makes me do it.
It's about $30NZ to get 4 rechargeable batteries. But the benefits are that far less toxic batteries are generated (by far my only reason for doing it).
However, there is a great financial blessing when you switch over to rechargeable batteries - as well as an ease of stress when using digital cameras...however "cheap" you get them, you don't have to buy batteries any more, which feels great.
Personally, I just enjoy the absence of guilt.
This is our family's personal battery stash from before switching to rechargeable in the photo above - I had been collecting and saving for a very long time, waiting to turn them in to the city's hazardous waste pickup locations (like that's going to happen). You can also turn these in to your local "transfer station", and they will dispose of them properly for you.
I recently found a way to replace Shane's trusty big ole flashlight (photo below above on the left). They don't make rechargeable batteries that size. The bulb was broken by one of the kids. I went to the auto parts store to look for another. I found they don't even sell this type of flashlight anymore - the same brand one is made with an LED now. So I bought a very affordable ($15) flashlight that runs on 3 x AA batteries, and has heaps of LEDS on it on the side, and on the end - it's very bright. It's supposedly for fixing cars. Works for me. Look at the difference in the waste it would generate in 2 years (give or take).
340g butter (room temperature or warm it up in microwave) 1 cup sugar 3.5 cups flour 1 capful vanilla 1/4 tsp salt 100g chopped dark chocolate
1 interesting silicon cookie mould - we were lucky to find this fabulous Butterflies and Bugs silicon mold at the Warehouse for $10.
Step 1- Premeasure ingredients, or measure on the fly, but have the kids take turns dumping them in. Step 2 - Once all the ingredients are mixed except the chocolate, it will be difficult for the kids to stir. First, get them to wash their hands! Then they can all stick their hands in to help combine the butter with the other ingredients.
Step 3- Squish the dough into the silicon mould, getting it into all the corners so that the cookies come out well. Leave a little space at the top for the chocolate bits. Sprinkle the chocolate all over the cookies randomly and press in.
Bake for 20-25 minutes (depending on size of cookie) at 180 degrees C (160 degrees C fanbake).
We were lucky to move into a house where the previous owners had modified our laundry water to divert into a pipe into a bathtub outside. But our bathwater and shower water were wasted.
In Stillwater, everyone is on "tank water", which means that all our water is from the rain, caught and collected from the rooftops into storage tanks. We have a sink filter for our drinking water. So our home is essentially a "rainwater house". I think that's very cool and independent - except during the dry summer when there isn't enough water to water the garden. The rain doesn't fall to water the garden, and we aren't collecting more to just have alot to spray around. So if you reuse the water you've used to wash your laundry, and now - bathwater - you are using the same water twice. The plants definitely don't mind a little soap in the water - although we do use mild eco-brand soaps and laundry detergent. And I "hold the vinegar" (that definitely kills plants) in the laundry at this time. During the winter, it rains so much that the plants don't need watering.
Anyways, Shane rigged up a neat system which was just a lid which closed off the shower/bath pipe in which he'd drilled a hole, and glued an attachment for the hose into it. He also added silicon to aid in waterproofing. He cut some garden hose, attached it to the lid, which diverts the bathwater into a tub which I bucket to give life to my garden plants. But unless I want the water, the hose connects to a "holey" hose which has been placed along one of our gardens - so it waters the garden automatically after we pull out the plug from the bath. Of course, it is important that the outlet is lower than the bath to use gravity.
Awhile ago I posted about digging all the insides of my vacuum cleaner bag out with gloved fingers into the compost. Man is it easier with a bagless vacuum! Our vacuum cleaner died, so I insisted on a bagless one for this reason (wanting to compost all the dust to cut down on waste going to landfill).
How do you compost the contents of your vacuum cleaner easily? Buy a bagless vacuum. Now this is realistic for anyone to do easily.
Just try not to vacuum up anything plastic!
Photo courtesy of Lucan Dale, 5 (bribed with chocolate).
When we bought our house, Shane and I had been longing for land to use as we wished. We basically fought for territory - Shane got the front yard, and I got the back - so we could both experiment at our will.
But somehow, I couldn't figure out where to put my pumpkin plants - as they tend to get tangled with everything else. I cleared them some space in an area that used to be choked with weedy, ugly groundcover - in the front yard.... Now look at them go! Creeping into the non-veggie garden space - with lots of space for them to grow unhindered. (Shane said he doesn't mind though.)
I am guiding the growing branches to the concrete area above, and to the space along the bushes below.
Aren't the baby butternut pumpkins cute!
I planted butternut pumpkin plants sown from seeds saved from one I had bought to eat from the grocery store. I could also have squashes and crown pumpkins as I transplanted random seedlings from the compost as well. Earlier Stage - the same 5 pumpkin seedlings a few months ago (in December):