Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts

Monday, November 1, 2010

Halloween Fun!

We had a great Halloween this year, trick-or-treating and pizza as always with another family we're close with. The kids loved it and so did we. This year, (their choice!) my children were Princess Aurora and Prince Phillip. My son will initiate playing Sleeping Beauty on a daily basis, believe it or not. He puts on the vest, grabs his stick horse and brings my daughter her dress. She pretends to sleep under the kitchen table and, after slaying the dragon with a stick, he crawls under there to give her a kiss. Yep, it's melt-your-heart adorable.




And this pumpkin from our garden was feelin' a little green...

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Patches of Pumpkin Fun (& learning!)


We grew pumpkins in our backyard garden this year. It was our first attempt, and it was surprisingly successful! We've had over a dozen perfect pumpkins from August to October. The kids have had so much fun watching them grow, ripening from green to orange and carving them into jack-o-lanterns! I usually let my husband do the pumpkin-gut scooping with the kids (outside, whenever possible!) because half the fun for the kids is making a huge mess with the core. Plus, my husband enjoys toasting the pumpkin seeds, so he doesn't mind the mess. He separates the seeds into a bowl, rinses them and lets them dry on dish towels overnight. Then coat with melted butter, salt them on cookie sheets and bake for a half hour at 350-degrees, flipping them half-way. They're nice and crunchy and the kids love them, too.
For more educational exploration, let your kids use various "science tools" while they "dissect" the pumpkin. They can examine the stringy core, seeds and hollow pumpkin shell with magnifying glasses, measuring cups and more.
Don't want to hassle with the guts? Having kids (even young ones) paint the pumpkins is great fun, too! One year we had a small Harvest party and I got a big giant bowl of small pumpkins, squash and gourds, lined the table with butcher paper and set up small paint cups with brushes for the kids to decorate. (Make sure you have some place to dry them before guests leave.)
Here's a fun activity involving a variety of squash and gourds:
Squash Sorting
Line up an assorted collection of squash and gourds (acorn squash, spaghetti squash, Hubbard squash, etc.) for your kids to classify according to color, size, shape, weight, etc. After they've classified them, get out the paper and crayons to draw pictures of them, allowing them to move from concrete to semi-concrete items.

Exploring pumpkins is also a great opportunity to introduce the sphere shape with your kids, if you haven't already.

The book, "From Seed to Pumpkin" by Wendy Pfeffer (Link) is wonderful. My family has enjoyed many volumes from this series of "Lets-Read-and-find-out" science books. You can find & request them from your library for free. (We've also enjoyed "Why do the leaves change color?" and "From Seed to Plant" from this series... and I'm sure others that I can't think of at the moment.)

Here's a fun pumpkin coloring page:


And, if your family enjoys Halloween, even if only select portions of the holiday, you'll find nearly 100 different lesson plans and related educational activities at this great site: Halloween Lesson Plans.

Popcorn fun

Pick up the book "Popcorn" by Frank Asch at your local library for your young elementary aged children and they will delight in this Halloween tale of a bear and his friends filling up an entire house with popcorn and then having to munch and crunch their way out! Make a bowl of your own popcorn to go along with the story and it doubles the fun!

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Spider Sandwiches

These friendly, spider-shaped sandwiches couldn’t even scare Miss Muffet away! Your kids will delight in eating this fun and festive Halloween treat.

Cut bread into circle shapes with a round cookie cutter or upside-down glass and make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. Lightly pinch around the edges. Use graham cracker sticks for the legs and Reeses Peanut Butter Cereal puffs for the eyes. Adhere with small dabs of peanut butter. Great to serve at a holiday gathering or just a new twist for your child’s lunch during October. They’ll be crawling back for more!