Today we started a unit study on trees so we went for a walk to identify some trees and gather a few leaves. My plan is to study just two or three trees every day or so and by the end of the month we will have learned about many of the common trees around here.
We could have started with the trees in our yard, but why waste a chance to go for a walk down the road, around the pond, and into the woods? So we packed guide books, paper, pencils, crayons, ziplock bags, and a clipboard in a backpack and away we went.
The first tree Little A picked to gather samples from was a Persimmon tree:
Here is what the fruit looks like:
We did a bark rubbing and a leaf rubbing on some paper with the crayons and labeled them. Then we collected a leaf sample, to press when we get home, and put it in the ziplock bag.
The next tree was a Sweetgum tree:
Here is a picture of the gumballs:
We did our bark and leaf rubbings, then collected a leaf sample. All was going well and I felt we could probably study one more tree. But Big T had found something he wanted to show us and we got distracted exploring the creek bed. As we were walking along, Little A slid on a muddy part and stepped on something that cut her foot. It was bleeding quite a bit so I went back to the house to get the car (and a popsicle for Little A - those make everything better, lol) and drove her home.
I doctored her up, prayed for her foot, read her a story, and encouraged her to take a nap. She woke up feeling much better. Tomorrow, we'll probably just pick a few trees in the back yard to study.
Bonus: We found a happy little Sassafras tree, too. But we didn't collect any samples from it (except one leaf for tasting, lol).
REMAKING!!
14 years ago
2 comments:
Sorry about little As foot. Your nature walk sounds fun otherwise. I never thought of doing bark rubbing. What’s the best way to do that? I really like your blog, and not just because my favorite color is green. LOL I’m bookmarking it.
Making a bark rubbing is easy.
Just put a sheet of paper over the bark and rub over it using the side of a crayon. Be sure to label your rubbing with the name of the tree.
Thanks for stopping by!
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