Posted on 3 Comments

Handbook of Nature Study Newsletter – June 2014 Edition

HNS Newsletter June 2014 Cover

Handbook of Nature Study Newsletter

June 2014 – Nature Photography

Please read the following explanation outlining how to get this month’s newsletter.

If you don’t receive the separate email with the download link, you probably aren’t subscribed to the blog yet. This will take less than a minute to do if you follow the steps below.

  • You will need to go to the Handbook of Nature Study, look to the top right corner for the box to type in your preferred email address, and then confirm the email that comes to your email inbox.
  • Once you subscribe, you will receive a thank you email from me with the download link.

This month’s newsletter link will be available only during the month of June so be sure to download it before 6/30/14.

Remember! All of the archived and current newsletters are available as part of the Ultimate Naturalist Library…every level!

Contents of this edition of the newsletter include:

  • 4 articles with practical advice and tips for taking better photos of nature, even an article to help you with iPhone photos!
  • Nature Journal Toppers
  • Summer Fun Grid
  • Recommended study links

Please note that Ultimate Naturalist and Journey level members have access to several members only printables each month in addition to the newsletter printables. You will need to log into your account and then go to the “Other Releases” section.

Posted on 1 Comment

Outdoor Hour Challenge Blog Carnival – May 2014 Edition

OHC Blog Carnival

This has been a very busy traveling month for our family. My daughter and I visited four national parks and one national historic site. What a great trip!

While I was gone, you were all busy with your May nature study and some of you have sent in your entries. I invite you to take a look at this month’s entries and encourage each other with your family outdoor time. Thank you to all who sent in your entries!

Our family’s entries from this month’s study (in case you missed one):

May/Spring Garden Observations

Hiking in the Adirondacks (including a snake!)

Be inspired. Be encouraged. Get outdoors!

 

Cats

Carol from Journey and Destination shares their excellent cat study, Nature Study and Outdoor Hour Challenge, and journal with the carnival. You will also enjoy seeing more of their Southern Hemisphere nature study subjects and nature journals.

Alex at Life on a Canadian Island has submitted their Squirrel Visitor in the Garden entry for you to enjoy. This challenge was to find a mammal to study and they featured this one instead of a cat…love the story.

 

Spring Oak Tree
Photo Credit: Janet at Pursuing Joy in the Journey

 

Potpourri

Barbara over at Schoolhouse on the Prairie is sharing their Spring Nature Work with a continuing year-long tree study of their cottonwood tree. They also share their robin’s nest story and some beautiful peonies.

Kerry from Keeping Up With The Kordishs shares their Nature Study in May post with the carnival. I love that they are pressing all the flowers they find in their yard. Take a look!

Janet from Pursuing Joy in the Journey shares their Spring Oak Tree Study with carnival readers. They completed their study with a notebook page..well done! They also have shared their entry, Great Tits Have Moved In! and it includes some amazing photos!

Alex from Life on a Canadian Islands is keeping us updated with their Window Nature Study – May entry. Looks like spring is coming to PEI.

Eva Varga would love for you to view their Florida Nature Study entry. It is always wonderful to include a little nature study as you travel.

Colleen from Sologratiamom has submitted their Wisdom of a Weed entry as well as Planting a Kid’s Garden for you to enjoy.
OHC Blog Carnival

Don’t forget to share your blog entries with the Outdoor Hour Challenge Blog Carnival. All entries done in June are eligible for the next edition. The deadline for entries is 6/29/14 and you can send them directly to me: harmonyfinearts@yahoo.com or submit them at the blog carnival site (link on the sidebar of my blog).

Posted on Leave a comment

Handbook of Nature Study – Gardens Pinterest Board

This month the Handbook of Nature Study newsletter featured lots of information about gardens and gardening with children. Now that the weather is warmer, think about starting some seeds with your children, even if it is just in a pot on your back patio or deck.

I have created a Nature Study – Gardens Pinterest Board and I would love for you to follow along to receive some of the best gardening with kids ideas I can find.
[pin_board url=”http://www.pinterest.com/harmonyfinearts/nature-study-garden/”]
If you would like to receive the newsletter, you will need to subscribe to the Handbook of Nature Study. The subscription box is at the top right corner of the page.

Posted on 1 Comment

Nature Photo of the Week – May 2014 Recap

 

Nature Photo of The Week @handbookofnaturestudyblogspot.com
I had to play catch up this week as I posted the the photos for the month as part of this project. I had tons of photos to choose from this time since we spent a lot of the month of May on the road between California and New York. I hope you enjoy my images!

Please feel free to join us over on the Nature Photo of the Week Pinterest Board.

Petrified Forest National Park

Old-Petrified Forest National Park. This was an interesting place and I learned a lot about how the trees became stone. Plus the park is amazingly beautiful and so different than any of the other national parks

Silver Shores CN May 2014 (31)

Motion: Two of my kids at Silver Sands State Park in Connecticut. Memories of a perfect spring morning walking at the shore of Long Island Sound. So many birds and wildflowers!

Grand Canyon Day (24)

Arch: Bright Angel Trail at the Grand Canyon. One spring afternoon with my daughter…along the trail there are a couple arches to hike through. Amazing memories!

Appalachian Trail Massachusettes May 2014 (5)

Trail:This road trip kindled in me the desire to hike part of the Appalachian Trail. We crossed it several times as we traveled. This particular point was in the Berkshire Mountains of Massachusetts.

I promise to share more about the trip as the weeks go by and in my monthly national park posts.

Posted on 2 Comments

Outdoor Hour Challenge – Spring Ant Study

Ant Nature Study

Outdoor Hour Challenge:

Every day we pass by ants, not noticing them in their busy ways. This week try to slow down and look for some ants in your yard, perhaps under a rock, in a crack in the sidewalk, or on a plant. Find a way to make this fun for your children. Invite them to open their eyes and to look carefully.

Use the ideas in this challenge from the past to get you going: Spring Series #10: Ants.

You can also use the Nature Journal Topper from the May 2014 newsletter to inspire a fun ant related nature study and journal entry.

If you have access to the new printables as part of your membership to this site, there is a new printable sheet with Insect Nature Table and Learning Style ideas for you to print out.

Special Activity:

Make a model of an ant out of clay or Sculpey. Make sure to depict the three body parts of the ant: head, thorax, and abdomen. There is a great video to show you how to do this with clay and wire.

How to Build a Model of an Ant on YouTube.com

Getting Started Suggestion:

If you already own the Getting Started ebook, complete Outdoor Hour Challenge #3.  Use the suggestions in this challenge to make some ant observations and then follow up with a drawing activity for your nature journal. Here is a link to help with drawing an ant: How To Draw an Ant-Step by Step.

Blog Logo 1

OHC Blog Carnival

You are welcome to submit any of you blog Outdoor Hour Challenge blog entries to the Outdoor Hour Challenge Blog Carnival. Entries for the current month are due on 5/30/14.

 

Posted on 4 Comments

Hiking in the Adirondack Mountains- Mount Arab

Mount-Arab-Adirondacks-May-2014

What a glorious thing to explore a new state, a new trail, and then to top it off…a NEW to me flower.

Our recent trip to New York (via a road trip across the complete United States), gave us an opportunity to take several new hikes in the Adirondack Mountains of New York. My daughter picked the hike to Mount Arab out of the guide book and it was a winner! Just outside of Tupper Lake, NY, this trail is a short hike up the mountain and through a heavily wooded forest. Since it is early spring, the trees were just starting to get their new leaves and there were wildflowers just starting to bloom alongside the trail.

purple trilium

I created a list of wildflowers to look for during our trip, flowers we don’t have in California but are listed in the Handbook of Nature Study. I had a east coast wildflower field guide with me too for reference since most of the flowers are new to me.  We actually spotted this variety of trillium (Purple Trillium) right at the beginning of the hike…so pretty and colorful in the brown woodsy floor. (Outdoor Hour Challenge for this flower in the future.)

Trout Lily

Then we saw lots and lots of Trout Lilies! This is another one on my list of wildflowers to study and I will now be able to create an Outdoor Hour Challenge for this flower. The abundance of these lilies really created a special atmosphere as we hiked up the mountain.

Mount Arab Adirondacks May 2014 (34)

I read in a guide book before we left that May is “mud season” in the Adirondacks. There were sections of this trail that turned out to be quite muddy but the trail makers had made it easier by adding these board walks to span the muddier parts. The mud created spots for insects to gather and we tried not to stop and get eaten by bugs.

Mount Arab Adirondacks May 2014 (24)

The trail at the top opens up where there are large rock slabs and an incredible view. The weather had been threatening to rain in the morning but we enjoyed sunny skies when we reached the top.

Mount Arab Adirondacks May 2014 (25

Here is the fire tower at the top of Mount Arab. The wind was blowing really hard which felt like air conditioning after a hot hike up. I am not great with heights but my kids and husband were eager to climb up the stairs and check out the view from the top.

Mount Arab New York Adirondacks May 2014 (7)

I was a little sunburned…that’s the trouble with fair and freckled skin. I had on sunblock…really. I climbed about half way up the tower and the wind was whipping through up there. I was good with the view from there, I know my limits.

Mount Arab Adirondacks May 2014 (35)

On the way back down the trail, we spied several toads. The above image is a “Where’s Waldo?” sort of photo where the toad is very well camouflaged by the leaves on the forest floor.

Mount Arab Adirondacks May 2014 (39)

We also saw a snake! He was as curious about us as we were about him.

Mount Arab Adirondacks May 2014 (10)

What a great hike! We will remember this one for its trilliums, lilies, toads, snake, and view from the top. I will also try to remember the variety of bird song we heard as we hiked along as a family.

This hike will count toward my Nature Study Goals for 2014…a new hike!

 

Posted on 3 Comments

May Garden Observations: Drought Year

California Poppies

Your Garden in All Four Seasons – taking a look at our spring garden

My garden is coming to life during the month of May. We had an unusual winter so many of the plants didn’t do well without our normal winter rains. Our dogwood barely bloomed this year with perhaps only five or six flowers compared to dozens in past years. Some of our lavender plants did not survive either…perhaps the week of snow and freezing temperatures with the snow left on top made the death blow but no matter the reason, we will be digging them up and replacing them next year.

Come along on a quick trip around my spring garden…welcome to all who are popping in from the Tuesday Garden Party.

We are currently experiencing drought conditions in our part of California and we are under mandatory watering restrictions. This means I will not be planting my traditional garden but trying to keep our drought resistant plants and native plants going with the water we have available. The weird winter didn’t seem to effect the California Poppies at all and we have a beautiful crop of flowers right now in our front yard.

Late April Garden 2014 (16)

The Spanish Lavender did much better than the English Lavender over the winter and the bees are back in full force. There are lots of spittle bugs and border bugs too.

Garden may 19 2014 (13)

We have not put much time into the garden yet and it shows. There are lots and lots of weeds all around the garden boxes. The interesting thing is how many oregano, thyme, and sunflower plants there are growing outside the boxes! We also have a pile of wood left from the walnut tree we cut down that needs to be stacked neatly. I am missing my strong teenage boys who usually take care of tasks like this for me.

Sunflower

This is a monster size sunflower growing where the walnut tree was before we cut it down. I think I will leave it to grow in this spot and let the birds enjoy the seeds this summer. I can hand water it if I need to since there are not drips over on this side of the yard.

sunflower in a pot

There are sunflowers growing in several of my deck planters as well. In the past, these volunteer plants seem to be the most hearty of plants and they have great flowers so I will leave it growing here as well.

Hedge Bindweed

The Hedge Bindweed is so pretty right now as it grows under the birdfeeder and around the old pine tree stump. There is a lesson in the Handbook of Nature Study for this flower if you have it in your yard too.

Hedge Bindweed flowers

There are so pretty and remind me of morning glories. My little patch is growing in a spot that I can let it wander without too much trouble.

Mullein

There is lots of mullein around my yard…I love to watch the flower stalks grow and the leaves are so pretty and soft.

Strawberries

We have quite a crop of strawberries already which is a little early for our “June” berries. I don’t think they will do well with our restrictive watering rules this summer. I may need to pull a couple of plants out, put them in a pot, and hope that I can keep them going during this drought year.

Mystery Flower

I found this mystery flower growing among the mullein and I am not sure what it is yet. I know that last year I planted a mix of seeds on this side of the yard but none of them grew. I am wondering if this is from a seed that I planted last year and it is just now growing. I will keep an eye on it.

Disneyland Rose

The Disneyland Rose is gorgeous right now, the whole plant full of blooms. I am filling vases full for the kitchen table and they just keep coming.

Bleeding Hearts

The shady part of the yard is filled with Bleeding Hearts…such a fun flower that I love to see when I look out the window. I appreciate that this plant comes back year after year with no fussing from me. I just get to enjoy it.

Jerusalem Sage

The Jerusalem Sage is an amazing grower in our garden. It is thankfully a drought tolerant plant and I don’t have to worry about the amount of water it will get this summer. It just keeps on blooming.

Star Jasmine

The Star Jasmine is filling the air with its sweet perfume. This is another plant that will take the heat and very low amounts of water.

Kona Dog

Well, there is a look at our spring garden. I would love to get out and plant some summer veggies but it looks like that is not going to happen this year. Instead of being disappointed, I will focus on the plants and flowers I do have and be satisfied.
http://www.anoregoncottage.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/jtgpfinal.png

Posted on 2 Comments

Outdoor Hour Challenge – Spring Earthworm Study

Outdoor Hour Challenge:

Spring Earthworm Study

We are going to be outside this week looking for earthworms. The Handbook of Nature Study suggests going out at night with a flashlight to look for worms but we find them just digging around in our garden boxes. Ask your children if they know where there are any earthworms.

Spring Earthworm Study – Make sure to find all the suggestions for worm observations in this entry.

Earthworm Nature Journal Topper – Find a nature journal prompt in the May Newsletter that will help you record your earthworm observations.

Special Activity:

If you have a child who is super into worms and they would like to see a YouTube video of an earthworm dissection, here is a link: Earthworm Dissection.

Getting Started Suggestion:

If you already own the Getting Started ebook, complete Outdoor Hour Challenge #3.  Take some time this week to use the suggestions in this challenge to focus on making a drawing in your nature journal. It can feature your earthworm study or anything else your child finds during your outdoor time that interests them. 

Handbook of Nature Study Ultimate Naturalist Library

 

Posted on 5 Comments

Your Garden in All Four Seasons

 

Seasonal Garden Notes Ideas from the newsletter @naturestudyhomeschool.com

“Nature study should be a matter of observation on the part of the pupils. The teacher’s part is to indicate points for observation and not to tell what is to be seen.”

~Anna Botsford Comstock in Suggestions for Nature Study Work

Our yards and gardens tell an ever-changing story from season to season. It is a story of birth, life, and then death, leading to rebirth the next year. It is a intertwining story of plants, insects, birds, animals, and our family too.

It is a delight to learn the story that unfolds as we work from spring and on into summer. Take a few minutes this week to make those important observations together as a family, learning the story of your garden.

I have created a follow-up notebook page for children to use if they desire. You will find it in this month’s Handbook of Nature Study newsletter which is free to subscribers. It is also found in the Ultimate Naturalist’s Library and in the Journey level of membership here on the Handbook of Nature Study (Scroll down on your membership page to the Printables section.)

 

Handbook of Nature Study Ultimate Naturalist Library

Posted on Leave a comment

Outdoor Hour Challenge – Spring Snake Study

Outdoor Hour Challenge:

This may be a challenging study for many of you but from my experience I can tell you that you may be surprised when an opportunity to view a snake up close comes along. In any account, you can use this snake nature study to prepare for a future snake sighting.

  • Spring Snake Study using the Outdoor Hour Challenge: Use the ideas in this challenge to learn more about your local snake population. In my area we only have a few kinds of snakes so we listed them in our nature journals as a reference. This may give you a way to complete this study without actually seeing a snake.
  • April 2013 Newsletter – If you have access to this newsletter, there are some ideas and printables for you to use in your snake nature study, including a Reptiles and Amphibians nature study grid.

Special Activity: Field Trip-Amphibians and Reptiles

Use this free printable activity while on a field trip to a place in your local area that has reptiles and/or amphibians. This could be a zoo, pet store, nature center, or local park. Instructions are included on the bottom to create a mini-book to complete and then to attach in your nature journal.
Free Printable Amphibian and Reptile Field Trip Mini-Book

If you already own the Getting Started ebook, complete Outdoor Hour Challenge #2. Make sure to take your 10-15 minute outdoor excursion to spend some time outdoors this week. After you walk, help your child with finding words to describe their experience, whether they observed a snake or not. Use the accompanying notebook page to record your outdoor time.

Note: You can find the Getting Started ebook in all levels of membership here at the Handbook of Nature Study.

Handbook of Nature Study Ultimate Naturalist Library