‘Tis the season. Thanks giving has passed and the shopping season has begun. One of the glass goodies I’m making for the season are ornaments…and I’m going to post tutorials for all of you so you too can make ornaments for the holiday season. This one is about glaskolbens. I call this remedial glass blowing but it is glass blowing none the less. These are German made glass cylinders with a tube attached. I found a video on YouTube made by Delphi. Very helpful. You can get the ornaments from them too…now you can blow glass!!
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Arctic Fox Activities for Kids
There are lots of winter animals that are fun to learn about when it’s cold outside. I’ve covered polar bears and penguins before, but this time let’s learn about the arctic fox.
The arctic fox, also known as the snow fox or white fox, lives in the arctic regions of the Northern Hemisphere. They have warm, thick, white fur and fluffy tails that help them keep warm and camouflage them in the snow. Their fur actually changes color through the year, and you can learn about how and why that happens from Discvr.
They are small omnivores, with bodies that grow to about 18-27 inches (45.7 to 68.5 cm) and tails that are about 13.75 inches/35 cm long.
Learn more about them from this post on National Geographic Kids. If you need some arctic fox books for your library, check out the Scholastic book Arctic Foxes or Arctic Fox: Fantastic Animal Facts for Kids.
Add some arctic animals to an arctic sensory bin for extra fun while learning, like this one from Fun Learning for Kids. If you don’t want to do ice, Mama Megan Allysa has a version using Epsom salt as the base, or use fake snow (you could also use cloud dough) like this one from Fun-a-Day.
Learn how to draw an arctic fox from Art Projects for Kids, or use a coloring page like the one from First Palette.
Simple Living Creative Learning has a printable pack about the life cycle of the arctic fox and a printable fact book. This pack of more than 80 pages also includes alphabet cards, letter tracing, three-part cards, math activities, I-spy, do a dot letter matching, writing pages and more. It’s available to download for free in black and white or in color.
The Who Lives in the Arctic spinner craft from Non Toy Gifts helps kids learn about other animals that live where the arctic fox does, including reindeer, polar bears, seals and narwhal.
Fairy Poppins has a nice set of arctic fox writing and labeling activities at Teachers Pay Teachers.
And of course we can’t forget the crafts! Make an adorable arctic fox face using crafts sticks and this tutorial from Made to be a Momma. This printable from Simple Everyday Mom also uses craft sticks as the body of the fox. Or make a handprint arctic fox like this one from Our Kid Things.