Showing posts with label DIY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DIY. Show all posts

Friday, February 1, 2013

Cloud in a Bottle

The little voyagers are learning about clouds as part of their DIY Meteorologist badge.

We tried a "cloud in a bottle" experiment to learn about cloud formation last week, but we weren't happy with the outcome:


Lighting a stick on fire to create smoke...


When the stick didn't work, we tried paper. 
Squeezing the bottle, then releasing to get smoke sucked down inside...


And a little bit of a cloud. We could actually see it better than it appears in this photo, 
but I was still a bit disappointed, and I think the little voyagers were, too.

If I can find some matches, we might try another version of this experiment.
In the meantime, how about some cloud poetry?

This first poem is a hint for our art project for today. 
Does it remind you of It Looked Like Spilt Milk?
This poem by William Wordsworth is short, but lovely.
 






This final cloud poem is by Percy Bysshe Shelley. 
Long, but nice!


Friday, January 25, 2013

DIY Friday: Wind Engineer Project #3

Up, Up and Away!

We couldn't possibly pass up the opportunity to make kites -- because Spiderman absolutely loves kites!


NASA has a super easy version of our kite. Theirs in a bit smaller and uses straws, rather than wood sticks/dowels/skewers, like the ones we made. Get the NASA instructions HERE.

The Experimental Aviation Association has their own instructions for a sled kite. We more or less followed their instructions, with minor materials substitutions. Not only do they have great Sled Kite instructions, they also have a bunch of other cool activities to try! See for yourself HERE.


Here is one of the three kites we made; almost ready to go -- just waiting on the tails.

And here is Spiderman's kite - flying high!
*      *      *
These sled kites are awesome, because they are easy to make -- and easy to fly.

The little voyagers give them six thumbs up!



Friday, January 18, 2013

DIY Friday: Texas Tornado!


Project #3 for our DIY Meteorologist badge was to make a TORNADO! I decided to personalize our tornado project to really make it hit home with the little voyagers. As the family historian, I had already researched Sherman's Black Friday, the deadly cyclone (tornado) that killed the little voyagers' great-great-great-great grandparents back in 1896. 


First, we located Sherman, Texas on our little United States map. The big map is a blown up aerial map of Sherman, Texas, drawn in 1891, five years before the tornado.


I showed the little voyagers a family photo of the surviving daughter, their ggg-grandma, and her family. This grandma happens to have the same given name as their mommy.



Next I gave them a brief version of the account in the book linked above, including a few gory details to emphasize the dangerous powers of tornadoes...


Then we looked at some pictures of the wreckage left by the tornado.


We then located the street the grandparents lived on and a few landmarks mentioned in the book to help us re-trace the approximate path of the tornado through town.


Next, Rosetta marked the wind directions,just prior to the tornado according to witness accounts in the book. (The book states a weather vane on a Presbyterian church showed the wind blowing one direction, and across town at the Oil mills, it was blowing in the opposite direction.)


Finally, we watched a couple of real tornado videos to get an authentic sense of how powerful the winds can be.


Then it was time to build our own tornado!

Materials Needed:

two plastic bottles - 1 or 2 liter (the openings must match up exactly)
water
duct tape
food coloring (optional)
glitter (optional - represents debris)  


Fill one bottle about 3/4 full, then add a few drops of food coloring, if desired.


Then add your glitzy debris, like Saralina is doing here.


Invert the empty bottle, line up the mouths, exactly and tightly tape them together with duct tape. Make sure this is very secure; you don't want "blue" water spilling out and staining your surroundings!


Time to create a tornado! 
Flip the bottles and give a swirl.


See the tornado?


The little voyagers really enjoyed this activity, and they each got several chances to swirl it themselves. There is a bit of a knack to getting a "tornado swirl" going, so it takes a little practice.

 
But as you can see, mama voyager's got it mastered!

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Things are Heating Up!

A big part of "WEATHER" is the temperature, and so, our little voyagers are learning to read a thermometer and record their findings. They are trying to do it everyday, morning and afternoon, and, have been mostly successful.

This was project #2 for the DIY Meteorologist badge:

To spark interest, and introduce the "temperature" concept, we started off with our own version of  this (DIY recommended) thermometer project from Instructables:


We didn't have any film cannisters, but these protein scoopers were a similar size, and we had some Zero Water lids that were a tight fight, so... this is what we used:


Materials Needed:
small plastic containers with tight fitting lids
thin straws (we used the stir straws for coffee)
food color
modeling clay or hot glue gun for sealing
water


First, drill a hole in the center of lid. This is where you will stick the straw.


Now, insert the straw...


See - Like this!


Next, add water...


Add food color...


And more water -- We added a little water, the dye, then more water, 
so we wouldn't have to stir it.


Put the lid on -- Make sure the straw is way down in the container, but not touching the bottom. Then use the modeling clay or hot glue to create a good seal around the straw.


We first tried using our hands to warm the "thermometers," but that didn't do anything! We tried cold water -- uneventful. But the hot water worked! Especially in the case of Spiderman's blue thermometer! 

His worked the best out of the three --maybe because he just had to add "a little extra" dye, which made the rising water easier  to see in the straw. He also pushed his straw down in a little further than the girls, and that might have helped, too! So much for following the adult's directions, and good thing he didn't, or we would have been sorely disappointed.

Although this was a fun project, if I were to do it again, I would probably try a different homemade thermometer. This one from EnergyQuest is VERY similar, but looks like it would have more potential for success:
I think using a bigger bottle would make it easier to see the temperature change. Has anyone made this type of thermometer before? How did it work?







Tuesday, January 8, 2013

DIY WIND Badge Project #1: Pinwheels

SONG FOR MORNING
 
Free to the wind like a swallow,
Free to the wind like a bird,
Over clouds, over fields flying always,
Never resting from the blue air,
Over brooks curled like ringlets,
Over apple trees in flower,
That is where I would be;
Free to the wind, free!

Title: Shoes of the Wind: a Book of Poems
Author: Hilda Conkling
Publisher: Frederick A. Stokes Company, 1922
Page 106

*     *     *     *     * 
We introduced the little voyagers to the topic of wind by reading some of the books mentioned in the previous post. Then, it was off to make our pinwheels!

The basic template for the pinwheel can be found in this FREE Weather Unit from Living Life Intentionally:

We used the template from the Weather Unit linked above as an outline, but decided to use some scrapbook paper since it was of a heavier stock -- Plus, it had the advantage of already having a pattern on one side for contrast.


What You Need:
pinwheel template (or guesstimate and make your own)
cardstock, if desired
pencil with eraser
tack or pin
extra eraser if using a long pin (not shown)
tape (not shown)
scissors
colored pencils or markers

Color pinwheel template...

NOTE: Oil pastels, like the one being used here, are not recommend. We had a tough time getting the tape to stick when we were assembling the pinwheels.


Cut on the diagonal lines...


Pull in two of the marked tips (see template) and tape, then repeat with the other two tips...

Stick the pin or tack through the middle, then into the pencil eraser. That is it!


NOTE: We first tried the tacks pictured in our materials, but they didn't want to stay in the eraser during play, so we switched them out for sewing pins, which were LONG. This is where the extra eraser comes in....We cut up an old eraser and stuck it on the back end where our pins were sticking out. This was a great solution, and held up well to outside play.  See for yourself!



When the pinwheels were first assembled, the little voyagers tried blowing on them and had a hard time getting their wind direction just right, but the minute they walked out the door, nature took over and saved them a ton of work -- and breath!

*     *     *

Do you like the poem? Need printing practice for your child? Feel free to use these:


These worksheets were created using the ESL Writing Wizard.