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Nature Activities for Kids

Invite Wildlife to Your Yard – Wildflowers

  • by Editorial Staff

It’s easy to attract wildlife to your yard.  In return you will enjoy many hours of entertainment and your children will enjoy the process.  This week I am going to focus on wildflowers and why they are good for your kids, your backyard and wildlife!

Often ornamental flowers are chosen in lieu of wildflowers because they are more showy, bloom for longer periods and there are many more varieties and colors available.  However, in many cases they require intense care which includes chemical fertilizers, pesticides, constant watering and time.  Natives are a nice choice because they require little care once they take root and are beneficial to wildlife.  An  added benefit it that you avoid adding unneeded chemicals into the ground, which pose a danger to your family, your pets, and wildlife.  Additionally, some natives are deer proof, which means you won’t have to battle them eating your buds anymore.  You can check with your state’s cooperative extension service to obtain a list of recommended plants.


Early spring is a good time to plant wildflowers.  You can also start them inside as early as January.  Here is a great link to help you get started.

Including your kids in the process will be great fun for them and you and will provide a nice learning experience. The National Gardening Association has an entire website dedicated to the topic called Kidsgardening.org and instructions on how to plant a wildflower garden. The instructions are geared to teachers in a classroom setting, but they can be easily adapted to your needs.

Once your garden grows and the flowers bloom, you will notice many creature taking advantage of them.  Butterflies, honey bees, hummingbirds, and moths will be the most obvious.  And you don’t have to just stick to planting native flowers.  There are many beautiful shrubs and trees that support a healthy backyard habitat.  Because you are providing food, cover, nesting places and an overall healthier environment, you and your family will be rewarded when you spy rabbits, frogs, toads, newts, salamanders, bats and more in your yard.

PS – You may wonder why  dandelions were chosen for featured photo in a story about wildflowers.  Well, poor dandelions have a bad rap.  They are actually wildflowers not weeds and many species of butterflies use them to lay eggs.  So before you yank them out or mow them down, consider saving a section of them in your yard.

Birds

Our Winter Friends

  • by MCC

Today is a good day to fill the bird feeder. It is cold and the birds will most certainly be looking for an easy meal since they will be using more of their energy to stay warm. Feeding the birds is a great way to reconnect your children with nature. It allows them to become instant naturalists because it is so easy to observe birds and discuss their behavior. You can help your children identify the birds that appear at your feeder.

Our birds flew South for the winter months ago. Lately, we have seen Blue Jays, Chickadees, Nuthatches, little Downy Woodpeckers, and Tufted Titmice visiting the feeder. The Northern Juncos arrived sometime last week. They must be happy to be in the New England weather. To them, this is like being on vacation in paradise. What we think of as cold and wintry they think is balmy and warm. Juncos travel all the way from the northern reaches of Canada in mid-fall and stay until returning in the spring.

A family of turkeys visits the feeder every couple of days. There are 13 members in this family. One of the jakes tried to land on the feeder and almost knocked the entire thing to the ground before he decided he was too big to perch on it and eat. Luckily for everyone on the ground because they received a free meal.

Once a child is able to identify several birds, she will enjoy looking for them each day. My daughter is eager to head downstairs each morning to see what birds she will find. The fact that she provided the food they are eating makes her feel important and helps build her confidence.

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American Horticultural Society Attracting wildlife Backyard exploration Bird feeding Birding with kids Campfire Camping Crafts Critter cams Deer Detritus cycle Earth Day Ecology Fall Fear of the dark Fire Fishing Gardening Hiking Migration National Audubon Society National Park Service Natural Resource Conservation Service Nature art Night camping Night critters Picnic Pressing flowers Punxsutawney Phil Rivers Safety Smokey Bear Snow Spring Fever Spring flowers Stargazing Streams Summer vacation Trees Vegetable gardening Walk Walks Wildlife viewing Wildlife watching Winter
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