Posts filed under ‘Recycle’

Chipper Recycle Craft: Paper Plate Frog


This week, Chipper created this fun paper plate frog! Not only can this craft be made from materials lying around the house, this craft also incorporates a fun science lesson!

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Here’s what you need: 

-kid-friendly scissors

-tape or glue (Chipper used double-sided tape!)

-three pieces of construction paper (one red, one green, one white)

-a green and black marker

-a paper plate

First, color the back of the paper plate green with a marker. (You can use a crayon, paint, or any other medium as well.)

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Fold the paper plate in half. Draw and cut out four frog feet from green construction paper. Draw and cut out a tongue shape from red construction paper. Draw and cut out eyes from white paper. Attach to folded plate with tape or glue like so:

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And voila! Here is a fun and cute paper plate frog.

Along with this craft, teach your child about frogs! Here are some fun frog facts:

-Frogs hibernate in the winter

-Instead of drinking water through their mouths, frogs absorb water through their skin!

-A group of frogs is called an “army”!

-Frogs can be found on every continent except for Antarctica

Also, you can do frog-jumps around the house/park/backyard to reiterate the importance of exercise to your little one! Here’s a fun video on various animal exercises:

Let’s Go Chipper for Frogs!

May 19, 2013 at 1:00 pm Leave a comment

Chipper Recycle Craft + Snack: Garden Lady Bug


Spring is in full throttle and summer is right around the corner! Now is the perfect time to get outdoors and explore your gardens! Finding little creepy crawlies with your little ones is not only a fun exercise, it instill an inherent curiosity in your child. That curiosity will push them to explore and learn about not only the great outdoors, but all aspects of the world. Education should inspire them to find out more, not stifle their natural wonder.

Let's go Chipper | Lady Bug Snack and Recipe for kids

Take your little one(s) on a nature walk, strolling slowly in your back yard or community garden. Take 5 minutes in each area, observing things carefully, to see what you can find!  Keep a look out for lovely little ladybugs. Here are 10 fun facts about ladybugs to teach your kiddos:

Let's go Chipper | Lady Bug Snack and Recipe for kids

  1. Ladybugs are also called Lady beetles or Ladybirds.
  2. The male ladybug is usually smaller than the female.
  3. A ladybug beats its wings 85 times a second when it flies.
  4. The spots on a ladybug fade, as the ladybug gets older.
  5. In many countries, ladybugs are considered to be good luck.
  6. Aphids are a ladybug’s favorite food, making them good for your garden.
  7. There are over 5000 different kinds of ladybugs worldwide.
  8. A female ladybug will lay more than 1000 eggs in her lifetime.
  9.  Ladybugs chew from side to side and not up and down like people do.
  10. Ladybugs are all around us! Ladybugs can be found in trees, shrubs, fields, beaches, and even houses!

LADYBUG CRAFT

What you Need:Let's go Chipper | Lady Bug Snack and Recipe for kids

  • Egg carton or round cardboard piece
  • black and red markers, paint or crayons
  • scissors or whole puncher
  • Pipe cleaners
  • Optional: googly eyes

Instructions:

  • Separate one cup from an egg carton or use any round cardboard pieces you have on hand.
  • Using markers or  paint to color the egg carton cup red. Then, using black paint/markers, color in the head, and make spots on the body.
  • Using the point of a scissors or a hole puncher, an adult should make 6 small holes (3 on each side) at the base of the cup (these will be for the legs. Make 2 small holes (for antennae) where the top of the head will be.
  • Insert a black pipe cleaner into each a side hole and out the other side for the legs. Use half a pipe cleaner for the antennae.
  • Glue on googly eyes or paint on white eyes.
  • Take your ladybug into the garden and try to spot some real ones!

Let's go Chipper | Lady Bug Snack and Recipe for kids

LADYBUG SNACK

This Simple Recipe is Tasty and Cute!

Let's go Chipper | Lady Bug Snack and Recipe for kids

Ingredients:
1-small red apple
2tsp.- strawberry cream cheese (low-fat)
1/8 cup- raisins or dried cranberries
1 or 2-red or black seedless grapes

Optional: lettuce leaves for garnish if desired.

Alternatives: peanut or almond butter instead of cream cheese. Round cereal instead of raisins, a small pinch of cinnamon. Use your imagination and what you have on hand in the kitchen.

Directions:
Wash the apples and lettuce. Arrange a few lettuce leaves on each plate. Cut apples in half from stem to bottom. Remove seeds. Lay each half of apple cut side down on
cutting board and cut in half from stem to bottom. With skin side up place both halves of apple on top of lettuce. Put a small amount of cream cheese in-between the apple
halves to adhere the apple back together (enough to have a small amount squish out the top). Stick raisins to cream cheese down the middle of apple, then use a small dab of cream cheese to adhere the raisins (see picture below) on each wing. Cut a grape in half and use cream cheese to stick it to one end of your ladybug apple for the head.

This is a perfect recipe for adults and kids to make together. It’s fun, easy, cute, and so tasty. And did Chipper mention it’s healthy too? “Healthy before sweet, can’t be beat!”

May 16, 2013 at 8:30 pm Leave a comment

Chipper Craft & Snack: Celery-printed flowers!


Happy Sunday! This week, Chipper snacked on and played with one of his favorite nutritious foods, celery! Normally, Chipper picks up some celery every week at the super market. Did you know that celery provides anti-inflammatory health benefits? Or that the crunchy vegetable contains antioxidants such as vitamin C and flavonoids that help protect us from unwanted oxygen damage to our cells, organs, and blood vessels? It does!

This week, Chipper created flower prints from celery. It is an easy craft that can be created with materials that are lying around at home. All you need is: celery, a knife, paint, and a piece of paper! Here’s how:

First, take your bunch of celery and cut off the bottom.

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Then, dip the bottom portion of the celery stalk in to paint and stamp away! Chipper used red paint.

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The celery stalk ends up creating these fun, flower shaped objects.

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Here’s Chipper‘s end product.

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Chipper cut up the rest of the celery stalk and enjoyed it with some peanut butter.

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According to an article by Harvard Health Publications, peanut butter has fiber, vitamins, and mineras, among other nutrients. Unsalted peanut butter contains a terrific potassium-to-sodium ratio, which “counters the harmful cardiovascular effects of sodium surplus….even salted peanut butter still has about twice as much potassium as sodium.” In addition, many research studies have concluded that people who “regularly include nuts or peanut butter in their diets are less likely to develop heart disease or type 2 diabetes than those who rarely eat nuts.”

With this craft and snack, teach your child the importance of being creative and snacking right all at the same time!

Let’s Go Chipper for creativity and healthy snacking!

April 28, 2013 at 12:00 pm Leave a comment

Chipper Recycle Craft: Arbor Day Tree


Happy Arbor Day! Arbor Day is a national holiday that encourages people to care for, appreciate, and plant trees. Each state tends to celebrate Arbor Day on its own day, the most common date for Arbor day is the last Friday of April. Proposed by a journalist by the name of J. Sterling Morton, the first Arbor day was celebrated in Nebraska, 1872. Other countries besides the United States celebrate environmentalism and tree-planting, too:

Japan – Greening Week

Isreal – The New Years Day of Trees

Korea – The Tree Loving Week

Yugoslavia – The Reforestation Week

Iceland – The Students’ Afforestation Day

India – The National Festival of Tree Planting

In celebration of Arbor Day, Chipper made a coffee sleeve tree recycle-craft this week! This craft is simple, eco-friendly, and even incorporates the theme of trees for Arbor Day!

Here’s what you need:

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First, cut the coffee sleeves open and cut pieces to create a trunk. Cut the green coffee sleeves open and cut leaf shapes. If you don’t have green coffee sleeves, just use marker, paint, or crayon to color your coffee sleeves green!

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Then, place glue (or tape!) down the center of your piece of construction paper like so:

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Place the pieces down like so:

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And there you have it–a fun and simple tree craft for Arbor Day! After creating this craft, spend some time with your little one discussing trees. Did you know that trees help keep our soil healthy by minimizing soil erosion? Or  that there are over 23,000 kinds of trees on Earth? Click here to read and learn more about trees!

Let’s Go Chipper for Arbor Day!

(Chipper got the idea for this craft from this blog.)

April 21, 2013 at 7:00 pm Leave a comment

Chipper Craft: Celebrate Earth Day


With Earth Day inching closer, now’s a great time to start thinking about good ol’ Mother Earth. Held annually on April 22, Earth Day is a world-wide support day for environmental protection. Earth Day began in 1969 when John McConnell, a peace activist, proposed a day to celebrate the environment and Earth’s beauty. The reason why Earth Day is on April 22 is because of the abundant amount of youth activism in the 1960s: April 22 is a likely day for college students to be available because it falls between Spring Break and Final Exams. Interesting, right?

In celebration of the upcoming Earth Day, Chipper made an Earth Day craft this week! Not only is this craft simple, it will teach your little one about the importance of loving our planet.

Here’s what you’ll need:

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Firstly, draw a circle on blue construction paper and cut it out. This will be the water of planet Earth.

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Secondly, cut out arbitrary land-like shapes out of green construction paper and glue (or tape) them onto the blue circle. Your planet Earth is starting to take shape!

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Then, place your hands into a heart like shape like so. Trace your hands and cut them out.

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It will end up looking like this:

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Using glue or tape, adhere your hands onto your already-made Earth. Voila! This craft symbolizes the importance of using your hands in activity to love on the environment around us.

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Optional: Using red marker, draw a heart in the middle like so. This could further solidify the link between using hands to actively take care of Mother Earth.

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Let’s Go Chipper for Earth Day!

April 14, 2013 at 10:30 am Leave a comment

Chipper Craft: Recycled Spring Blooms


Spring is here at last! What better way to celebrate than by spending some time with your little one’s making a craft? Crafts are not only great fun, they make pretty, sentimental decorations for around the house or classroom and they help develop your little one’s mobile skills, creativity, and coordination. Try making some Spring Blooms using recycled toilet paper rolls this season. This craft will teach your kids how easy (and pretty!) reusing trash can be.

Kids Gardening

Learn more about Spring with your little one’s as you make the craft and talk about the importance of recycling. Make your own garden this season! Planting the seed, watching them grow, and seeing them bloom is a valuable experience for children of any age. It’s also another great way for you to connect and spend time with each other. Children are natural gardeners: They’re curious, like to learn by doing, and love to play in the dirt. Working in a garden, a child can experience the satisfaction that comes from caring for something over time, while observing the cycle of life firsthand. Gardening gives children a chance to learn an important life skill, one that is overlooked in standard school curriculums. Gardening is also a great way to teach environmental awareness by exploring the workings of nature.

What You’ll Need:

Girl cutting a paper roll

  • Empty toilet-paper rolls
  • Ruler
  • Pencil
  • Kid-friendly scissors
  • Bamboo skewers or stick with a pointy end for stem (pencils work great!)
  • Paint or Markers
  • Paintbrush if using paint
  • Tissue paper or recycled paper colored and crumpled
  • Green cardstock or construction paper (Alternatively, you can use recycled cardboard or paper and color it with markers or paint)

Instructions:

Finished flower craft made from recycled materials
  1. Draw a ring 2 inches from edge of tube. Repeat on other end. Then, from each 2-inch ring, draw cut lines every 1/2 inch. Snip along each line to make petals.
  2. Fold petals back to create flower. Paint flower and bamboo skewers; let dry. Cut out green leaves and glue to skewers.
  3. Push the skewer through one end of the flower’s center until it just touches the other end. Crumple an 8-inch square of tissue paper and place in the center.

Let’s Go Chipper this Spring!

March 21, 2013 at 1:27 pm Leave a comment

Chipper Recycle Crafts: DIY Plastic Bag Jellyfish


Jellyfishes are one of Chipper’s favorite animals because they are just so fascinating: they lack heads, hearts, and brains, they existed before dinosaurs, and they never stop growing! These amazing animals are 95% water and can even sting when they’re dead! There are around 1000 to 1500 different types of jellyfish worldwide, including one of the top 10 deadliest animals on earth, the Australian Box Jellyfish. Learn more about these awesome sea creatures!

Try making this easy and fun jellyfish craft with your kids this weekend. It can be made from materials you have lying around at home– all you need is a plastic bag, some safety scissors, string, and an empty see-through bottle. It is also a fun way to remind your little one that the environment needs to be kept clean to sustain these amazing little creatures! Plastic bags are a dangerous pollutant to our oceans and teaching our younger generations to utilize reusable bags more often is an invaluable lesson. Learn more about how plastic bags harm our environment and how to avoid using them here.

First, take a plastic bag and cut out a small square. Chipper’s was the size of a CD case. Any color plastic bag will do!

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Secondly, pinch the middle of the plastic bag square so that it forms a head.  Use string to tie off the bag to secure the head.

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Using scissors, carefully cut the bottom of the bag into thin strips–these are the jellyfish’s tentacles!

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Fill a empty bottle with water (Chipper used an empty milk jug). Stuff your jellyfish into the bottle, cap the bottle, and shake to watch your jellyfish in action!

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Along with this craft, a fun and active activity to engage your little one would be to act like jellyfish around the house. “Sting” each other and play a game of tag!

Let’s Go Chipper for Jelly Fish this weekend with a wiggle and a giggle!

March 5, 2013 at 1:10 pm 2 comments

Chipper Recycle Crafts: DIY Paper Flowers


Recycle crafts are great for the environment, low-budget, and really teach kids how to maximize the resources around them into a creative utility. With spring right around the corner, these bright paper flowers are the perfect craft to refresh a classroom or any kind of room space.

What you'll need for a DIY flower

How to make a Paper Flower:

1. Color in the cardboard packaging fillers in with your favorite color marker–be sure to color both sides! These pieces of cardboard are from the packaging material between some bowls that were recently purchased. If you don’t have these flower-looking pieces of cardboard lying around, use some scrap cardboard and cut out a similar shape! Don’t have cardboard? Local grocery stores will often give them out for free.

Flower Recycle Craft

2. Draw and cut out a small circle out of black construction paper. Chipper used a small bowl to draw a perfect circle. Similarly draw and cut out a bigger circle out of yellow construction paper. Chipper used a larger paper plate to measure out the diameter.

ImageMake you own flower

4.  With scissors, 1″ cut strips around the perimeter of the black ovule at every 1/4″ or so.  Do the same with the yellow stamen, about 2″ strips.

learning the parts of a flower craft

5. Using a thin marker, pencil or chopstick, curl the strips on both the black and yellow circles.

making a recycled flower

6. Using glue or tape (Chipper used glue), assemble all the pieces together. The order is as follows, from bottom to top: two cardboard packaging fillers, the yellow stamen, and the black ovule.

How to make a flower DIY

7. Create leaves by folding green construction paper in half and drawing a leaf shape. Cut them out and glue or tape them to the back of the assembled flower!

Flower craft

Once your little one has finished his/her floral creation, have your kids name the flower parts and functions of the parts they assembled! (Leaves, petals, stamen, ovule).  By interacting with the flower in a hands-on way, kids will remember and recall the information more easily.

Parts of a Flower

February 26, 2013 at 12:47 pm Leave a comment

Learn about Metamorphosis: Chipper Caterpillar and Butterfly Crafts


Teaching our younger generations about natural processes is not just about them passing science class. It gives them a deeper understanding of the world and all it’s critters.  Metamorphosis is a process some animals go through to become adults! It is a series of physical changes. Metamorphosis is especially common in insects. Genes and chemicals called hormones control the process. The wonder of metamorphosis

Teach your little one’s about this natural process with a hands-on craft project! First make a recycled caterpillar craft and talk about how the caterpillar must eat lots of leaves before making his cocoon. Explain that this biological transformation into an adult happens with in the pupal casing spun of silk.

Caterpillar Craft - Let's Go Chipper

WHAT YOU’LL NEED:

Craft Supplies

-Glue or Tape

-Constructions Paper

-Scissors

-Hole Pincher

-Pipe Cleaners or any other material to make antennas

-Google eyes or a marker/pen to make the face and eyes

-Toilet Paper Roll (for Butterfly body)

HOW TO MAKE A CATERPILLAR:

First, cut two inch-thick strips of paper in two different colors (or the same color, it’s up to you!).

Caterpillar Craft - Let's Go Chipper

Then, either tape or glue the two strips of paper together at a right angle. Caterpillar Craft - Let's Go Chipper

Now, just fold one strip of paper over the other, going from color to color, until your reach the ends of the paper! Then secure with glue or tape.

Caterpillar Craft - Let's Go ChipperCaterpillar_4

Add antennae by punching two holes into your caterpillar’s head, cutting an 2 inch long segment from a pipe cleaner, and stringing it through. Caterpillar5Caterpillar6Caterpillar7

Now for the Butterfly! When he’s ready, the adult unravels the silk to enter a new world of flight! Much like when your little one leaves home for college or other pursuits, the newly-formed butterfly must learn to take care of itself. Complement this information with an adorable butterfly craft made from a recycled toilet paper roll!

Butterfly Craft - Let's Go Chipper

HOW TO MAKE A BUTTERFLY:

This is a very simple craft. First, fit a strip of construction paper around your toilet paper roll and secure with tape or glue.

Then cut out wings (best way to do this is fold a paper in half, draw half of the wings with a pencil then cut out!).

Attach wings to your toilet roll body with glue or tape and then decorate! Use glitter, googly eyes, or whatever you can find around the house. Add antennae like you did with the caterpillar or add a string to hang your butterfly creation around the house or outside!Avery looking through the binocs

Once your crafts are made, take them outside and see you if you can spot caterpillars, cocoons, and butterflies in your own backyard or nearest park! Making a set of recycled binoculars can be a fun additional craft to take outside and explore! Your little one(s) will not only learn about this natural process but get to look for it themselves. This hands-on approach solidifies their newly found knowledge into their minds so they will remember it and connect with it throughout their lives. Let’s Go Chipper into the Great Outdoors!

 

February 21, 2013 at 11:33 am Leave a comment

Chipper Recycle Crafts: Home-made Valentines Day Cards and Decorations


Chipper and Paisley Valentines Day
“To love one’s self is the beginning of a life-long romance.” -Oscar Wilde

February is the month of love! Show your appreciation to your friends, family and loved ones by making them a Valentines Day card or decoration. Nothing’s as special as a home-made craft. Connect on an intimate level not only by making something but by giving extra kisses and hugs this month. It’s the little things that really matter so spread your love in small ways.

Appreciate and care for the planet by making recycled crafts, it’s amazing what you can make from “trash.” Save some trees by reusing old Valentines Day cards: just cut off the cover from an old card then attach it to a fold piece of recycled scrap paper. Color it, add decorations, or cut it out in the shape of a heart. They sky’s the limit when crafting with recycled materials. Just use what you have around the house. Pink buttons would be adorable on a crafted card!

Make a “Love Bug!” 

Valentines Craft

First, cut out a heart (it’s easiest to fold a paper in half, draw a half heart from the fold, then cut a long the line) from a recycled cereal or food box or any paper product that’s a bit thick.

Then add some love! Our Chipper friend Callie used red, white and black construction paper to make hearts and a red napkin to cover her big heart. She folded strips of black paper and glued on fuzzy pom pom’s for her love bug’s eyes! She used glue but tape can be used here as well. Add some googly eyes or some legs to your bug. Put it on a popsicle stick and play or hang it on the fridge.

topilet paper roll love bug

Have fun making a love bug with a toilet paper roll and come paper scraps! Decorate with ribbons, beads, buttons and bag ties. Here they used pipe cleaners for antennae and made wings from construction paper. You can easily use recycled paper and color it red, pink and purple with crayons and markers.

Let’s Go Chipper and get crafty this Valentines Day!!!

January 31, 2013 at 4:58 pm Leave a comment

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Let's Go Chipper

Let's Go Chipper

Nature-inspired, play-based learning!

Into the Great Outdoors with Chipper the Squirrel! Camping, hiking, and outdoor fun - Chipper playfully teaches young children good character and a love for the environment in this award winning children's series!

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