
Category: Winter
Winter Sky Week: Exploring Nature With Children

It’s Winter Sky Week in Exploring Nature With Children.
The Snowflake Man ~ A short film about Snowflake Bentley
How Do Snowflakes Form? ~ video
Drawing Fog, Rain, Snow, and Dew ~ video workshop by John Muir Laws
Calendar of Firsts: Week 51

The 12 Days of Christmas: Exploring Nature With Children

Next week will be the Twelve Days of Christmas in Exploring Nature With Children
“Tweet of the Day has been entertaining early morning listeners to the Radio 4 schedule every day since 2013, but this Christmas we will delight in an avian offering of the well known song Twelve Days of Christmas.
On the first day of Christmas so the song goes, a true love sent a partridge in a pear tree. As actress Alison Steadman suggests as ground birds, partridges are not known for their amorous arboreal perching. Why a partridge in a tree could have many meanings, but given the song is of possible French origin, the French or red-legged partridge seems an ideal candidate as sitter in a pear tree.”
Happy Winter Solstice!

Happy Solstice, friends!
Winter Solstice Week: Exploring Nature With Children

This week in Exploring Nature With Children is ‘Winter Solstice Week’.
Here are some helpful links to get you going:
- 10 Things About The December Solstice
- Why the days are shorter in winter and longer in summer (video)
- Billy Nye explains the seasons (video)
- How to Draw Trees in Winter (Tutorial)
Happy exploring!
No Animal…

No animal, according to the rules of animal-etiquette, is ever expected to do anything strenuous, or heroic, or even moderately active during the off-season of winter.
Our Nature Journals Week 11

It’s been a lovely week here; spring sunshine and gentle breezes, with the odd heavy shower. The natural world is changing so quickly right now, waking up from its deep sleep. For those of you who follow me on Instagram, you will know that we have a lot of mud!
Rose decided to sketch her wee Horse Chestnut tree. In late summer 2015, Rose brought home a conker from the woods and planted it in a pot. Somewhat surprisingly, it began to grow the following spring (Horse Chestnuts often take a few years to germinate.) and is still faithfully growing.


Rosie’s Field Guide

This week was the first nature walk for Rose and two of her friends. We are planning to walk together each week, then return to my home, so that the girls can work on creating their very own field guides.
Our first outing was a great success; I began by sending the girls off to play for an hour, as per Miss Mason’s instruction:
“Then, there is much to be got by perching in a tree or nestling in heather, but muscular development comes of more active ways, and an hour or two should be spent in vigorous play; and last, and truly least, a lesson or two must be got in.” Vol 1 pg 45
The girls were most interested in the pond, as the toads and frogs are spawning.

Once they had finished their play, we began our object lesson. We are starting out with the study of trees.
“Children should be made early intimate with the trees, too; should pick out half a dozen trees, oak, elm, ash, beech, in their winter nakedness, and take these to be their year-long friends. In the winter, they will observe the light tresses of the birch, the knotted arms of the oak, the sturdy growth of the sycamore. They may wait to learn the names of the trees until the leaves come. By-and-by, as the spring advances, behold a general stiffening and look of life in the still bare branches; life stirs in the beautiful mystery of the leaf-buds, a nest of delicate baby leaves lying in downy warmth within many waterproof wrappings; oak and elm, beech and birch, each has its own way of folding and packing its leaflets; observe the ‘ruby budded lime’ and the ash, with its pretty stag’s foot of a bud, not green but black –
“More black than ash-buds in the front of March.” Vol 1 pg 52

Here are twigs from some of the trees we observed:
Hawthorn, Horse Chestnut, and Ash.
We observed the placement, size, colour, and texture of the buds. We talked about the presence of lateral buds, (growing along the sides of the twig) and terminal buds, which grow at the end of the twig). Placement of the buds is key to helping us identify the tree; the Ash and Horse Chestnut have opposite branching (buds growing in pairs) The Hawthorn has alternate branching, with the buds growing one at a time.
The buds of many trees are protected by a covering of modified leaves known as scales which protect the new leaves growing inside. The Horse Chestnut scales are covered by a sticky substance which gives even greater protection to the developing leaves. The girls thought that this would be a good way for the tree to protect itself…
We came home for lunch, and after a smashing game of Rapidough, I worked with the girls to help them create the first page of their Field Guides.
We are working on heavy A4 paper, which they can slide into page protectors, to be kept in a special, dedicated binder.
Here is Rosie’s first page:
Happy exploring!
Our Nature Journals Week 10





