Raise your own caterpillars For The Fun Of It: Fritillary Butterflies
Posted Aug 26, 10 -Filed Under Nature: plant and animal identification, children's activities (recycled materials) | Leave a Comment
Try this at home! Find and raise your own caterpillars. I found these lovely Variegated Fritillary caterpillars in my yard (southern MD) and didn’t know what kind they were. The best part of raising caterpillars is the thrill of discovery!
I found these caterpillars on our violet plants.
Here it is munching down on a violet leaf.
Find your own:
If you want to find fritillary caterpillars, you will want to look on the plants which they love to eat. In this case: violets, pansies, passion flowers, flax, stonecrop, moonseed, and plantain. I found these on violet plants.
Make a home:
See my post on making a metamorphosis observatory.
Feed:
Bring in some of the plant you found your caterpillar on. Give it new food as it eats up the old. The vase should have water in it to keep the plant yummy for the caterpillar but you don’t want the caterpillar to drown in the water, so use a vase with a narrow neck.
I allow plenty of violets to grow around my house. The larvae (the caterpillars) of the variegated fritillary as well as other fritillaries feed on violet plants.
You might not even think about it but when you landscape your yard and get rid of all the native plants, you are also getting rid of food for native insects. If there are no bugs (including caterpillars), then birds etc. don’t have anything to eat. Native insects need native plants!
This is the chrysalis of the variegated fritillary. It has beautiful gold spots.
Here is a variegated Fritillary butterfly that we raised.
Raising Tree Frog Tadpoles (MD, USA)
Posted Aug 17, 10 -Filed Under Nature: plant and animal identification, children's activities (recycled materials), seasonal: spring, seasonal: summer, use for vegetable scraps | 22 Comments
If you have kids, raising tadpoles into frogs is a must. With not much effort you can witness the fascinating metamorphosis of a tadpole into a frog. Here is a tree frog we raised in the summer of 2004.
Gray tree frog found on my house (which is green) in southern Maryland 2008.
Green tree frog found outside my house. (Southern Maryland 2008)
Green tree frog outside my kitchen window 2009. It is not uncommon for tree frogs to hang out there eating the moths that are attracted to the light.
Mini Pond -2004
We have a galvanized container that I got at an antique store that doubles as a mini deck pond. When it rains we often hear one or more male tree frogs calling for a mate. They usually get together at night but we’ve seen them on really rainy days. In the morning we see eggs in our pond: lots of them. It doesn’t take long before you have all those little tadpoles swimming around. At this point, we get a few of the tadpoles to raise inside. I find that if the weather is really hot, the tadpoles all die. Hence, for better results, we bring some inside for raising. The tadpoles in our mini deck pond, if conditions are good, will eat mosquito larvae growing in the “pond”. Therefore, I don’t have to worry about creating a mosquito problem. The tadpoles will also eat algae- the green stuff growing on the sides of your pond. Your pond will stay cleaner looking. They will also resort to eating smaller tadpoles. This sounds pretty harsh but in doing so, at least some of the tadpoles will make it to adulthood.
Home for tadpoles
We kept our tadpoles in various large glass containers over the years. I like to limit the number of tadpoles because you don’t want to overcrowd them. The number you raise will depend on the size of the jar or tank you use
Change the water:
Freshen the water by dumping about half out and replacing it with fresh water. I have well water but if you have city water, you probably have chlorine to worry about. The chlorine will kill your tadpoles so set out a pitcher of water for a day or two in preparation to adding it to your jar of tadpoles.
Feed your tadpoles:
Your jar pond should have sunlight so the algae can grow. They love to eat the algae that grow naturally but there will not be enough in your little “pond” so you will need to feed them.
Don’t add so much food that the water gets all dirty looking. Feed as needed. I’ve successfully raised tadpoles on lettuce. I chopped it up then boiled it for a short time. (I’ve since read that boiling it first isn’t necessary.) After that I’d either pour off the water and freeze it or make portions in ice cube trays: the lettuce is frozen in the ice. Either break off bits of your frozen lettuce or drop in an ice cube when necessary. I’ve also feed them leftover fish food that I didn’t need any more. They loved that too.
I recently found the following link. It provides additional information about keeping tadpoles and is definitely worth checking out (no pictures though).
http://frogs.org.au/x/media/cs-lentic.pdf
When they start to grow front legs, you will need to cover your jar with cheese cloth or mesh of some kind so they don’t escape into your house. There needs to be something for the frog to climb onto- out of the water because you don’t want your new frog to drown. Release your tree frog back into the wild after metamorphosis takes place.
The whole process will take a little over two months if you are starting with eggs.
Check out the mouth on this guy!
This tadpole is clearly trying to go unnoticed.
Back legs at last!
Almost done!
How cute is that!
Tree frog we raised in the summer of 2008.
Making Flower Crowns For Your Little Pixie
Posted Aug 17, 10 -Filed Under children's activities (recycled materials), children's crafts (recycled materials), use for natural stuff: vines, sticks... | 1 Comment
Flower crowns are beautiful and your little pixie or princess will love it.
Make a bunch for a fairy party or just enjoy a little mother and daughter time.
How to:
Cut a vine and remove the leaves. I used a wisteria vine this time but you can use whatever you have on hand. Cut and bend it into a circle. Check the size of the hoop by putting it on the child’s head. Use a piece of wire or a string to hold the vine. Use flowers and leaves that are available in your garden. Use a wire or string to wrap around the hoop securing more flowers as you go around.
Pretty little pixie girl wearing a crown of fresh flowers.
Wonderfully Fun Fairy Houses Made By Imaginative Children
Posted Aug 14, 10 -Filed Under children's activities (recycled materials), children's crafts (recycled materials), use for natural stuff: vines, sticks... | 1 Comment
During a recent “green” sewing and crafting workshop I was giving to children, these fairy houses were made. I’m continually impressed by their collective creativity. Now the woods surrounding our house are filled with welcoming homes for visiting fairies. Don’t you want to go out and make your own?
Let these pictures inspire you but not limit you in your building. Start by taking a walk and gathering supplies along the way. Scout out good locations for your fairy home. All manner of natural materials make good additions to these structures: flowers, feathers, leaves, sticks, bark, moss, pine cones, rocks, acorns, berries…
*Be sure not to overharvest living materials. Moss for example is very slow growing.
Moss table with pinecone seats for fairies.
Moss chair cleverly designed by 10 year old for the comfort of her fairy friends.
Fairy doll in her garden.
Doll was a gift made by a talented friend.
Artist at work.
Welcoming fairy accommodations.
What fairy could resist?
Don’t forget a stash of food to offer visiting fairies.
MYO Charming Mushroom Pincushions Made With Recycled Shirts and Wood
Posted Aug 3, 10 -Filed Under children's crafts (recycled materials), crafts (recycled materials), reuse fabric items, reuse stuffing, from pillows etc., sewing, use for natural stuff: vines, sticks... | 2 Comments
I designed these charming mushroom pincushions out of recycled materials and pieces of branches. If you change the design a bit, you could make a forest of trees in a similar way. –Another day perhaps. These pincushions could also be adapted into cupcake pincushions. Just scrape off the bark and paint the stump with lines like a cupcake bottom.
I know that mushroom pin cushions are old news but I’ve put my own spin on the idea (using wood for the stumps). The wood bottm makes them very stable.
Incites on how to make your own:
Gather supplies as seen in picture. –jar lid, wood stump, fabric, stuffing, plate for tracing. You will also need needle and thread and glue. Sometimes I use wool roving for the stuffing. The natural oils from the wool help to keep needles from rusting.
First, use a plate to trace a circle on a salvaged knit shirt. You want fabric that will stretch like a t-shirt.
The size of the plate will depend on the size of the jar lid you are using, which will depend on the stump size. The fabric will need to be bigger than the jar lid by about two inches extra all the way around. Smaller mushroom tops will require less, so test it out.
Using a straight stitch (put the needle up then down, up, then down through the fabric) to sew all the way around your circle. Sew near the edge. I like to use a metal jar lid to help shape the mushroom to have a flatter bottom.
Pull the thread to gather the fabric. Add the jar lid and the stuffing and gather some more.
Knot the thread to hold the gather.
Glue the mushroom top to your stump. I used a branch that I chopped with a miter saw. You could use a hand saw. Put something heavy on top until the glue dries.
I made the tall mushroom out of a second-hand infant hat. I like to use it to hold threaded needles for quick access.
Observing Nature: Fisher Cat In NH Yard
Posted Aug 1, 10 -Filed Under Nature: plant and animal identification, children's activities (recycled materials) | 2 Comments
During a visit to Amherst, New Hampshire, we were amazed to see a fisher cat come out of the woods! It was searching for dinner scrapes that were tossed there. We were all surprised. My family and I had never seen one before that. Fisher cats are known for being secretive and they are very rarely seen. Incredible: we got to get such a good look at the fisher cat while safely on a raised deck! It didn’t even seem to know or care that we were there.
When I was a kid we would throw out kitchen scraps and watch what came around after dark to get it: mostly raccoons and skunks. We would turn on the light to view them at a distance.
I’ve since read that fisher cats are omnivorous; they eat a bunch of stuff including small animals, carrion, insects, fruit and even mushrooms. They rarely eat fish despite their name and apparently they are good at hunting porcupines. Furthermore, they were hunted to near extinction back when wearing furs was the thing to do.
The night before I took these pictures, my Aunt’s toy dog was carried away while she was standing nearby. It was dark and the dog went outside of the ring of light. She was shocked and devastated when this beloved pet was carried away in the night: a fox was blamed. After seeing this fisher cat we are all convinced it was the fisher cat. Fisher cats are blamed for the disappearance of many house pets but biologists believe that other predators are usually to blame. Unfortunately, I think this fisher cat saw an opportunity and took it. How was she to know?
This fisher cat showed up around 6 p.m.








































