MudPies & Bu’flies Village Parkdays 11:00am – 4:00pm

2009
July 27 - Yarn & More - Giant Wind Mobile

August 6 - Wind, Earth & Rocks -(w/ a little Roll)

August 13 - Water & weatherwizkids.com

August 20 - Celebrate different and same Cultures from around the world ***Potluck Dinner & Drumcircle until 8pm

August 27 - Character & Creative Construction Day (come as favorite character from book, movie or comic)

September 3 - Sky, Stars, Planets & Int’l Space Center

September 10 - Fairies & Dragons, Oh My!!!

September 17 - Tell (or read) a Story Day & Stone Soup *** Potluck Dinner & Drumcircle until 8pm

September 24 - Atoms & Molecules Part 1– Fun with building blocks of our World

October 1 - Anatomy Fun Part 1– learning how our body works

October 8 - Recycle, Reuse, Remember & Create

October 15 - Planets, Moons & Space (back for more!) Potluck Dinner & Drumcircle until 8pm

October 22 - Making Music: Investigating Rhythm, Song and Sounds: Make your own instruments

October 29 - Halloween Party & Making Masks ~Come in your Costumes

November 5 - Culture Gap- Focus on Tibet - Craft making Prayer flags and doing the Snow Lion Dance!

November 12 - Remembering the Early Settlers (Like Laura Ingalls Wilder)

November 19 - International day – come dressed in a cultural outfit and bring a dish of that nation.

November 26 - THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY

December 3rd - Into the Woods: Nature Activities

Dec 10: Nature Part II - PineCone Birdfeeders & Greet a Tree

Dec 17: Paint ornaments, Make Kwanza Mkekes & Hanukkah Menoras and sing Holiday carols

Dec 24: Holiday no Parkday

Dec 31: Make Music to bring in New Year

2010
Jan 7: Anatomy Part II

Jan 14: Physics & Spiderman

Jan 21: Rained out

Jan 28: Freedom & Civic Rights: Ghandi, MLK jr, Mandela

Feb 4: Chumash Native American Day

Feb 11: Spirit of Olympic Games:curling - speed skating

Feb 18th: Chinese (Korean & Vietnamese) New Year

Feb 25th: Spirit of Olympic games II Flags & Hockey

March 4th: Spring Bling: Worms, Dirt & Seeds: Preparing for spring

March 11th: Global Timelines (pocket timelines)

March 18th: Desert Life (preping for Campout at Joshua Tree )

March 25th: Magnetism part I: I'm attracted!

April 1st: Magnetism part II: Physical Force of Nature

April 8th: More than Block Designs: Bridges, Cantilevers & Treehouses

April 15th: Japanese Culture: Authentic Girls' Day & Boy's Day Celebrations

April 22nd: 40th anniversary of Earth Day

April 29th: Earth Day Part 2

May 6th: Let's get Nautical: Boats, Knots, Pirates & Explorers

May 13th: Ladybugs, Silkworms & Praying Mantis

May 20th: Cultural Highlight on Hawaii & Potluck Luau!

May 27th: Pollination, Fruit & Seeds - Turn fruits & vegi's into creatures

June 3rd: BodyGuards : Snot, Scabs and More

June 10th: Catapults & Parachutes: Gravity & Lift

June 17th: Swedish MidSummerFest & Potluck

2 week Holiday

July 8th: Undetermined

July 15th: Bastille Day - French Independence & Potluck

July 22nd: Inuit Culture & Games

July 29th: Mudpies & Butterflies 1 year anniversary

August 5th: Honey, Bees & Wasps

August 12th Turtles, Tortoises & YOU

August 19th: Potluck dinner

August 26th:Light, Refraction & Rainbows

Sept 2nd: History of Flight

Sept 9th: Chemical (molecular) Reactions

Sept 16th: Cancelled due to Campout

Sept 17-20th
Family Campout @ Sequoia Nat'l Park

Sept 23rd Russian Culture & Potluck

Sept 30th Light & Refraction Part II

Oct 7th

Oct 14th

Oct 21st Potluck

Oct 28th - Halloween Spooks

Making Squishy, Squooshy Organs

IMG_1924IMG_1962What a great Part Two to our Anatomy Fun series on January 7th.  Thanks to all the families who brought the tactile goodies.  We had models with movable organs to kid-handle and a Lifesize Anatomy Man whose layers could be lifted up.

Back in October we made our own Blood with cheerios for the red blood cells, mini marshmallows for the white blood cells and candy sprinkles for the platelets.  Today we learned how hard the heart works to move it all about the body to gift each and every cell with Oxygen – their lifesource.

IMG_3708Oxygen comes from where?  One child pointed to the sky.  Yes, the air has our Oxygen.  We breath in deeply of oxygen and take it into our lungs.  Our bloodcells load up on oxygen turning it bright red and they deliver the oxygen all over our body.  Our skin, our eyes, our muscles, your little toe all require oxygen. And when it is delivered the same blood cell  picks up the trash – mostly Carbon Dioxide (CO2) and carries that back to our lungs so we can breath that out.  It happens all the time.  Millions of times Every day.

And who loves our exhale of CO2?  Yup, Trees and Plants do.  They inhale CO2 and Exhale our lovely Oxygen!  What a match we are!  That is why we need the trees!

When the blue diaphragm gets pulled down the lung fill up

When the blue diaphragm gets pulled down the lungs fill up

When the diaphragm is pushed up, the pressure pushes all the CO2 air out of the lungs.

When the diaphragm is pushed up, the pressure pushes all the CO2 air out of the lungs.

Everyone took a balloon and blew them up.  What did they fill it up with?  Air.  What kind of air?  Air with mostly Oxygen or CO2?

Now let’s look at what happens on the inside, where we can’t see!

Find your ribs and breath in. Feel what happens.  Some bellies got bigger, our ribcage rises a bit.  There is a muscle like a flat rubber drum head that lifts up and down when we breath and exhale – called  the DIAPHRAGM.  It does most of the work to fill our lungs and push the air out.  I modified the lungs model from B.K. Hixson’s hilarious and inspiring science project book Anatomy Academy.

We asked lots of questions about the heart, lungs and also the liver before we went to make our Squishy, Squoosy Organs.  IMG_1935We made them out of Gak which is the greatest science fun you can do in your home for kids of all ages.  All you need is Elmer’s Glue, powder Borax (laundry whitener found in stores), water and a little food coloring.

Step 1: In a small bowl mix 2 cups of Glue and one and a half cups of warm water.  Add some drops of food coloring here to get the color you want.

Step 2: In a different bowl dissolve  one and a half tablespoons of Borax powder in one cup of HOT water.

Step 3: Combine the two containers and stir.  This is where  the magic happens when the Gak starts to solidify.

Be sure to discuss the magic of  Chemical Reactions as your kiddos stir.

Step 4: Remember to store your gak in an airtight container to prevent it from drying out.  And don’t play with it on rugs, carpets or car seats.IMG_1938

All the kids got to participate since we  made three batches. One pink for making hearts, one yellow for making lungs and one brown for making the liver. IMG_1939 The Liver is an amazing organ that has over 500 functions.  Mostly it is in charge of cleaning  what we take into the body after it is digested.  It is a  factory that converts this into that and regulates  alot of stuff (hit the Liver link to get specific). The coolest fact I know about the liver is that even if you lost 90% of it, that one bit left is enough to regenerate the entire liver.  This like lizards who can grow their entire tails back after it gets pulled off.IMG_0954

Kids made hearts and lungs and livers.  The squishing was the most fun.  One kid made a pink diaphragm and one organ looked just like a yellow intestines.

In order to better understand how the heart pumps or why we need oxygen so much, I had the kids all find their pulse.  Some found it on their wrists, others on their neck and some their heart.  As I slowly moved my arm like a clock to a silent count of 10, they counted how many beats they counted from their pulse.  Then I released them to a high speed run for a 3 minutes (a great activity if your kids are getting too bored sitting down).  Then upon return to the blanket, we all counted our beats again.  Almost everyone got more beats this time, some almost double.IMG_1953

Why is that?  Through questions and answers, I led them to the fact that their muscles, which power all their big and little moves, needed more oxygen to do all the work their brain was telling their bodies to do.  So in order to get more oxygen, the decision was made to speed up the process of delivering more oxygen to the muscles. That means the heart had to pump faster.  The lungs were taking in more air with more breaths or deeper breaths. They figured this one out fast!IMG_1966

After a lot of spirited FreePlay, we did one last Activity.  Becoming Lifesize in Art. Kids helped kids and parents helped kids outline their body on a white piece of jumbo cloth.  (Unlike over-sized paper, cloth can be easily folded and stored.)  Then they filled it in with whatever they wanted to (ideally an organ or two).  Take a look.IMG_1949IMG_1947IMG_1943IMG_1942IMG_1969IMG_1951

IMG_1945

The Red dots are not Chicken Pox, but all the Red Blood Cells carrying oxygen all over her body!

The Red dots are not Chicken Pox, but all her Red Blood Cells carrying Oxygen! They Got It!

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