Showing posts with label maple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label maple. Show all posts

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Maple Sugaring Printables

Last year was the Queen's first taste of Sugar on Snow! YUMMY!

I am preparing a fun unit on Maple Sugaring for my preschool classroom. I love the printables at the website below. Last year I displayed these at our booth at the St. Johnsbury World Maple Festival and I found that many adults were very interested in them!

I'll be back in couple of days to blog more about my ideas for teaching 3-5 year olds about maple sugaring but for now be sure to check out the printables at:
http://www.wordplayhouse.com/2011/03/how-do-you-make-maple-syrup-maple-sugaring-free-printables.html

Friday, February 24, 2012

Tapping for Sap



Last year the I had this vision of creating a model maple tree that my preschoolers could tap and pretend to collect sap. I wanted the kids to have some first hand experience before we took them to a local sugar shack.

So I found the largest piece of cardboard I had, and got to work crafting a maple tree. Then I recruited my then five year old to help me practice collecting the sap. He was a bit dismayed at how slow the drips were, but once a puddle of 'sap' collected in the bowl he became excited about the process. As with many of our projects and experiments, I lost interest long before him. He continued to collect the sap for almost an hour and only stopped because his little sister started dumping the sap bucket!



How it works:
One child gets to stand in the back of the tree and starts the flow of sap by using a pipette to push water into the tap.

The other kids watch as the sap drips from the tap, runs through the plastic tubing, and finally collects into the bucket.

To keep a group of kids interested in the activity, be sure to have plenty of funnels, cups, spoons, strainers, and tubing for them to explore properties of 'sap'.

When I led this activity in my preschool classroom the kids were eager to be the one behind the tree and a line formed as they waited their turn. So I put additional pipettes in the collection bucket and they played there until it was their turn to 'be the tree'. 

This activity would be great to try at home. You could use any type of hose and a turkey baster! If you don't have cardboard to make a tree, you could use a grocery bag with a hole cut or a large oatmeal container.

I will do a couple of blog posts in March about the science of maple sugaring and will include sensory play & art projects...so check back!


** Check out the maple tree for yourself at the World Maple Festival on April 28th from 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. in St. Johnsbury, Vermont! The Balch Nature School at the Fairbanks Museum will be leading a pretend "Sap Collecting" activity in the Kid Zone area. More information about the festival can be found at www.worldmaplefestival.org