As spring has well and truly sprung, our visits to the allotment have resumed.
This presents an abundance of science opportunities for the children to experience.
Skippy helps us learn about plants and animals in the allotment.Guiding us in our gardening is our friend Skippy (yes he is Australian). He looks after our allotment and helps us tend to the various plants and animals we find there.
“Skippy pointing to flowers and busy bees”. By Owen
We were blessed with glorious sunshine on our visit on Monday, however our session started inside thinking about what seeds need to grow and how they change.
“They need soil” – Nathan
“They need the sun” – Patrick
“Water!” – Harmony
Skippy showed us the beans and peas that were planted by the last group.
Some of the seeds were actually beans!
the bean had started to grow a little! We could see the bean shell still on the top!
We could see a real difference between a bean without soil, water, heat and light and one that had.
They had grown into little plants.
Skippy told us about how the plants were buried in the soil to grow.
Skippy showed us how the seed sprouted.
Skippy told us how the seeds grew.
We had a think about what the plants needed to grow and how this could happen inside the hut (which has no windows).
“You could use the lights!” – Patrick
Skippy showed us the propagator and let Nathan and Lara feel the heat mat that keeps the seedlings warm and gives them light because the sun can’t do either inside.
We all listened to Skippy.
Nathan got to feel the heat mat.
Lara felt the warmth of the heat mat.
The seedlings were kept warm on the heat mat and given light from the lamps.
Nathan applied his previous learning to what Skippy had shown and told us…
“Maybe the beanstalk will grow and have a castle at the top!” – Nathan
Skippy assured us that he hadn’t used magic beans so a castle was very unlikely. Then we went outside to see what was in the allotment, and what was growing.
Skippy showed us the leeks, chives, garlic and spring onions, and shallots that are all part of the onion family!
Skippy showed us where he had just cut up old flowers and scattered the cuttings. Seedlings were starting to grow.
Skippy showed us some of the vegetables he had started to grow in the greenhouse.
Skippy has started to grow tomatoes in the greenhouse too.
We saw an interesting green box at the end of a path…
We looked at the box and guessed what it might hold.
It was a beehive!
It was the allotment’s beehive!
Bees live in hives.
Skippy told us how bees are essential for plants to grow.
“Without bees, nothing could live!” – Patrick
The bees get the stuff that they use to make honey, out of flowers.
We looked at some flowers to find the middle bit that the bees visit to collect nectar and get stuck with pollen. When the pollen from different flowers gets mixed up it allows new seeds to be formed – this is called pollination.
“The bees collect pollen from the flowers.
We looked for the middle bit of the flower to see where the pollen is for the bees to spread.
Skippy explained about why bees are important.
We pretended to be busy bees visiting the flowers getting covered in and spreading the pollen.
We tickled flowers pretending to be bees collecting nectar and spreading pollen
Busy bee Harmony gathering nectar to make honey and spreading pollen to make new plants!
Some of the middle yellow bits were extra special…
Skippy pointed out interesting flowers.
We tried to think what would be different about these flowers.
Skippy asked us to look closely at the middle bit of the flower.
The yellow middle will grow into strawberries!
The strawberries aren’t the only fruits growing in the allotment.
We looked closely at the plant to see tiny buds that will grow into raspberries.
Looking for baby raspberries.
Looking for buds of baby raspberries.
We had a lot of thinking about seeds and how they grow, finding pollen and seedlings that have started to grow. However we hadn’t thought about how weeds and wild plants spread. The gardeners didn’t plant the chives in the path or the dandelions. We had a think about what moved them.
“The wind did it!” – Harmony
Skippy showed us where the seeds were formed in some plants and we helped spread some.
Skippy showed us where seeds can be found.
Skippy opened up some flowers to reveal the seeds.
We looked for seeds in dandelions.
Skippy demonstrated how wind helps to garden by spreading seeds.
Ellie acts like the wind to spread dandelion seeds.
Nathan helps spread dandelion seeds while practicing his counting with a dandelion clock.
Blowing dandelion clocks are a fun way to help your child count, think about more or less and learn about time language! The Mary Queen of Scots dandelion head popping rhyme is a good fine motor exercise, helping your child strengthen their finger muscles in preparation to write! The latter is more popular with gardeners
All to soon it was time to return to the nursery, smarter little biologists.
Am I becoming a colour bore? I feel we have been looking at colour for a long time now. However the children continue to be really engaged and invested in their learning.
As planned, I offered the same experience, well the same resources again today. Of course it isn’t the same experience as now the children have their previous learning to draw on and develop. And me being me I had to add a twist. I added a mystery mixture in test tubes and a squirty bottle.
There was some debate over what the mystery mixture was.
“Is it vinegar?” – Patrick
“It’s water!” – Gabriel
“It’s nothing colour” – Heidi
It had a strange effect – it chased the colour away intead of mixing it.
“I’m chasing all the colours away!” – Heidi
“You’re chasing them all the way to America!” – Charlie
And it had a weird effect on the paper – it turned it see through too!
“It’s invisible colour!” – Charlie
Sophie noticed that you could draw with it using a pipette.
And the oddest thing was what it did to the colours when you put them in the test tubes to mix……
It separated!Tommy’s blue floated around in little balls within the mystery liquid before settling on the bottom.
“Gravity is what makes the colours go down!” – Caoimhe
Can you guess the mystery liquid? It was very slimy…
“Maybe it’s jellyfish” – Patrick.
“No they might sting us!!” – Alex
No fear it wasn’t jellyfish but just baby oil.
Oil and water won’t mix so our colours wouldn’t mix with the oil.
Well now we have begun to think about colours separating I think the time has come to chase rainbows….
Thank you for sharing our learning!Please remember to leave a comment. Ant suggestions for areas of science to explore would be very welcome! And don’t forget totell us about any science learning going on at home!
Science blog from the children and staff of Kelly St. Children's Centre.