Showing posts with label metamorphosis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label metamorphosis. Show all posts

Friday, June 13, 2014

Frog Life Cycle

We successfully witnessed a frog's life cycle, from egg to adult frog!  It was an enjoyable learning experience.  It is a leopard frog (Northern leopard frog, to be exact), and supposedly they take three months or around 12 weeks to complete metamorphosis.  Our frog took eight weeks.  I wonder whether it was nourished extremely well or whether that is supposed to include the frog growing in size.

Past life cycles we've learned about and witnessed can be found on this blog on the following pages:

Bird Life Cycle

Wasp Life Cycle

Butterfly and Pill Bug Life Cycles

Human Life Cycle

Most of the pictures I took of our tadpole are not good quality.  It would have been optimal if I'd have taken all the pictures when I had the tank in the bathroom to change out its water, but in the earliest stages I didn't even walk that far with the tank, but poured half the water into a bowl.  Also all were taken with my iPhone, as I could not get my digital camera's flash inactivated.  I do not know what the deal is.  It lived its tadpole life out on top of my dresser.  The most important thing, of course, was that we were able to watch and enjoy.  Jaden William and Elizabeth especially enjoyed it (as did I).  Liv liked it, too.  Trusten didn't seem to care a whole lot.  Nathan thought it was pretty neat and watched Tad's transformation, too. 

At arrival, most were embryos; there were some eggs.  The second day all but one died.






See the little back leg, at just over five weeks vs. the supposed sprout at six weeks.


Bathroom picture came out better with better lighting.


Front legs!  And they grew completely over one night, I swear!  I don't know how it would have hidden them, as I was daily watching closely for sprouts.


I placed a piece of wood in the tank for Tad to climb upon.  Its tail is hanging in water.  Second picture is underwater photo, as it was frightened.


Chin propped up on wood, tail shrinking quickly!


Short tail and practically no tail


Dirty little creature; picture on right taken in boys' room where it now resides.  We've not seen it eat any live moving insect, yet, but that's what it's supposed to do.  It's certainly not for lack of providing them.



A Kindle book borrowed for free with our Amazon Prime membership:




Boys' journal entries on tadpoles/frogs:

 Trusten's illustration cracked me up.  Remember, he's the one who was "not that much" interested in the life cycle of the frog.  The way he depicted the tadpole growing and then winning a race (rather than transforming into an adult frog) makes me think he's likening it to the story of Willy the human sperm.  Hahahahaha!  I love this boy!


I love William's colorful picture!  Do you see the frogs at his feet?  And then he drew the life cycle.


This was fun!  I highly recommend teaching life cycles by seeing the real deal.  We've always enjoyed seeing the various stages of life in different species, whether it be plant or animal or other.  

Brought to you by Lifestyle of Learning.

Until next time...

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Second Half of Summer 2013: What We've Been...

Another of my "What We've..." posts to cover the second half of summer, which will soon be over as reckoned by the fall equinox.  I've got at least four additional posts planned, which I soon hope to get posted.  They will cover our Trumpets celebration, plans for the remaining three and a half Roman calendar months, and then the starting back of weekly updates on what we've done in our homeschool, of which I'm already behind.  I'm typing this post on my iPad, as our messed up computer is finally officially finished, after three months of trouble following a lightning strike.  It served us well for four years before that happened.  Nathan is looking for a replacement, which is necessary.  I've had to download two different apps for this device in order to make blogging these posts with my pictures possible, but I'm so thankful I've got this option.  It appears as if there will be no font size changes or anything of that nature, but I'll make do.  Sooo...

What We've Read...

Jaden William's history (Mystery of History):

*Emperor Asoka of India
*The Septuagint and the Colossus of Rhodes
*The Qin Dynasty (Ch'in)
*Hannibal, Elephants, and the Punic Wars
*The Han Dynasty
*The Maccabean Revolt

Trusten's history and geography (Our Christian Heritage):

*Leadership/governing in our lives, especially God and parents
*Four oceans
*Seven continents
*Facts about each continent and some animals that live on each

We've gone back to pick up where we left off in Scholastic's Read and Learn Bible.  We are currently in 2 Kings, about to read about Elisha.  We are also still continually, over and over, going through the book of Proverbs.  Instead of a daily chapter, though, and also trying to fit in other bible reading with the kids (not counting my own reading), we are usually doing a chapter of Proverbs every other day, and the days in between we are reading a chapter in the children's bible.  Sometimes we combine and read both, but some days it doesn't work out, and I feel relieved that I have decided not to stress myself out about it.

Various children's books.  I'm not going to subscribe to the Weekly Reader/Scholastic News this year, at least not for Trust and Liv.  I apparently paid twice last year, because they sent me a notice of credit.  I am still trying to decide whether to order for Jaden William, but I'd likely let him read them on his own time, if I get them, if it's not too late.  When we got these, the reading from children's books was reduced, and I don't like that.  I love the wildlife magazines the kids get, and they are only monthly, so we will continue to enjoy these.  


What the Boys Have Written...



Jaden's book report on Lois Lowry's The Giver (book pictured above in previous section). Yeah, that boy managed to get his report all dirty, because he laid down on his belly on the front porch to write most of it!  He needs much more writing, writing, writing practice, but he is getting better.  He just gets in a hurry on everything!  This was his second draft, so I'm disappointed in how many spelling errors and missing punctuation there was.  


Jaden's book report on Lois Lowry's Gathering Blue.  This is his first draft, on which he came a LONG WAY from his first draft on The Giver.  And he's finally grasping how to write a full-length book report.  This is just his third, after The Giver, and you may remember his first one on The Children's Homer by Padraic Colum.  So I was pretty pleased with him on this.  I've got to go over it, type up corrections, and then he'll write his final draft, which had better be better than his final one on The Giver.  I don't know how that boy managed to spell things incorrectly and miss periods and such, when his second draft was COPY WORK.  I'd typed out corrections and added some detail in to better help him understand what he was lacking.  He definitely didn't lack in this report like he did that report. :-)  His grade (something very few things the kids do get) will be reported in a future post, as well as his book report on the final book in the trilogy.  

Trusten has mostly done copy work in his Language Lessons workbook.  He finished the one on which he was working and will now be working on the Explode the Code series and won't continue on with the next LL workbook until he's finished, which I expect will only take four or five months at the most.  He is good at flying nearly flawlessly through such things.  He's doing well on most of his work, despite his hair-trigger temperament.  Below is pictured some of the drawings he was asked to draw in his LL book.  He normally flies off the handle each time he's asked to draw anything (among many other things), which involves an exposive verbal outburst, a throwing of his pencil, etc.  Once I am able to calm him, it's as if nothing happened, and he gets his work done.  Same thing with anytime he's asked to write something free-hand (not copy work).  He knows very well I'll help him spell anything with which he needs help, but it seems all memory of that leaves him each time. 

Regarding the sentence pictured below, he was required to write his own sentence using one of the words in a list.  After his meltdown, I spoke a few sample sentences for examples, like "I want to fly a kite" and "I hope my momma loves me" ("kite" and "hope" being words in the list).  He shouted, "I know you love me!"  (Think with me: "CHILL OUT, child!")  Well, he calmed down, and I left to be about my business in the kitchen.  When he was finished with his work, he properly put up his workbook.  When I went to check it, I was humored that he had written that example sentence, even after his outburst!


LOL.  (If you haven't read the two preceding paragraphs, please do so now.)  NO spelling errors in that simple sentence, and I didn't help him (true, I spell it "momma" and "Momma" when it's proper, rather than common, but I'm a rare exception).  He just loses it too easily.

Jaden's latest reading and research obsession has been technology, and specifically Apple technology.  He drives me crazy!  He asked me whether I'd rather him talk about languages again, and I said, "Yes!  Please!"  LOL 

I've started reading about plant science to Trusten.  I'll talk more about that and more in a future post.

What We've Been Eating...


Homemade suki-yaki steak with homemade white sauce (maybe not as satisfying to the lust of the tastebuds as what you eat in the Japanese restaurants, but mine is whole-grain rice and pasta and all organic ingredients); homemade chicken pot pie (ok, except for the crusts), homemade peach cobbler (a long-time favorite around here), squash casserole, fruit salad, potatoes, creamy chickenn and potato soup (pictured is a failed attempt at an experimental casserole, but afterward I started making it as soup and cut the potatoes differently); tortilla pizzas; spicy Thai noodles.

The soup and the spicy Thai noodles were well-liked around the table as new meals.  I've fixed the former a few times, but I've yet to make the latter.  I will change it up next time, as it contained way too much oil the first time (but was indeed tasty).  


My sweet boy Jaden William (10 years) has fixed breakfast many times lately (usually muffins). His favorite is pancakes, and he happened to surprise me one morning with making pancakes.  I was walking into the kitchen, and he was already flipping pancakes out of the pan.  Yes, he runs the grain mill, combines all the ingredients himself, and does the cooking, and he does a great job.  He's already had plenty of practice over the past few years.  I asked for chocolate chips in mine, and he surprised me with a chocolate chip smiley face!

That's a cantaloupe out of our garden (yum!), and Na cut the cucumbers one night for our dinner, and he made us all cute things.  He made me the little car/cart above.  Almost all of our cucumbers have been delicious.  Everything has been so good.  Nathan dumped all of our wood ash on our garden spot throughout last winter, and Jaden put the straw and chicken poop from cleaning out the chicken house on there, so our food has been nutritious and tasy.  

What We've Done on Sabbath Afternoons...



Pictured above: After one of the floods (odd for mid-summer), the kids swam and played in the water in the creek that borders our property to the south/southwest.  I took so many absolutely gorgeous pictures.  The kids played after each flood.


You can tell they're dressed and ready to go play in the creek again, but first some fun with mud!  Check out William's mudman!


The two sweetest girls...  Liv wanted to show me a moth and other nature finds.


These pictures are so funny.  Poor Liv.  Trusten torments that poor girl, but you've got to admit that the pictures of him chasing her with his mud ball is pretty hilarious.  


What Nature Things We've Enjoyed...


The kids got to enjoy witnessing the metamorphosis cycle of butterflies (painted lady species).  Pictured above are the caterpillars hanging from the top of their containers (nasty by that point) and each creating a chrysalis for their pupae stage, and then in the bottom picture they are all in the pupa stage.  I pinned them to the side of the butterfly pavilion.  Notice one on some tissue at the bottom.  It had fallen to the bottom of the container, and I didn't have much hope for it.  Jaden and I theorized.  I told him I wondered whether it would not develop properly if it laid on the bottom, or whether the sole purpose of caterpillars suspending themselves up high was to keep away from predators.  I wondered whether there was a dual purpose (like so many things, or often more than dual).  It turned out in the end that the butterfly emerged from the chrysalis alive, but one of the wings was deformed.  It was unable to fly, so Jaden put it in one of my pots of flowers.  We felt bad for it.


ALL ten caterpillars emerged alive as butterflies.  Nine were perfectly formed and able to fly away on release day.

I also read our copy of Eric Carle's The Very Hungry Caterpillar for fun, and I played a video on Amazon on Demand of butterflies and their lives.


We only kept the butterflies as adults in the pavilion two--maybe three--days, and then the kids took turns getting one on their fingers and then releasing them.  The picture at the bottom right of the collage directly above is so funny.  JW had a butterfly perched on his finger, but by the time I shot the picture, the butterfly was gone.

We LOVED this!  It was especially a treat to us, because we love butterflies so much!  Life is truly a miracle!  It's just so amazing!

Poor Elizabeth didn't know any better.  She'd found the under-developed butterfly that Jade had put in the flower pot of flowers.  She came walking excitedly toward me with a big smile on her face, holding the butterfly.  I was horrified on the inside, but I managed to gently tell her that no, that wasn't good.  I don't think she damaged it too much (it wasn't going to make it, anyway), but William started to shout, so I had to calm him quickly and remind him that Baby Sister didn't understand how to hold butterflies, and she was just excited to get to hold one like all her siblings.


Jaden William a beetle or something in its pupa stage. This was exciting!  I liked this particular ones.  You can the one in the upper right picture is broken open a bit, so you can see the larvae inside.  The rest were undisturbed.  This was fascinating!  I just love all the awesome things you can find in nature.  The coverings were like tree bark!

Liv is picured with an adult pill bug crawling on her hand.  She loves these things!  (My younger sister did, too.  I won't touch them.)  Liv is often scared of such things at first, but once she realizes they won't hurt her, she takes quite a liking to them, whatever the "them" may be.  

Well, I've got LOTS more to share, but this is it for now.  There will be more soon.

Until next time...

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Butterflies & Caterpillars


Caterpillars and butterflies (and moths) have always been a big deal in our household.  I love butterflies, and all my kids have loved both caterpillars and the adult moths and butterflies.  I have so many pictures of Jaden William with caterpillars over the last several years of his life, and I've started collecting quite a few of Trusten and Liv with the crawling creatures.

For years I've wanted to get Eric Carle's book The Very Hungry Caterpillar, and I just haven't.  I finally did, though, and the kids loved it.


I also showed the kids Youtube videos of the metamorphosis of caterpillars to butterflies and included a couple of videos with cute little songs about the magnificent creatures.

I used to make a lot of play dough creations for William when he was the ages of Trust and Liv.  We had so much fun.  I've recently started playing with play dough with Trusten and Olivia.  I make creations for them while they play with some by themselves.  Last week we had a session where I focused solely on making caterpillars and butterflies.  They used my butterfly cookie cutter to cut our butterflies, and they free played.

Trusten making balls as I had shown him how

Liv picking up her newly-cookie-cutter-cut butterfly

Trusten showing off his own caterpillar creation

My caterpillar

My butterfly (yes, with the lines from my hands, but they're like veins in butterfly wings!)

Liv using cookie cutter to make a green butterfly

Also during the week I made all of them a fruit snack that looked like the caterpillar in the Eric Carle book.

Not the prettiest caterpillar, but the kids love when I make fun snacks
Then I transformed my fruit, seed, and grain bar recipe into butterfly cookies by taking the dough and rolling it out thinner and using my butterfly cookie cutter.  That dough with all the stuff in it doesn't cut out cleanly, but we could still tell they were butterflies, and the kids loved them.

Super delicious with sweetened cream cheese (Trust likes jelly or plain)
For young, but slightly-older children than Trusten is, here is a good worksheet resource for The Very Hungry CaterpillarActivities and Lesson Plan for The Very Hungry Caterpillar

Until next time...