Toasty Fall Treats

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These adorable little toasts, the recipe in our October High Five magazine, make a great snack – simply vary the shape to make them appropriate throughout the entire fall!

For our first toasts, Travis chose pumpkin- and leaf-shaped cookie cutters. Adults: toast 1 slice of bread per each shape.

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Travis loved helping press the cookie cutters into the bread, and seeing the shapes pop out.

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Next came spreading them with red-pepper hummus, giving a nice autumnal hue to our snacks.

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I cut up small strips of red and yellow peppers for him to arrange on the toasts as decoration, including red color for our pumpkin’s stem.

Okay, the leaf veins were care of mama.

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Closer to Halloween, make a ghost toast! Use a ghost-shaped cookie cutter and spread with non-dairy cream cheese. Add eyes and a mouth from cut black olives.

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Once we’re into November, consider a turkey version. We spread with red-pepper hummus again, and used bell pepper pieces for tail feathers and a beak.

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Happy snacking!

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Easy Pinecone Wreath

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We’ve had a kindness wreath up on our door for over a year now – a project that we loved, but the time now feels right for a change. We used fall nature finds to craft this easy wreath on a store-bought twig frame.

As the title of this post suggests, you’ll need pinecones of course, but feel free to add other treasures that your children bring in from nature. We added some beautiful fall foliage!

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You can use ribbons to attach the pinecones, but I worried this wouldn’t be strong enough. Instead, we wrapped floral wire around each pinecone – Travis loved this new material (under adult supervision, of course).

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I did the wire wrapping, but he selected the perfect spot on the wreath for each pinecone.

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To attach the leaves, we simply tucked in their stems.

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Is there a homemade wreath hanging on your door for this autumn? Please share in the comments!

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Nature Hunt Treasure Stick

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This neat idea from KiwiCo’s website is a great way to bring home treasures from the outside world. Bonus points if you craft it while you’re still out in the woods!

We went for a short walk after a morning of classes, bringing along two Y-shaped sticks that I’ve hoarded just for this purpose.

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As we walked, we gathered anything we deemed a “treasure” – leaves we liked, little flowers, berries, and more.

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Back at the park entrance, we seated ourselves at a picnic table and I showed Travis how to wind yarn (which I’d brought along) around the Y of his stick. Keep wrapping all the way up the Y, then tie the yarn off.

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Now tuck in your treasures!

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Travis and I each made one, reflecting the various things we’d found beautiful along the way.

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A great way to get outside with your little one in these wonderful autumn days.

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Autumn Leaf Jewelry

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We love bringing home items from nature to make into all kinds of crafts, but the problem is that many of these are fleeting in nature (leaves that dry out, flowers that wilt). This activity captures the beauty of autumn, but it won’t fade, thanks to the use of fake leaves. You’ll find these readily at craft stores this time of year.

Originally we planned to make leaf necklaces as a gift for grandma, but I didn’t have a lacing string that was long enough. It was simpler to turn thread onto pipe cleaners instead, resulting in pretty autumn bracelets.

Travis alternated stringing on pony beads and a few of the leaves for an autumnal touch

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(Note: Grown-ups can make holes in the leaves either with a hole punch if they are thin or – on our case – with an Xacto knife to cut a slit if they are thick).

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Once each pipe cleaner was filled, I looped the ends together. A great gift for anyone with a fall birthday!

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Acorn Owls

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It’s autumn, and for us that means the best time of year for nature walks. Some of the supplies we bring home are perfect to play with together, crafting into games or animals. But this one was more of a grown-up project that I put together for Travis, involving very fine fingerwork. He loved playing with the resulting toy! Bigger kids can, of course, help make the “owls” as well.

The longer and taller an acorn you can find for this project the better, and you’ll also want acorns without the caps. My acorns actually weren’t ideal, but I worked with what I had after a pretty stroll.

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Cut out tiny owl features from various colors of felt. We had pink wings and yellow beaks. If I had been patient enough, I would have cut small felt eyes, but instead used a sharpie for this final step.

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Glue on the details, and let dry completely. You can also cut out a felt tree or branch for the owls to hang out on. Travis delighted in these little creatures.

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Perhaps next time we’ll turn our acorns into different animals – what would you suggest? Please share in the comments!

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Leaf Drawings

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A recent nature walk yielded up the first of fall’s changing leaves, and we knew we had to make art with them when we got home!

My original title for this post was going to be “leaf butterflies”, since when I saw all the pretty leaves, I immediately thought of little butterfly and bug wings. Travis had plans of his own, hence the more generic title of “leaf drawings.” Read on!

For the original butterfly idea, I drew a few bug bodies in crayon, and Travis helped select which leaves would be their wings.

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Liberal application with a glue stick was all we needed to attach “wings” and googly eyes to each critter.

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But Travis wanted to make his own picture with the remaining leaves, and began gluing and coloring.

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“It’s you and me in a leaf pile!” he explained proudly, showing me his first one. A second “leaf pile” work of art soon followed.

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What other drawings would you make featuring leaves from a nature walk? Please share in the comments!

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Apple Prints

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It’s officially fall, and that means it’s time for apple picking! Apple prints are an activity that never grows old, whether you’ve plucked your apples fresh from the tree or pick them up at the farmers’ market on a crisp autumn morning.

That’s exactly where Travis and I headed today. We set aside most of our bounty to eat, but saved an apple or two for artwork, thanks to the prompt in our latest Ranger Rick Jr.

Cut one apple in half, to make large prints. Cut a second apple into wedges. Dab the cut sides of the apples dry with a paper towel.

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Squirt paints onto a paper plate (or a piece of foil works, in a pinch). Dip the apples in paint, and press down on construction paper or watercolor paper.

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We didn’t make a flower like the magazine suggested, but it was fun to have two different shapes to work with. Travis said his picture was footprints – perhaps a dinosaur?

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We decided mommy’s print looked like some sort of buzzing insect.

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What will you make with your apple art? Happy fall!

Leaf-Shaped Crayons

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Back-to-school plus a drop in the temperature around here has us thinking about all things fall, even though it’s not quite autumn yet. Making leaf-shaped crayons was the perfect way to kick off the season!

First, we dumped out all of our crayons and I asked Travis to help me select the ones in fall colors – browns, oranges, yellows, and reds. This was a nice reminder for him of the upcoming season and what we can expect to see on the trees.

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Grown-up step: peel the paper from the crayons. (Note: making a slit with an X-acto knife first helps).

Travis was a big fan of helping to snap the crayons into small pieces!

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We filled a leaf-shaped silicone mold (available at craft stores or Amazon) with the small pieces.

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Place in the oven at 300 degrees for 15 to 20 minutes, until the crayons are completely melted. It will help to place your silicone mold in a larger baking dish, so you can easily remove from the oven.

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Let cool completely, then pop the crayons from the mold and get drawing!

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Fall Bucket List Part II

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Back in September, Travis and I set the goal of a Fall Bucket List of items to enjoy in the 90 days between the first of autumn and the first of winter. Below is our journey through all 23 items. If you followed along with your own bucket list, I’d love to hear about it in the comments!

9/29 – Visit a Sculpture Garden

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We made this our first stop, exploring the grounds of a local museum that houses a wonderful sculpture scavenger hunt for children. Travis was delighted he could finish rhymes like that/hat and known/stone to find each sculpture along the way. We explored materials, emotions, shapes and more in the works of art that we found. It was a beautiful 70 degree day with no real change to the leaves yet, so definitely still early autumn.

10/1 – Make a Scarecrow from Daddy’s Clothes

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It was a crisp fall morning that turned into a beautiful sunny afternoon, so we checked our way through a whole bunch on our Bucket List this day. To start, we stuffed daddy’s shirt and shorts with newspaper for a scarecrow in anticipation of…

10/1 – Go to a Pumpkin Patch

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….heading to a local farm to pick pumpkins! Travis was so proud helping to select four pumpkins, one of which was perfect for finishing off that scarecrow as the head. We set the other three aside for decorating later on…

10/1 – Go on a Hay Ride

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The pumpkin farm also included a hay ride, one of the first we encountered over the season whose name I would dispute slightly. This one was a flatbed pulled by a tractor, with a line of hay down the middle. We later rode on one billed as a “hay ride” that was merely a covered wagon pulled by a tractor, not a hay bale in sight! Ah well, the hay ride counted as an experience, and we checked it off on our list.

10/1 – Corn Maze

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We finished off our pumpkin patch day with a walk through the corn maze, Travis proudly pointing the way at each intersection. Talk about tricky; I followed along on the map, and when I thought we were in the middle of the maze, it turns out we were right back where we had started!

10/4 – Drink Fancy Coffee Drinks

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The weather was staying unseasonably warm, but that didn’t stop us (er, Mom and Dad) from craving cozy coffee drinks. I use the term coffee loosely here, since you’ll want a seasonal drink for your child with no caffeine. I had hoped to treat Travis to a pumpkin-flavored steamed milk, but upon learning that the pumpkin mix is not vegan, we settled for an almond milk vanilla steamer. His first ever Starbucks drink!

10/7 – Apple Picking

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Apple picking day! Travis loved filling up a bag with plump Jonagolds at a farm that included another hay ride (“hay ride”) and a big red barn selling roasted corn and other fall treats. What did we do with all those apples? We ate apple crisp (simply use olive oil in place of butter to make the recipe vegan), applesauce, and enjoyed lots of apples out of hand just for snacking.

10/12 – Paint Faces on Acorns

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This suggestion was cute and quirky, and as luck would have it, a walk in the woods resulted in acorns of varying sizes so we could make a “family.” Travis loved figuring out which acorn was the daddy, mommy, brother, and baby, and then decided we needed to dress them with paint. He had so much fun picking out the colors – a blue shirt and pink “hat” for the daddy and so on. Painting tiny faces was a challenge for his fine motor skills, but to my surprise he insisted on being part of it.

10/13 – Watch Youth Soccer Game

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This was unexpectedly my very favorite item on the list, as it wasn’t something I would have thought to do. On a random afternoon, Travis and I headed to the local high school to cheer on the team despite knowing none of the players. Travis proudly sipped apple cider and loved watching the referees blow their whistles. Plus it felt good to have some hometown pride!

10/14 – Have a Popcorn Party

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I originally had grand plans when I put this on our Bucket List, envisioning an event where we might invite over family and friends, ask guests to bring a favorite popcorn recipe, string up popcorn garlands, and make popcorn balls. Our weekends filled up fast though, so we checked this one off our list in much simpler, quieter fashion; on a dreary Saturday afternoon, we made it movie-and-popcorn-party-day just for the family. This meant Travis got to select a film to rent, and I whipped up the easiest fall-spiced popcorn ever: Sprinkle a bag of popped plain popcorn with salt and pumpkin pie spice, then toss to coat.

10/17 – Winter Prep! Buy Coats and Boots

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This first truly chilly day, midway through the season, reminded us to get to the winter prep item on our list! Travis was so proud helping to pick out his new coat and mittens. The mittens were such a hit that he insisted on wearing them right away, even though it wasn’t quite that cold. It felt nice to be prepared and ahead of the game… But I was also happy to hang up the heavy new coat and get back to enjoying the fall!

10/18 – Make Fall Placemats

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The leaves were slow to change this year, giving us more muted yellows than vibrant oranges and shocking reds. But we still collected leaves on our walks, which allowed us to make these placemats. Simply arrange leaves between two sheets of wax paper, then iron to seal.

10/19 – Make Leaf Art

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Leaf rubbing never grows old, the magic of watching bumpy veins appear through paper with a crayon. For more complicated leaf art, we turned some of the leaves into “leaf glitter,” made big pools of glue, and sprinkled on this “confetti.”

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10/19 – Nature Walk with Camera

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After that busy morning of leaf art, we headed off on another nature walk, this one an assignment from Travis’s nursery school teacher! (Yup, I’m the dorky mom who loves homework). This time we brought along the instant camera. Travis loved taking snaps of our favorite finds, including bugs, leaves, spider webs, and more.

10/26 – Make Fall Cookies

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We went a long stretch without bucket listing, thanks to a weekend away and a busy school week. But after school we decided it was time to get back in the swing of things with fall cookies. We decided our fall cookies had to have pumpkin in them, but if other fall flavors are your thing, consider sugar cookies cut with a leaf-shaped cutter, or maple cookies, or whatever else says fall to you!

10/27 – Carve a Pumpkin

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The big moment finally arrived: Pumpkin carving day! Travis and I have decorated pumpkins before, but this was the first year we got in there with a carving knife, and man oh man did he love it. I remember that fascination when pumpkin’s stem lines up with the jagged top of a jack-o-lantern like a puzzle piece. And the joy of scooping pumpkin guts. And the glee of seeing the lit up face once a candle (aka battery-powered tea light) is inside. In sum, all the spooky magic of Halloween.

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10/29 – Make Caramel Apples

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Well, here’s the one thing on the list we didn’t truly accomplish; after two failed attempts at making caramel, I had to accept that this one wasn’t in the cards, due to a faulty old thermometer which wasn’t reading the temperature of my caramel correctly. So we coated our apples in a sticky glaze, but the result wasn’t what we hoped for. Next year!

10/31 – Trick-or-Treat

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No explanation needed! Travis was a NAVY Leap Frog parachuter, and loved every minute. His favorite candy this year? Twizzlers!

11/4 – Photo Shoot in a Leaf Pile

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We were into November, and winding down our Bucket List. By now the leaves were really on the ground, so it was leaf pile time! We don’t have trees around our apartment property, but that didn’t stop us from filling a large trash bag in the local park, bringing it home, and creating a leaf pile off our patio!

11/11 – Make Pomander Balls

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I intended to save this drop in our Bucket for a Thanksgiving decoration, but Travis asked for it one morning while we were tucked in from an early arctic blast. This simple pomander uses large citrus (we used grapefruit), cloves, and ribbon. Travis loved the materials involved, happily turning the clove spice can into a musical shaker while I prepped the grapefruit: Draw lines in any pattern that you want using a washable marker. Use a toothpick to make holes evenly spaced along the lines, then wash your citrus to remove the marker. Insert a clove into each toothpick hole you’ve made. Cut a length of ribbon and wrap up the citrus as you would a present. For a lovely touch, knot a cinnamon stick at the top.

11/12 – Write Name in Leaves

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It never hurts to throw a little learning into the fall fun. Name recognition is a key skill for preschoolers, so with leaves from (yet another!) fall walk in the woods, I spelled out T-r-a-v-i-s on a large piece of contact paper. Fold the paper over to seal the leaves between the sticky sheets, and your child has a beautiful poster with their name!

11/20 – Walk Around Town and Get Cocoa

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By now we were in late fall (that winter coat has come out of the closet!) and checking off the final items on our list. Town was already brimming with Christmas decorations which made it the perfect time to check out the décor. Travis was gleeful to spot reindeer in one shop window, and loved cupping his hands around his warm cocoa.

11/22 – Bake a Pie

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Just in time for Thanksgiving, we put the final check mark on our Bucket List, baking a fresh pumpkin pie for Thanksgiving. My little helper had way more fun nibbling on extra ginger cookies for the crust than he did in stirring together the ingredients, though!

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Even though there’s technically a full month of autumn left on the calendar, it felt appropriate to end our Fall Bucket List here. As soon as Thanksgiving ends, we’ll no doubt turn out attention to winter-y Christmas fun. Which reminds me, perhaps we’ll need an advent Bucket List to take us through December…

Thanks for coming on the journey with us!

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Fall Leaf Votive

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In addition to our Felt Fruit, here’s another possible adornment for your Thanksgiving table this Thursday. It’s a lovely twist on the Halloween Luminaries we lit up in October, this time putting a leafy autumnal twist on the same idea!

First, head outdoors and collect a few (relatively small) fresh leaves. Try to find a variety of shapes and colors, for the best effect.

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Coat a glass jar with a layer of mod podge, then have your child arrange the leaves in whatever pattern they like. Set aside to dry overnight.

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Travis’s favorite part of the project was applying a second layer of mod podge the next morning, to ensure that no edges of the leaves pop up.

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He thought dabbing a gluey paintbrush over the leaves was great fun, much more so than when we just put the glue on the clear jar!

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If you like, you can add pieces of tissue paper to fill in the blank space between leaves, but we left ours clear.

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Insert a tea light, and light up your Thanksgiving celebration!

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Note: As a bonus, this votive will look lovely lit up for a long time to come. Consider it for a nightlight in your child’s room, or just a pretty decoration after dark.

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