
Talk about a milestone; my five year old is finally brave enough to tilt his head back in the tub and get his face underwater. This was a big step for Travis!
We celebrated the moment with a fun experiment I’d been telling him about for a while, ever since learning about whales with Kiwi Co’s baleen whale crate.
All you need to do is tap two spoons together in order to experiment with how sound travels both above and below water. First we tapped them out in the open air.

Next I tapped them underwater while his head was above water. The sound was quite muffled.

Now he leaned back until his ears were underwater, and he was able to hear the sounds much more clearly. “It also sounds deeper,” he commented, though I can’t say for sure if this was the case since my ears weren’t under there. Either way, he was quite happy to have done the experiment, and I think our little whale spout cover concurred!

The idea here is to illustrate why whale song can travel for hundreds of miles through ocean water; sound travels farther and faster in water than it does in air!







This turned out to be a happy coincidence as the suggested guiding word from 







Then we made a
Finally, we built a sandpaper sandcastle, an activity
It was neat to do this now, with Travis much more in charge of where each piece of his sandcastle went on the paper!
We continued the fun at home by making 

Then snuggle up and talk about how there can be a bond between two people as well!



We also read 
Could we also scatter tissue paper across a tabletop with our breath?
Then head outside and hold up tissue paper into the wind – Travis loved the way it twisted and turned!
For a neat art project, drip a little liquid watercolor onto a piece of paper. Blow through a straw to scatter the watercolor into gorgeous patterns.
We tried to make 
To finish our focus on the word, we made a 