Tree-mendous Themes for the Summer

Three children and an adult sitting on a blanket in a forest making crafts with leaves, pinecones, and paper

“Nature is a volume of which God is the author.”  –  Harvey

Need some fresh ideas to keep the kids or grandkids entertained this summer? When my kids were young, I started a fun summer plan called “Theme Weeks.” The concept is simple – when we had a week free from camps, trips, and VBS, we made our own fun by focusing on a theme.  I used ABCD as our guide.

  • A stands for activities
  • B stands for books
  • C stands for craft
  • D stands for devotional

Here’s an idea of how you could plan out a Nature Theme week.

Day One: Bugging Out

              Activities – Make or buy bug catchers and go on a bug hunt, visit local natural history museum or university, rent a bug movie, chase fireflies in the evening, look at bugs through a magnifying glass.

              Books –  The Grouchy Ladybug, The Very Quiet Cricket both by Eric Carle, Ms. Spider series by David Kirk.

              Crafts – Create your own antennae using a headband and pipe cleaners, make tissue paper butterflies, make and decorate bug catchers using plastic jars and netting.

              Devotional – Consider the Ant,  Proverbs 6:6-11

Day Two: Flower Power

              Activities – visit a garden or nursery or arboretum in the area.  Purchase seeds and plant a small garden or plant flowers in a pot.

              Books – Planting a Rainbow by Lois Ehlert, My Backyard Garden by Carol Lerner

              Craft – Paint and decorate flower pots and visors, make tissue paper flowers, color or water paint pictures of a garden, make ice cream treats with ice cream in clay pots, use chocolate cookie crumbles for the dirt and put a plastic flower on top.  Add a gummy worm for effect!

              Devotional – The Four Soils. Mark 4:1-20

Day Three: Super Skies

              Activities – Visit planetarium, lay down outside and cloud watch talking about the different shapes that you see, star gaze at night, look through a telescope.

              Books – The Cloud Book, by Tomie de Paola, It Couldn’t Just Happen: Fascinating Facts About God’s World by Larry Richards.

              Crafts – Make drawings of both the day sky and the night sky.  Use glitter for stars on the night scene and clouds for the day. 

              Devotional – Creation Genesis 1:14 – 19, The Heavens Declare the Glory of God. Psalm 19

Day Four: Amazing Animals

              Activities –  Visit the zoo, local farm, doggy park, rent or go to movies about animals, dress up like animals using face paint and making ears using felt and headbands.

              Books – Anamalia, by Graeme Base, Animals Born Alive and Well, by Ruth Heller.

              Crafts – Make animals out of clay or foil or recycled items. Bake and decorate animal shaped cookies.  Draw pictures of the zoo and Noah’s Ark.  Put together photo album of animal pictures from magazine or from the zoo.

              Devotional – Creation  Genesis 1:20 – 25, Noah’s ark Genesis 6,7

Day Five:  Tremendous Trees

              Activities – Take a hike through a forest, visit a wooded area and do bark rubbings, collect leaves, plant a tree.

              Books – The Legend of the Three Trees, by Angela Elwell Hunt and Tim Jonke, The Giving Tree, by Shel Silverstein.

              Crafts – Create tree bark rubbings by holding paper on the side of a tree and rubbing with a crayon to get the impression (collect several and compare different barks), draw a forest, make a collage from items collected on your hike, preserve leaves between wax paper or clear contact paper, write a poem about trees.

              Devotional – All of creation sings God’s praises  Psalm 96:11-12

I hope these ideas spark your thinking and give you some fun ideas to make it a memorable summer. Other possible themes include: farm week, prince and princess week, music week, or art week. You get the idea. My purpose in sharing the concept of theme weeks is to encourage you to spend time engaging with your kids or grandkids this summer. Stay tuned for more summer fun in the weeks to come.

Check out my bestseller, The Power of a Positive Mom, for summer reading and additional creative ideas.

Guest Blogger Shelley S. Cramm

Shelly

This week, I’ve invited my friend Shelley S. Cramm to be our guest blogger. I know you will love what she has to share. Shelley is the author of devotions for NIV God’s Word for Gardeners Bible, and has found the Word of God to be completely useful and practical in her everyday life—not to mention delightfully fun! Her background includes work in architectural and garden design, as well as involvement in a local Toastmasters International club, Bible study groups, Moms in Prayer, and Moms of Preschoolers ministries. Inspiration to write a gardener’s Bible grew out of a routine of morning journaling and an enduring hope to finish up the laundry and get out to the garden. Shelley and her husband Topher have five children and live in Irving, Texas. For more information, visit www.gardeninDelight.com.

BLOOMING DESERTS

autumn crocus sq

As a garden writer, my favorite place to embrace and live out Positive Life Principles is in the garden, of course! The methodical pace of garden work seems to open up God’s ministry to my mind and moving forward in life, and God-sent glimpses of Scriptures or memories of Bible stories become my meditation. His Word breaks through mental burdens formed under the pressures of livelihoods or the sufferings of our loved ones to bring God’s hope, solace, and courage to carry on.

For example, recently I retreated to the backyard after our college daughter left for a summer camp job, one that will take her away for the whole season. I was prepared to mourn her loss when she left for freshman year, but now heartache unbalanced me all over again.  Will I be undone with such sadness every summer? We have more children; will all their departures distress me like this? Ugh. What a terrible system, I moaned. I took my protest to the garden (of course), to prepare a new bed for onions, wailing and murmuring at the whole process of life changes, not unlike the Israelites in the Sinai Desert (Numbers 11:4-10).

While gathering the gumption to wrestle the work of turning over soil and mixing in compost (first requiring the overturn of my compost heap—another ugh!), a simpler task caught my attention. I’ll quickly plant my order of autumn crocus bulbs, the flowers that spring up after hot summers in the dry lands of the Bible.

The desert and the parched land will be glad; the wilderness will rejoice and blossom. Like the crocus, it will burst into bloom; it will rejoice greatly and shout for joy. Isaiah 35:1-2 NIV

I hunted for some pots to plant them in, amused through my sorrow as I realized that with my forgetfulness in watering pots, these will soon resemble the parched Promised Land!  A small smile emerged and soon I remembered the joy God’s Word communicates in seeing a lifeless stretch of earth burst into bloom. Thoughts drifted to our daughter and the burst of life she embodies. Filled with dynamic beauty and enthusiasm, she brings energetic gladness wherever she goes. I thought about the families she would meet at camp, greeted by her joy…and in an instant I glimpsed her life’s charge, to bloom deserts! That is, to impart rejoicing into weary hearts. Suddenly I didn’t feel like crying any more. I was gently renewed, my heart built up in the thoughts of flowers soon to blossom and the beauty of our daughter’s budding life. The pots all planted, I left crying in the onion bed for another day.

In this manner, I have come to see my commonplace suburban plot set against the backdrop of the Bible lands; the garden I keep is common ground between my daily life and the epic tales of truth and wisdom in God’s Word, making the choice “to view life through the eyes of hope” an easy one!

Photo Caption: © 2012 Shelley S. Cramm  Autumn crocus planted in pots bring Isaiah’s rejoicing! Isaiah 35:1-2 NIV

A portion of this blog was first published at www.gardenindelight.com/garden-gods-great-garden-stories/ on June 28, 2014.

For more on planting autumn crocus bulbs, see www.gardenindelight.com/plant-guide/autumn-crocus/

For more about her book, click here.