Mum's Mail Durban - April 2020

Page 44

Make a Butterfly Feeder Butterflies are very like children. They are both more than happy just eating sugar!

H

owever, unlike children, butterflies can do this without running around like maniacs afterwards and feeling slightly ill. So, why not use some sugar to set up a butterfly feeder in your garden and watch to see which butterflies visit? You will need: Water, sugar, pan, jar with lid, acrylic pens/ paints, string or twine, hammer and nail, and a sponge or cotton wool. First, ask a grown-up to make you some sugar water. This is done by dissolving one tablespoon of sugar in nine tablespoons of water by heating it in a pan. While that cools down, you can construct the feeder. Take a small jar and decorate it with brightly coloured flowers. You could tape on paper shapes, but it will last longer if you painted them on with acrylic paint or acrylic paint pens. Next, take your string or twine and cut four lengths at least three times longer than the jar itself. Take each piece and, making sure you have an equal length either side, tie it around the neck of the jar, finishing in a knot. Do the same with the next piece, this time making sure the knot is on the opposite side. The final two pieces should end with the knots halfway between the other two so that all four knots are equally spaced. Now turn the jar upside down before taking a piece of string from each of the two adjacent knots and tying them together about 3cm up the string. Do this with all the other pieces until you can see a net pattern forming. Repeat this with the second layer of knots and continue until you reach the top of the jar. You will need to add a hole to the jar lid. You can do this by hammering thorough a nail (which is best done by a grown-up). Next, take your small piece of sponge or

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cotton wool and thread it through the hole so some is poking out both sides. It should be a snug fit so that the water soaks the sponge but doesn’t drip off (you can experiment until you get it right). Finally, fill the jar with the sugar water, put on the lid and use the string, bunched together, to hang it somewhere in the garden where the butterflies can see it – a sunny spot is best. Source: 101 Things for Kids to Do outside by Dawn Isaac.


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Old School Party Games

6min
pages 49-52

Easter Egg Slices

1min
page 48

Four Seasons Tree Craft

1min
page 43

The Importance of Playing With Your Child

2min
page 40

Plant a Mobile Herb Garden

1min
page 41

Make a Butterfly Feeder

2min
page 44

Easy Recipes for Kids

1min
page 35

Building a Routine for your Kids During COVID-19

2min
page 32

Dr Megan @ Home Health Awareness Month

3min
pages 24-25

What to do if you Suspect you have COVID-19

3min
pages 28-29

MRP Sport’s Self-Isolation Active Inspiration

5min
pages 37-39

Integrative, Holistic and Drugfree Therapies

2min
page 34

Science Experiment: The Life of a Flame

1min
page 36

Giant Bubbles

2min
page 33

Meet the Cover Stars

2min
page 6

Gardening with Your Kids

2min
pages 18-19

Lockdown Comfort Food

1min
page 9

Weight Loss Tips

3min
pages 22-23

Cakes by Eva

2min
pages 16-17

Uplifting and Empowering

2min
page 8

Top 8 Reasons to Adopt from an Animal Shelter

6min
pages 11-13

World Autism Awareness Day

3min
pages 20-21
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