Bubble Blowing at Art Camp with 30+ Kids
Kids really enjoyed this activity. It was fun to see how big they could get the bubble piles to be. Also, it was fun to see the outcome of the bubble burst!
Directions:
Okay, kudos to Tiny Rotten Peanut for this cool activity.
This is one of those activities that you really are in trial and error mode.
We used liquid watercolor, bubbles, and straws taped together.
Seriously, you just have to add watercolor, bubbles, and try it out.
We had several small cups filled with watercolor and bubbles. (see pics) This really worked great!
We let kids make decisions about the number of straws and the mixing of colors.
This was a very fun activity as you can see by the smiling faces!
Trentan is one cool, bubble-blowing dude! |
Molly Gail's cousins are jelly jealous of her bubble mountain. |
In 1903, Lawrence Welk was born in Strasburg, North Dakota, which now has only approximately 400 people. The family home is now a tourist attraction.
Welk talked his father into buying a mail-order accordion for $400. He promised his father that he would work on the farm until he was 21, in repayment for the accordion. On Welk's 21st birthday, he fulfilled his promise to his Dad. He left the family farm to pursue a career in music, which he loved. In the 1920s, he performed with various bands and started his own orchestra.
So, my point?
Find a way to do what you love and blow a few bubbles along the way.
1965
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