Match the colours to the things found in nature
Answers
Answer:
dhshdhdbdgddhsbsnnzydndg
Answer:
Nature hunts are a great way to engage children to engage in the natural world around them, as well as exploring different textures, colours, shapes and patterns.
Below you can find lots of different nature hunt ideas that you can try out and about on walks or around a garden or park.

We hate to waste anything and recycling and reusing materials is one of many small things we can all do to help the environment. So instead of chucking used cardboard boxes we like to find ways to use them in crafts and activities.
A piece of recycled cardboard makes a great base for a threading and weaving nature hunt board. All you need to do is ask the children to draw or paint simple pictures, shapes or faces onto some cardboard. (Or you could do it for them if they are too little). Then carefully poke a pencil through the cardboard at different points to make holes for the children to poke, thread and weave found natural materials through.

You could use leaves, long grass, plant stems, bark, fallen fruit, nuts, seeds and flowers*. *Pretty please don’t pick any wild flowers, only collect ones you have grown yourself or fallen ones you find on the floor.
We drew a simple flower pot and used flowers from the garden and plant stems to weave poke through and fill and decorate our flower pot with.

We also had fun drawing faces and reusing the flowers and stems to decorate and make their hair with. This is a great activity for developing fine motor skills and stimulating creativity.

Colour matching nature hunts are also good fun. The children can draw or paint circles or patches of colour onto a sheet of paper or card. Then they can then match nature finds to the colours on the sheet. You could use glue, paperclips or strips of double sided on the sheet for them to stick the nature finds onto.

Alternatively you could cut a shape out of recycled cardboard (like a heart or butterfly) to stick your finds too again using tape or glue. You could even paint or colour in your shape before you go to collect your nature finds. We made ours rainbow coloured and then found matching coloured natural items to complete the rainbow.

Its a great way to stimulate conversation and encourage children to think about the colours they find. Can you get a whole rainbow? What colour did you struggle the most to find? Which colour was the easiest to find? Which colour do you like the most?

It’s also a good opportunity to talk about why things are all different colours. For example flowers are brightly coloured to attract pollinators like bees and butterflies, grass and leaves are green because of the chlorophyll in the cells which is busy turning sunlight into food.

Another idea is to paint or draw different patches of colour onto the bottom compartments of an egg box. The children can then collect as many natural objects as they can find to match to the colours of the patches.

plz mark me brainliest