Friday, July 26, 2024

Beach Terrariums - Family Program

 

Beach terrarium

I was looking for a family craft that loosely fit the "Ocean Adventure" theme for our last week of summer reading, which had the overall CLSP theme of "Adventure Begins In Your Library", and somehow the idea of a beach-themed terrarium popped into my head, though it took me a little bit to figure out exactly how it was going to work.

Ages: Family, all-ages

Budget: About $3.75 per terrarium. This was one of my more pricey programs, but I also had some really inexpensive ones, so it evened out.

Time: This was one of the faster programs, taking only 40 minutes or so (which made up for my treasure hunt program the week before involving secret codes and hidden messages that ran WAY over, at an hour and a half!)

Materials:

  • terrariums - I got spherical plastic ones about 4" in diameter from DollarTree for $1.25 each, larger and cheaper than what I could find elsewhere, total of 34
  • air plants - $55 for 50 plants, Amazon (there are many different options available). I bought more than I needed because it would have been the almost the same price for fewer, and I figured some would die in transit (only 2 did), soaked in water for 30 minutes the day before the program
  • resin figures - packs of 3 for $1.25 at DollarTree, assorted (sandcastles, bucket of sand, coral, flip-flops, lighthouses, shells, starfish), 12 packs.
  • tiny shells & starfish - $12 on Amazon, came with 50 starfish and a jar of 800 shells
  • larger shells - these were from my personal collection from a long-ago vacation
  • sand - we already had play sand that I use for the sensory bin that I got from Lowe's for $5/50lbs
  • glue - from our stock supplies
  • craft sticks - from stock supplies
  • paper bowls - from stock supplies
  • small dixie cups - from stock supplies
  • measuring cup
  • forceps - left over from previous owl pellet dissection program
  • air plant care sheet
    (I ended up with about a dozen plants, 3 resin figures, about 12 starfish, and maybe 2-3 tablespoons of the tiny shells leftover)
How-To:
  1. I had them pick up the following supplies as they came in: terrarium, paper bowl, craft stick, forceps, dixie cup with 1/2-1 Tablespoon of small shells, and a few of the larger shells if they wanted. Glue and a small amount of dry sand were placed at each table.
  2. Next, I called them up a few tables at a time to get sand in their bowls, roughly 1/4 Cup.
  3. Add about 1/2 Tablespoon white glue to sand, and mix until it comes together, adding more glue if needed (this is to prevent the dumping of loose sand in the car or home; you could also use kinetic sand if you want to spend a lot more or have a small group).
  4. Press sand & glue mixture into bottom of terrarium, sprinkle just a little dry sand on top, and arrange shells as desired.
  5. While they were completing step 4 I went around and had them pick one resin figure out of a bowl without looking, to be fair, and they added the figures to their terrariums.
  6. Then they selected their air plants (there were a few different types) and added them to their terrarium, being careful to just set them on top of the sand, not pushing them into the sand.
  7. And for the final touch, I went around the room and gave everyone a tiny starfish to add.
Beach terrarium

How It Went:

This was a super popular program! So popular that I had to turn away 3-4 families due to all the terrariums being taken, which I really felt bad about, but I had purchased all I could find at all 3 stores in my area (not available online). I've never had this many show up for a craft program before! I had included "while supplies last, first come-first served" in my description (registration just doesn't work for us) and those I had to turn away at least seemed understanding. There was one other hiccup; UPS lost the package of air plants for several days, but they miraculously turned up the day before the program with only 2 dead out of 50 plants.

Other than that, it went really well, and those attending really seemed to like it. It was so popular, I will definitely do some other version of a terrarium program again in the future!

beach terrarium


6 comments:

  1. Hello I love this idea! I am the library director and youth/adult programmer of Lyndon Carnegie Library. I was wondering if you could email me these instructions to greynolds@lyndonlibrary.org or if I have permission to copy this so I can do it at my library? My tweens would love this. Genea Reynolds

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Copy away! That's why I share things :) You'll probably need to tweak them to fit exactly what you're doing anyway. Air plant care instructions are given in the Amazon listing that I linked to. Have fun with it!

      Delete
  2. Super fun! You do such cool things!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, I try! It's getting harder and harder to come up with new ideas, though. I just don't seem to have the creative energy I used to have.

      Delete
  3. Wow, this looks so fun!! I wonder if you could do something like this with repurposed glass jars or plastic bottles or something like that? We're always watching budgets, so I'm always trying to find ways to cut every penny I can, haha. We're the same with registration not working well, too - I had to do registration for a program recently because we only have so many iPads, and it was so frustrating how many people just didn't show up - I get that life is unpredictable, but we do ask that people at least call and let us know, so we can move folks from the wait list! Grrrrrr sigh haha.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I prefer to avoid glass when doing kids programs, but I'm sure there are ways to repurpose plastic bottles or jugs, and somebody has probably done it before.

      Delete