The Frog
by Hilaire Belloc
Be kind and tender to the Frog,
And do not call him names,
As "Slimy-skin," or "Pollywog,"
Or likewise "Uncle James,"
Or "Gape'a'grin," or "Toad'gone'wrong,"
Or "Billy -Bandy Knees":
The frog is justly sensitive
To epithets like these.
No animal will more repay
A treatment kind and fair,
At least so lonely people say
Who keep a frog (and by the way,
They are extremely rare) .
Showing posts with label frog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label frog. Show all posts
Sunday, July 21, 2024
The Frog
Saturday, February 12, 2022
A handy little frog craft...
The only supplies you will need for this craft is: green, white yellow, and red construction paper, scissors, white school glue and a young person's hand to trace around.
If you are working with students younger than five or six, the craft may be easier to accomplish with green paint and a hand print. But, as you students age, it is more of a challenge for them to trace around his or her hand and cut the shape out with scissors.
Cut three circle shapes for the eye balls: two from green paper and one from yellow. Then cut the yellow circle in half and glue the two halves to the lower halves of the green circles. This will make your green frog friend look sleepy...
Cut a larger green oval from construction paper for the frogs mouth. Use a green crayon to make the lips look puffy! Then cut a long red tongue from paper and curl it around your crayon. Uncurl it and glue one tip between the frog's puffy lips.
Now you can choose to mount this silly looking frog to a bulletin board, or a paper pond scene.
If you are working with students younger than five or six, the craft may be easier to accomplish with green paint and a hand print. But, as you students age, it is more of a challenge for them to trace around his or her hand and cut the shape out with scissors.
Cut three circle shapes for the eye balls: two from green paper and one from yellow. Then cut the yellow circle in half and glue the two halves to the lower halves of the green circles. This will make your green frog friend look sleepy...
Cut a larger green oval from construction paper for the frogs mouth. Use a green crayon to make the lips look puffy! Then cut a long red tongue from paper and curl it around your crayon. Uncurl it and glue one tip between the frog's puffy lips.
Now you can choose to mount this silly looking frog to a bulletin board, or a paper pond scene.
More Handy Frog Crafts:
Thursday, July 30, 2020
Frog: 14 Fun Facts
A variety of frogs from a 1892 print. |
A frog a small, tailless animal, belonging to the same class as toads, newts and salamanders.
14 Fun Facts About Frogs:
- These creatures, the amphibians (which see), start life as water animals, and in a mature state can live both on land and in water.
- Frogs differ from toads in having teeth and in possessing a less bulky body than their near kin (see Toad).
- Frogs are common in all parts of the world except Australia and South America.
- There are many species, and they inhabit widely different regions, but usually prefer swampy places and the shores of lakes and streams.
- The young frog, which is known as the tadpole, bears no resemblance to the parent.
- It has neither mouth nor limbs, but has branching gills and a long tail, with which it swims about.
- Its body looks like a roundish lump of dark jelly.
- But soon the mouth develops, the gills disappear and. as the days go on, the hind legs appear.
- The fore legs follow, the tail is gradually absorbed and thus the animal changes into the frog.
- It is an interesting transformation which any person may observe, if he will keep a few of the tadpoles where he can see them daily.
- The mature frogs breathe by lungs and cannot live in water without coming to the surface for air.
- They swim with great rapidity and move by long leaps, being able to jump many times their own length.
- In the tadpole stage, frogs live chiefly on vegetable matter, but the mature frog lives on insects, slugs, snails and the like.
- The flesh, especially that of the hind legs of certain species, is considered very choice food, and in France, particularly, frogs are bred for the market in large numbers.
More About Frogs From The Web:
Sunday, July 19, 2020
Whose Eyes Are These?
Teachers or parents may print out the animal eye chart to quiz their kids about whose eyes are these. Here are the answers:
- Eye of Solitary Frog
- "stalk eye" of Crab
- Eye of the Toad
- Whirligig Beetle Eyes
- The Chameleon's Eye
- Eyes of the Snail on Stalks
- Cat's Eye
- Moth's Eye
- Eye of A Dog
- Spider Eyes
- Eagle's Eye
- Grasshopper's Eye
- Sheep's Eye
- Eye of the Fly
- The Cow's Eye
Take the Nature Check Animal Eye Quiz!
and visit them to play more animal games.
Labels:
chameleon,
clip art for the classroom,
fly,
frog,
locust or grasshopper,
moth,
puzzles and games,
snail,
spider
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)