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Home > About us > Press room > Spring Preschool programs
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE (RIDGELY, MD—MARCH 3, 2008)
ADKINS ARBORETUM ANNOUNCES SPRING PRESCHOOL PROGRAMS
Adkins Arboretum will again offer its popular programs for three- to five-year-olds this spring. Classes are offered as a series of six programs and are available in Monday or Tuesday sessions.
Pre-registration is required for preschool programs. The fee is $45 for members, $55 for the general public for all six classes in the series. Each class includes a snack and a craft. Enrollment is limited, so early registration is recommended. For further information or to register, call 410-634-2847, extension 0. Programs begin promptly at 10 a.m.
Programs include:
Wetland Magic
April 14 and 15
It’s tadpole time again! Let’s take a closer look at tadpole habitat by examining the types of plants that grow in the wetland. We’ll use nets, buckets and binoculars to dig in and explore the world of the tadpole. Back in the classroom, we’ll make a frog craft and read wetland stories.
Stinky Skunk Cabbage
April 21, 22
What’s spring without skunk cabbage? Take the time to appreciate this springtime power plant on a meandering stream walk. We’ll learn interesting skunk cabbage lore, talk about the animal for which skunk cabbage is named, and make skunk cabbage chlorophyll prints. Don’t turn up your nose just yet: the morning snack will be skunk free.
Sunflower Power
April 28, 29
Help plant the Arboretum’s annual sunflower house in our children’s garden and take home your own sunflower seedling in a flowerpot that you decorate yourself. We’ll return to the classroom to learn about the grand sunflower, munch on sunflower seeds, and read garden books. Plan on returning to the Arboretum in the summer: the sunflower house will tower above your head!
May Day
May 5, 6
Search for lady slipper flowers in the woods after a lesson on these native orchid beauties. We’ll make a bouquet of paper flowers to take home and celebrate May Day with forest stories and fancy flower cookies.
Wonderful Woodpeckers
May 12, 13
Who’s that tap-tapping away in the forest? Learn about native woodpeckers, sing a woodpecker song, and take a walk to a woodpecker hangout. Back in the classroom, we’ll make milkweed pod birds, read a beak book, and eat birdseed snacks.
Creature Camouflage
May 19, 20
How do animals and insects protect themselves from predators? The answer might be hard to spot: camouflage! Look at beautiful pictures of how creatures use camouflage and make your own camouflage nature picture with finger paints. On our walk, we’ll break into teams and experiment with camouflage in a woods adventure.
Adkins Arboretum is a 400-acre native garden and preserve at the headwaters of the Tuckahoe Creek in Caroline County. Open year round, the Arboretum offers educational programs for all ages about nature and gardening. Through its Campaign to Build a Green Legacy, the Arboretum will build a new LEED-certified Arboretum Center and entranceway to broaden educational offerings and research initiatives promoting best practices in conservation and land stewardship. For additional information about Arboretum programs, visit www.adkinsarboretum.org or call 410-634-2847, ext. 0.
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