To give my son the closest glimpse of a twister that I hope
he’ll ever get, we decided to make our own tornado in a bottle out of two,
2-liter plastic soda bottles. This is a pretty popular science project and
after doing it, we know why: it’s SO cool!
Simply fill one of the bottles two-thirds full with water.
Add food coloring if desired. Place the second, empty bottle upside down atop
the first and apply duct tape liberally to the neck of the bottles. Expect the
bottles to leak some.
Once taped, flip the bottles and swirl them in a circular
motion. Watch the water spiral from the top bottle to the bottom bottle in a
tornado shape. (Even little brother thought this was awesome!)
After we finished, we read Charles and Debra Ghigna’s Step-Into-Reading
fiction book Barn
Storm. In this book, a twister moves farm animals to unexpected new
homes. The cows now sleep in the children’s bedroom at night. Super silly!
Finally, my son watched a short montage of video footage of
tornados on WeatherWizKids.com, the site with the tornado-in-a-bottle
instructions we used.
Our conclusion … tornadoes are cool to make and cool to
watch on video – but NOT so cool to experience.
Love your blog -- adding to the sidebar of mine and following!!!
ReplyDeleteWhat great educational ideas you have! I'm a new follower.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the sweet comment on my "displaying kids' artwork" post!