If you search online for winter activities for toddlers, you
will be bombarded with a zillion different “recipes” for fake or artificial snow.
Rose and I are going to go ahead and make several of these over the next
several days and post our findings on which snow is the best snow. Here’s day
one:
Ingredients:
- ½ cup Shampoo
- 3 cup Baking Soda
We made a smaller version of this recipe since we will be
making a lot of snow over the next week. Since the recipe is a simple 1:6
ratio, I began with 6 Tbs of baking soda and eventually added the 1 Tbs of
shampoo later. But first Rose played with the baking soda. This is quickly
becoming her favorite part of almost all of our activities. Whether it be
baking soda, flour, salt, or whatever. I then added the shampoo and helped her
mix it in. It should clump like in the picture below and you should be able to
compress it into a shapes.
Rose then played around in the fake snow, while I made her a
snowman using sprinkles for his face. I apologize for the lovey dovey face the
snowman is giving. Unfortunately, all I had were Valentine’s Day sprinkles.
Rose played with it for a couple minutes but quickly grew bored. That’s when I
pulled the vinegar out. Rose and I melted that poor snowman sucker.
Conclusion:
Pros:
- 2 Ingredients
- Smells lovely. I used coconut smelling shampoo.
- Multiple opportunities to discuss colors, sounds, textures, smells, and maybe even taste with little ones.
- Making it took around 5-10 minutes and playing with it took around 10-15 minutes.
- “Melting” the snowman with vinegar is fun and is probably the best part of the activity.
- Depending on which shampoo you use, the smell may be a bit overkill.
- Rose quickly grew bored with the snow itself. I don’t see this as big of a problem with older kids.
- If you do the vinegar step, you cannot keep and reuse.
Overall Rating: 5 Stars
I have no other fake snow to compare this recipe to yet, but
I’d say that Rose’s overall experience with this activity was great! She
enjoyed playing with the baking soda by itself at the beginning, and then had
fun mixing in the shampoo. She may not have completely understood the concept
of playing with the crumbly snow, but as soon as I brought out the vinegar and
droppers she was back at having fun. The overall activity took around 30
minutes from beginning to end with a quick 10 minute clean up time. So it ate a
good chunk of our afternoon boredom away.
Other Variations:
- I would definitely suggest this activity for a play date. Let each kid make their own batch of snow, then play with it, and finally let them turn it into a goopy sludge.
- Add glitter to the shampoo prior to mixing your two ingredients to make glitter snow.
Thanks for the idea! Simon quickly knocked all of his off of the island. Jude, however, is having a blast with it!
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