Family Nature Activities: Making Plant Biomes

Making Nature Biomes

A family nature activity that minecraft loving kids will love, bringing rainforest, desert and woodland biomes to life on their windowsill. 

Creative  ·   Child-led  ·  Horticulture

Hands on minecraft-style nature fun.  

Along with the rest of the world, we've spent a lot of time playing minecraft. Little Leopard is working on several zoos and biomes that at some point he'd love to share. 

I saw some free large ikea glass jars on facebook near us, and my mind whired into gear. How lovely would it be to try bringing those biomes to live on our windowsills. 

Little Leopard jumped at the chance, he said he'd love to do a rainforest, desert and woodland biome so I got busy figuring out what I'd need to source, what we already had, and what we could sustainably forage from the local area. 

The first thing was the containers. We picked up 2 Ikea jars for free, and then I asked my mum if we could have the old fish tank that's been sitting unused in her garage. (It's over 30 years old). 

It's not the perfect way to do it, but we're not professionals, and I didn't want to buy a load of different substrate layers, so I ordered: 

· one bag of agricultural sand   · one bag of peat free potting soil   · one bag of aquarium gravel.  

WOODLAND BIOME

Little Leopard was keen to use the tank as the woodland biome and convert it into a temporary home to observe snails and other minibeasts. So I cut out a section from the top and securely taped insect mesh onto it so that nothing unwanted can get in or out. 

Woodland biome substrate layers:

4cm layer of stones followed by alternating layers of soil and sand. 

We then gathered stones, moss, sticks from our local area, making sure to gather plant life from verges and cracks in pavements to minimise disruption to wildlife.

Once it was set up, we watered it, threw in a few seeds from our collection we already have. It's making a wonderful low-key experimentation, observation tank. Some of the seeds have grown. It was pretty magical when fungus started growing on the branches. 

We put a couple of snails in the tank temporarily to observe their behaviour. Little Leopard loved collecting broken egg shells we found on the ground and putting those in the tank. (Snails need egg shells to make their own shells). 

 

DESERT BIOME

We used one of the Ikea jars that we'd picked up from facebook, putting it on it's side. 

Desert biome sustrate layers:

 3cm of stones followed by 3cm sand, then 4cm of 1:1 sand and soil mix. 

We planted a cactus, and succulents, and gave it a light water. It now enjoys living in a sunny spot, with the lid off, and a bit of water every now and then (when we remember).

 

RAINFOREST BIOME

Little Leopard used his christmas money to buy some plants at a local garden centre, this seemed like a great place for some of them to live, including the fittonia. 

Rainforest biome substrate layers: 

3cm layer of stones, 1cm agricultural sand, 7cm potting soil.

We lightly misted it, closed the jar lid and have left it on the windowsill ever since. It's a great activity for learning about the water cycle, watching it mist up, and then the water clear away again. It's also lovely to see all the roots creeping down the soil and into the stones, from the side of the glass. Something that we can't see when they're hidden away in plant pots. 

Your Next Activity

If you found this fun, why not try one of our other nature activities

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