National Library of Australia

School holiday activity: Nature Journalling

As flowers blossom across Canberra, join the National Library of Australia these school holidays to create nature journals!

School Holiday Activities

Event Details

Category

School Holiday Activities

Event Starts

Oct 1, 2024 10:00

Event Ends

Oct 1, 2024 11:00

Venue

National Library of Australia

Location

Parkes Place West, Parkes ACT, Australia

As flowers blossom across Canberra, join the National Library of Australia these school holidays to create nature journals!

Celebrating the release of their new NLA Publishing title, Flora: Australia’s Most Curious Plants, learn amazing facts about Australia’s native flora and explore botanical drawing from the National Library’s collection.

While parents and guardians are welcome to stay and watch, each person who will be participating in this workshop will require a ticket.

This workshop is targeted at children aged 4 to 16 years of age, and bookings are essential. All material will be supplied to help start a nature journal that can be taken home and added to as spring continues.

This activity is also available to book into on:

About Flora: Australia’s Most Curious Plants

When it comes to flora, Australia is a land of diversity. From rainforests to deserts, mountains to the seashore, 90 per cent of our plant life is unique to this ancient land. Treasures like our wattles, eucalypts, grass trees and banksias are part of our heritage and identity—and they still flourish here today, on the oldest landmass on Earth.

Flora celebrates and highlights these diverse and curious plants, looking into the history, quirks and uses of our native plants, and how vital they are for our unique ecosystems. Tania McCartney brings her trademark skill and style in both writing and illustration, using her substantial experience in children’s literature to examine Australia’s botanical riches to pick out engaging, informative and surprising facts to share with young readers.

The book includes spreads on the Gondwana Garden, Deadly Flora, Bush Food, Flora Ancestry and more. Meet the Tasmanian mountain ash, which is both the world’s tallest flowering plant and the tallest hardwood tree, growing more than a metre each year … for up to 400 years! Share in a park ranger’s discovery of a living Jurassic fossil deep in a secret sandstone canyon. Learn how to avoid the most painful plant on earth, the gympie gympie, whose fine little hairs inject a fiery venom that feels like acid and electrocution all at once!

The author introduces readers to hard science too, including information on plant classification, countless cool scientific facts and binomial names and scientific terms, with a handy glossary aimed at children at the back of the book.

Image credit: School holiday activity: Nature Journalling. National Library of Australia.


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