Cheerios are one of those things I always buy too many of before an activity, and by the end of the night realise that I'm about to leave with quite a few boxes of them.
So here are 5 things to do with the left overs.
1) Bird Feeders
Needed
Pipe Cleaners
Simply thread the cheerios on to the pipe cleaner. Make sure the girls leave a small amount at either side, and then twist them together to create a hoop.
This is quite a good activity if you have time that needs filling as well, because the kids can interlink as many hoops as they like by simply making another, and placing it through the previous one before twisting the ends together.
I have seen versions of this where the initial feeder has been shaped into a heart. However, it just seemed to over complicate an activity that was simple, easy to focus on and fun to put together. Less was more in this case.
2) Starfish
Needed
Cardboard
PVA
Because of the young age of the kids, I cut out the star shapes before the activity began. However, the older the kids are the more capable they are of drawing around a stencil and cutting it out themselves.
I then told them to squeeze as many cheerios onto the shape using a scary amount of PVA glue.
I explained that it was to replicate the texture of the starfish, and showed the girls various pictures.
As a warning - by putting as many on as possible, with a lot of glue, it does take a while to dry out. If you only have an hour or so, make sure the kids leave carrying the star flat. Also, do not use straight card, because it becomes too loose and wet with a lot of PVA. Cardboard is a necessity.
3) Owls
Needed
Cardboard
PVA
Eyes
Crayons/Pens
This is another craft based on replicating a 3D texture. In this case the texture on an owl's chest. Cut from cardboard. As with the starfish, these owl shapes can be given to the girls cut and ready to go, or can be prepared by the kids themselves.
With the starfish the instruction was to get as many on as possible without leaving any space, whereas here the idea was to make any pattern that they wanted. For some it was lines of cheerios, some made circles, wobbly lines, faces. It was a case of 'whatever you want to put on an owls chest'.
The girls could then stick eyes on, or colour the rest of the owl in. Of course you could get the tissue paper out and suggest the kids use that on the rest of the owl. Whatever you have in the cupboard really!
Also, a tip that you can see from this photo. Rather than cleaning glue spreaders every week, you can use lolly sticks to spread the glue. This way the kids can't collect massive amounts of PVA on a glue spreader. There is no arguing over 'this was my spreader', and they can go straight in the bin after.
4) Coloured Cheerios
Needed
Paint
PVA
Card
Cheerios are very thick and so easy to stain.
For the above Rainbow activity, the colours had to be red, yellow and blue, and so I got them ready before hand. I placed a little bit of the colour paint in a sandwich bag with some cheerios and shook it until everything was covered. I left them to dry in the bags, and ended up with lots of red, yellow and blue cheerios.
Because there wasn't going to be as many cheerios or as much PVA it was fine to use general card for the background.
5) Stained
Needed
Sharpies/Felt Tip Pens
Kids can paint or stain the cheerios themselves. As a Christmas craft the cheerios were used as baubles. The girls used sharpies to stain them whatever colour they wanted once the glue had dried.
Have fun, and get messy!