Easter
Egg Hunt
Updated 3/6/08.
By Ann Zeise
A virtual Easter Egg Hunt just for the kids is over for Easter
2008. Come back next year.
I have hidden 26 Easter Eggs throughout the Explorations
4 Kids section of this site. Each one has a clue to the page
that has another egg. There are no eggs in the grown ups' sections
of this site.
Great
Gifts for Your Little Bunnies at Back To Basics Toys! 
The day after Easter all the clues will be on this page, in
case you haven't found all 26 by then.
The eggs look sort of like this:
or this 
I got the graphics from the Easter
Clipart pages on the Graphics Design site. The photo above
is my grandson, Gavin. at 9 months old. His egg doesn't count.
You could use this as a lesson on how to "grab"
clipart from the web as you go around and collect the eggs.
On a Mac, click and hold on the graphic for a few seconds.
A new little window pops up. Select "Download Image to Disk,"
and chose a folder in which to put your eggs. With Windows, I
believe you right click. The popup window may say something slightly
different, but look for a phrase that seems to let you save the
image to your hard drive. Practice on these two eggs here.
If you keep the eggs and decide to use them for your own online
project, do give the Graphics
Design page a reciprocal link.
The eggs will be removed shortly after Easter each year and
replaced a week or two before Easter in years to come.
Here's your
first clue:
Don't rain
on my Easter Parade!
Look through the subject headings in Explorations
4 Kids and take a guess which page might have links about
rain or parades. The last two eggs (#25 and #26) are really hard
to find! They are hidden on links within Explorations' pages
as "extras" on those pages.
Tips
- Keep the Explorations 4
Kids page up and available for use.
- Use the search engine at the top of each page. Put in a keyword
and see if it helps you locate a page with that word in it.
- Use your browser's FIND command to look for keywords.
- Use the Site Index at the top of each page if you are fairly
sure you know the name of the page where the next egg is hidden.
What to do when you've found all the eggs? Have fun with them.
Make some art with some of them. If you want to send me the graphic
you make as a .jpg or .gif file, fine.
Here's a fine Easter
basket for you to copy to your "Paint"-type program.
Copy the eggs you find from my site and paste them into this
basket. Color in the basket with your art program or print and
color offline.
I'm doing this just for fun and really don't want to collect
the email addresses of children. This is really a lesson in web
navigation and how to grab clip art from web sites and put in
an art program. Just have fun with it!
The solutions will be up on this page on the day after Easter,
March 24, 2008. The hunt will be taken down on March 26, until next spring. The page links below are
still interesting, even without eggs on them.
Other Easter
Lessons
Easter
Island
How and why did its inhabitants carve and transport the massive
statues which surround the island? What remains of this culture
today, and what lessons can we learn from their legacy? [Ancient
Hisory]
Five
"Eggs-traordinary" Lesson Plans: Just Add the Eggs!
Looking for a teaching theme with which to welcome spring? We
have "eggs-actly" what you're looking for! Toss eggs
into the curriculum mix. Eggs can be used to teach skills in
math, geography, and science. And don't forget to create "eggs-quisite"
art!
The
gospel on making perfect hard-cooked eggs
Here's how to cook hard-cooked eggs the eggspert (sorry,
we couldn't resist) way.
Naturally
Dyed Easter Eggs - All Fiber Arts
Dyeing Easter eggs and wool using natural dyes found in your
kitchen.
What is an "Easter
Egg"?
The term "Easter Egg", as we use it here, means any
amusing tidbit that creators hid in their creations. They could
be in computer software, movies, music, art, books, or even your
watch. [Creativity]
The
White House Easter Egg Roll
At the first Easter egg hunt at the White House the children
didn't so much collect eggs but when found, they rolled them
around until the lawns were covered with broken eggs. This was
a problem! So the tradition of putting the eggs in baskets was
instituted. [US History]
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