Discovering sticks
Adventure and bushcraft sticks
Make a fire
Cook over a fire
Build a den
Make a DIY tent
Make a staff
Make a stick sword
Make a catapult
Make an ancient spear-thrower and a spear
Make a bow and arrows
Make a pea-shooter
Magic sticks
Make a star wand
Make a wizard's wand
Make scavenging sticks
Make a witch's broomstick
Make a wiggly snake
Make shadow pictures
Make stick characters
Make stick and clay animals
Make a fairy house or an elf castle
Make miniature worlds for toy people and animals
Make hobby animals
Make woodland monsters
Make woodland magic carpets
Make a flying creature
Make fairy and fish sticks
Make wild storyboards
Creative sticks
Draw in mud and sand
Make charcoal pencils
Make a paintbrush
Make a picture frame
Make a woody crown
Make a necklace
Create stick art for a woodland gallery
Choose a stirring stick
Make a nest
Make a dream-catcher
Make a loom for wild weaving
Weave a wild basket
Make stick and paper lanterns
Make natural mobiles and wind chimes
Make a wreath
Decorate a seasonal stick tree with stick stars
Stick games
Throw a stick for a dog
Play pick-up sticks
Make a flying machine
Play capture the flag
Play quoits
Play Aunt Sally
Invent your own stick games
Do the stick tower challenge
Play tracking with sticks
Play the woodland mapping game
Sunny sticks
Navigate with a stick and the sun
Make a sun clock
Measure the radius of the earth
Musical sticks
Make percussion sticks
Make stick rattles
Bushcraft busking with a can guitar
Watery sticks
Play Pooh sticks
Mini raft challenge
Make a pond-dipping net
Make a fishing rod
Measure the depth of a stream
Woodcraft and conservation
Make your own walking/tracking stick
Make a stretcher
Make a mouse trap
Plant a tree
Make a habitat pile
Make a creepy-crawly hotel
Make a bird feeder
Stick stuff
Index
Acknowledgments
Fiona Danks did a degree in Ecology at Edinburgh University
followed by a PGCE in Rural and Environmental Science at Bath
College of Higher Education. She worked in environmental education
for a number of years, first for the Shropshire Wildlife Trust and
then for the Berkshire Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire Wildlife
Trust, organizing training for teachers and taking groups of
children out to nature reserves and other wild sites. She then went
on to write books about the Chiltern Hills and the Cotswold Hills
while working part-time running activities in a pre-school
nursery.
Jo Schofield gained a degree in psychology from Exeter University
and began her career working for an educational psychologist in
London. After getting involved in the production of a film, she
went on to work in the creative department of a TV advertising
agency where she began taking still photographs. This led on to her
becoming a commercial photographer in Australia and then London.
She worked mainly for national editorial magazines such as Country
Living.
'it is the most practical lessons this book can teach a young
outdoors enthusiast (how to build shelters and sun clocks) that
make The Stick Book something special'
When I leafed through the book, I was so enthralled that I
immediately planned a den-building party and picnic for my
daughter's tenth birthday.
This book, which offers over 70 interesting things to make or do
with a stick, will open up a world of creativity: from fashioning a
plain staff to wild weaving or making stick and paper lanterns.
Simplicity and a deep satisfaction go together, as where two sticks
and a piece of string achieve the sophisticated job of measuring
the earth. There are loads of photographs to add
inspiration.
Fed up with your children's demands for the latest electronic
gadgets? Why not give them a stick instead?Delights in this most
universal of playthings… I have been removing sharpened sticks from
under beds all half term.A book bursting with the most brilliant
ideas - you will never have reluctant country-walkers again.These
ideas will help the whole family get more hands-on with nature.A
guide to the ultimate free toys for children...Packed with ideas to
suit the most adventurous and boisterous youngsters and those
who'd rather take their time creating things to take home.This
book, which offers over 70 interesting things to make or do with a
stick, will open up a world of creativity: from fashioning a plain
staff to wild weaving or making stick and paper lanterns.
Simplicity and a deep satisfaction go together, as where two sticks
and a piece of string achieve the sophisticated job of measuring
the earth. There are loads of photographs to add
inspiration. Explores the almost limitless potential for play
offered by sticks. It is an attractively packaged book of 70
activities for children in a handy format for stuffing into a
rucksack or coat pocket. The book teems with colour photographs and
the text is easy to follow.Truly more ideas than you can shake a
stick at!Will open up a world of creativity: from fashioning a
plain staff to wild weaving or making a stick and paper lanterns.
Simplicity abd a deep satisfaction go together as when two sticks
and a piece of string achieve the sophisticated job of measuring
the circumference of the Earth.What are you waiting for? Go
outdoors, grab a stick, have The Stick Book handy, fire up your
imagination and off you go. This is an amazingly different book
bursting with ideas, a unique guide to fun and games, grab yourself
one now!Musical instruments, dens and bush craft are all within
one's grasp, with a stick! (So is poking an eye out so do be
careful.)This book offers masses of suggestions for things to do
with a stick, in the way of adventures and bush craft, creative and
imaginative play, games and more.A book jam-packed full of ideas of
sticky stuff!...a great resource for practitioners.This book might
just get you out of one of those, 'Mammy I'm bored'
situations.Ideal for entertaining all ages.This is an excellent
addition to the authors' other books on outdoor play.A great book
to encourage outdoor play and exploration at very little cost!When
I leafed through the book, I was so enthralled that I immediately
planned a den-building party and picnic for my daughter's tenth
birthday.'it is the most practical lessons this book can teach a
young outdoors enthusiast (how to build shelters and sun clocks)
that make The Stick Book something special'
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