2020 boredom buster

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LAKE COUNTY BOARD OF DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES/ DEEPWOOD Community Recreation Program 2020 BOREDOM BUSTER At Home Activities Keep the fun going with “Busting Boredom” Packet #37 Enclosed are at-home activities for you to do for fun. Share your results with us by: Taking 1 picture of yourself or family member with your favorite page. Post it on social media and tag @DeepwoodLakeDD - #BoredomBuster #EmpowerEngageEnrich. Scan or snap a picture of your favorite page and email it to [email protected] or US Mail the page to: Recreation Department c/o LCBDD/Deepwood, 8121 Deepwood Blvd. Mentor, Ohio 44060. All activity packets received by the Recreation Department will be entered into a drawing to win a surprise visit from Buster and Recreation staff. DROPPING OFF PACKETS IN PERSON IS NOT PERMITTED Boredom Buster packets are located on our website at https://lakebdd.org/community-recreation-program/. If you prefer for the Boredom Buster packet to be emailed or mailed via US mail to you, please contact us at 440-350-5165 or [email protected].

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Page 1: 2020 BOREDOM BUSTER

LAKE COUNTY BOARD OF DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES/

DEEPWOOD

Community Recreation Program

2020 BOREDOM

BUSTER At Home Activities

Keep the fun going with “Busting Boredom” Packet #37

Enclosed are at-home activities for you to do for fun. Share your results with us by: Taking 1 picture of yourself or family member with your favorite page. Post it on social media

and tag @DeepwoodLakeDD - #BoredomBuster #EmpowerEngageEnrich.

Scan or snap a picture of your favorite page and email it to [email protected] or US Mail the page to: Recreation Department c/o LCBDD/Deepwood,

8121 Deepwood Blvd. Mentor, Ohio 44060.

All activity packets received by the Recreation Department will be entered into a drawing to win a surprise visit from Buster and Recreation staff.

DROPPING OFF PACKETS IN PERSON IS NOT PERMITTED

Boredom Buster packets are located on our website at https://lakebdd.org/community-recreation-program/.

If you prefer for the Boredom Buster packet to be

emailed or mailed via US mail to you, please contact us at 440-350-5165 or [email protected].

Page 2: 2020 BOREDOM BUSTER

Learn more about the Lake County Board of Developmental Disabilities/Deepwood at www.lakebdd.org

Crafting with Recreation Wednesday December 16 at 11:00 a.m. On Facebook Live using this link: www.facebook.com/DeepwoodlakeDD

Zoom meeting ID 423 6092900 Silly Toilet Paper Roll Reindeer Craft for Kids to Make

SUPPLIES NEEDED:

9 toilet rolls or paper towel/wrapping paper rolls cut down to 4 inches length

brown acrylic paint

brown pipe cleaners

brown pom poms and 1 red pom pom

black marker

googly eyes

festive ribbon

white craft glue

1 thumb tack

Buster News Network Wednesday December 23 at 11:00 am On Facebook Live using this link: www.facebook.com/DeepwoodLakeDD Buster News Network will include

Jokes, special announcements, News and interviews.

Feel free to send us photos,

interview questions and jokes to share (or suggestions) to

[email protected].

Or Zoom meeting ID 922 2001 5439

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Learn more about the Lake County Board of Developmental Disabilities/Deepwood at www.lakebdd.org

Movies: G: Annabelle’s Wish (1997) Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer (2000)

Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer (1964) Prancer (1989) Year Without a Santa Claus (1974) PG: Elliot the Littlest Reindeer (2018) Reindeer Themed Christmas Songs: Up on the Housetop Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer Run Rudolph Run The Night Before Christmas Little Saint Nick

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Learn more about the Lake County Board of Developmental Disabilities/Deepwood at www.lakebdd.org

25 Days of Reindeer Dec. 20, 2012 Dr. Don dressed in Laplander clothing standing next to a reindeer. Who is Dr. Don? Don Moore is a zoo-based animal behaviorist, wildlife biologist and educator who has helped to renovate and manage several zoos across the United States for over 30 years. He has more than 20 years of experience working with North America deer in behavioral research and zoo collections. He has hand-raised white-tailed deer (including one in his bathtub), black-tailed deer, and reindeer/caribou, as well as pronghorn antelope and other hoofstock. He has worked extensively with elk and Pampas deer and once introduced Princess Christina of Sweden to a friendly herd of reindeer. Fact #1 Reindeer and caribou are relatives of elk and other deer in the mammal group of even-toed hoofed animals called Artiodactyla by geeky scientists like me. Uniquely among the more than 45 species of deer, reindeer (caribou) of both sexes grow large antlers! Reindeer are a mostly-domesticated race of caribou. Fact #2 A circumpolar species, reindeer and caribou are found around the world’s north. Greenland, Norway, Russia, Alaska, Canada, and the North Pole are all within the circumpolar Arctic range of these northern deer. Can you guess why reindeer and polar bears don’t have very many penguin friends? Fact #3 When it comes to terminology, reindeer are very similar to their less exotic relatives, domestic cattle. Male reindeer are called “bulls.” Females are called “cows.” And baby reindeer are called “calves." Also, "adorable." Fact #4 How do reindeer measure up? Female reindeer are smaller than males, and New World wild Caribou tend to be larger than Old World domestic reindeer. One study found that adult female reindeer weighed about 220 pounds on average, with adult males weighing in at over 260 pounds. Reindeer stand about four feet high at the shoulder. (Interestingly, reindeer from the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard are evolving toward “island dwarf” size, and are smaller. The eight tiny reindeer were probably from Svalbard).

Fact #5 How do reindeer talk to one another? Reindeer and caribou are usually very quiet. Bulls bellow during the fall mating season, or “rut.” Cows talk to their calves with grunts, and calves have their own infantile way of telling their mothers they need to drink milk.

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Learn more about the Lake County Board of Developmental Disabilities/Deepwood at www.lakebdd.org

25 Days of Reindeer page 2 Fact #6 A reindeer's summer hairdo is dark on top, lighter underneath, with a fringe of long hairs on the throat. Reindeer have very short tails. Long tails would be vulnerable to frostbite, but short tails are not good for swatting at swarms of arctic mosquitoes, so reindeers’ defense against these bity pests is to stay in the open in windy spots, or on colder snowfields that mosquitoes don’t like. Fact #7 In the winter, a reindeer's hair turns a beautiful creamy color, very light. The coolest thing (maybe the most heart-warming thing, actually) about winter hair in northern deer such as reindeer is that it’s hollow! Just like your hollow-fill winter jacket, it has great insulating qualities so reindeer stay warm in frigid Arctic temperatures (or frigid air at higher altitudes)! Fact #8 Some northern animals, such as squirrels or woodpeckers, can stay in the same place their entire life because their food is plentiful year-round. Others, like reindeer and caribou, migrate to keep up with food supplies or to get away from harsh, blustery winter conditions. (Reindeer that can fly probably get to eat cookies on their trip.) Fact #9 The Porcupine caribou herd of North America is one of the world’s most famous herds of reindeer or caribou. Numbering almost 125,000 animals, they move from northern calving grounds along the shore of the Arctic ocean, where food is plentiful is plentiful in summer, to more protected wintering grounds where winds are lower and snow cover is not so heavy so food is available if they dig through the snow layer. Fact #10 How far do reindeer migrate? Larger herds migrate longer distances. The large Porcupine caribou herd migrates from their summering grounds to wintering grounds about 400 miles away. But caribou outfitted with high-tech radio-locator collars have shown biologists that they move back and forth a lot on migration, so they are actually travelling over 3,000 miles each year! Svalbard reindeer have the shortest legs of any of the reindeer, and do not move far or fast while walking (books don’t say how fast they move while flying). Fact #11 Does water stop a caribou migration? No, reindeer and caribou can swim strongly for miles at a time! This is one reason our friend Santa stays calm while flying over the ocean (although he often takes the Great Circle Route, which keeps him over continental landmasses most of the time).

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Learn more about the Lake County Board of Developmental Disabilities/Deepwood at www.lakebdd.org

25 Days of Reindeer page 3 Fact #12 What do reindeer eat? Lichen, especially one commonly known as “reindeer moss” (Cladonia rangiferina). And reindeer chew their cud, basically semi-chewed, swallowed and burped-up plant material; yummy! Lichens are organisms that are made of a combined fungus and an algae or other photosynthetic organism. The photosynthetic partner in lichen makes nutrients from sunlight, and the fungus lives off of it. Reindeer, caribou, and other herbivores that eat lichens survive on this very low-energy food that manages to exist in a very harsh arctic environment. Fact #13 Reindeer feet are the widest of feet any deer. The dewclaws behind the hooves are well-developed, the sharp hooves provide traction on ice, and in winter hair grows between the toes. So, reindeer feet are like snowshoe adaptations for walking in Arctic snow. Fact #14 Up on the housetop: Click, click, click! Reindeer are easy to hear as they move along, but not because their hooves are clicking on the roof. As caribou and reindeer walk, they make a clicking sound as tendons in their feet stretch across their foot bones. Imagine hundreds of reindeer all walking together, clicking as they walk and grunting to their calves! Fact #15 When are reindeer and caribou calves born? After mating sometime before Christmas, females have a single calf after a gestation period of seven to eight months. Calves are precocial, which means they are born relatively developed and mobile. They take their first steps within one hour of birth, and can run several miles a couple of hours of birth. While this does let them play, more practically it also allows them to flee from potential predators. They are not spotted like the fawns of other deer. Fact #16 Calves are all born in a very short time in the spring. They then grow quickly on some of the richest milk produced by any terrestrial mammal, at 20 percent fat. (Dairy cows produce milk with about 5 percent fat). Calves are weaned as early as one month of age! By comparison, eggnog is about 29 percent fat. Fact #17 Where were reindeer domesticated? North American caribou have never been domesticated, and bull caribou

are fairly aggressive. Reindeer have been domesticated in Scandinavia and Russia. Reindeer herders in Lapland are known as Saami peoples. (In the picture at the top of the page, I am wearing a Lap reindeer herder’s outfit, without the reindeer skin booties.)

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Learn more about the Lake County Board of Developmental Disabilities/Deepwood at www.lakebdd.org

25 Days of Reindeer Page 4 Fact #18 What are domesticated reindeer used for? Milk, antlers, sinew (lariats, etc) and apparently delivery of presents (seasonally).

Fact #19 Toothless? Not quite! All deer, including reindeer and carbiou, lack upper incisors. But they have the rest of their teeth, just not the uppers in front. That means they can’t bite hard like horses might. No wonder Santa uses reindeer instead of horses to pull his heavy sleigh! Fact #20 What members of the deer family are even bigger than reindeer and caribou? Moose, the biggest deer species! Bull moose can weigh up to 1,200 pounds, and stand over 6 feet at the shoulder. They only live around the edges of the Arctic, so no wonder Santa didn’t use them to pull his sleigh. Russians in the 19th and 20th century tried to train moose to pull sleighs, but you don’t see many moose pulling sleighs these days. Fact #21 Non-Santa sources suggest the can swim five miles per hour, run ten miles per hour, and suggest that reindeer can travel 100 miles a day. (Books don’t say anything about how far they go at night!) One herder’s reindeer pulled a 250-pound load over snow one mile in three minutes (which comes to a speed of 20 miles per hour), so imagine what eight reindeer working together might accomplish! Fact #22 What are antlers made of? Why do they look fuzzy? Both male and female reindeer and caribou have antlers; only male deer of all other species have antlers. Antlers are bony appendages that grow every year. The antlers grow quickly in a blood-supply-rich material we call “velvet” (because that's exactly what it looks like.) Since they are fast-growing bone, cancer specialists study deer antler growth to better understand bone cancers. Once the antlers are full grown, the antler velvet dries and starts to fall off, hanging in shreds from the antlers like moss from a tree. In early winter (for males) and late winter (for females), bone-dissolving materials invade the deers’ antler bases which causes them to shed the antlers. The millions of antlers shed by deer in different habitats are chewed by everything from rodents to the deer themselves, because they are high in calcium and other minerals needed for healthy bones and bodies. (This is why it’s hard to find antlers around when we are hiking or sledding) Fact #23 What sex is Rudolph, really? Pregnant females shed their antlers last of all reindeer, in late spring, probably so they can excavate more snow to get to more food to help nourish their calf during pregnancy. Males shed their antlers in early winter. The one with antlers leading a sled team? Probably Rhonda the Reindeer!

Page 8: 2020 BOREDOM BUSTER

Learn more about the Lake County Board of Developmental Disabilities/Deepwood at www.lakebdd.org

25 Days of Reindeer Page 5 Fact #24 Can reindeer fly? Are flying reindeer possibly just more “highly evolved” than “leaping reindeer?” Reindeer have a trotting gait, and appear to fly especially when they are running in powdery snow. But, they'd probably need to lose weight to get far off the ground. Although I have seen one jump mightily, I have never seen one fly. But I remain optimistic that I will see one jump higher some year! So, the burning question is: What would happen if a flying reindeer pooped? Answer: I don’t know the answer, sorry! I’ve never experienced that. I only know what happens when flying birds poop and if I’m the target, it’s not pleasant!) Fact #25 How can we track reindeer in harsh Arctic conditions? Many reindeer and caribou wear satellite-collars that allow deer biologists to track them even during the cold, dark Christmas season with it’s stormy, snowy weather. Although a certain federal NORAD project seems to be top-secret, these reindeer satellite collars are probably how our National Weather Service tracks Santa on Christmas Eve.

Page 9: 2020 BOREDOM BUSTER

Learn more about the Lake County Board of Developmental Disabilities/Deepwood at www.lakebdd.org

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Learn more about the Lake County Board of Developmental Disabilities/Deepwood at www.lakebdd.org

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Page 12: 2020 BOREDOM BUSTER

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Listen to the song Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer and fill out the following questions.

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Learn more about the Lake County Board of Developmental Disabilities/Deepwood at www.lakebdd.org