Sometimes fruits and veggies look like people and animals. Potatoes look amazingly like teddy bears, tomatoes look like ducks, and strawberries look like bears. Carrots, parsnips and radishes have split to grow extra branches, and end up looking like people with arms and legs. Next time you’re munching a crunchy snack, take a good look at the veggies: they might be looking right back at you.
Wee ones: Tomatoes are red. Try to find 3 red things in your classroom.
Little kids: The “bear” potato has 4 bumps for the legs and 1 more bump to make the head. How many bumps is that? Bonus: If there are 5 photos of carrots, but 2 photos each show 2 carrots hugging, how many carrots are in these photos all together?
Big kids: If you take 28 crazy food photos of your fridge and 11 photos have potatoes in them, how many don’t have potatoes? Bonus: If it took 5 minutes to pose and photograph each of the 28 foods, how many hours and minutes of photography time did it take?
The sky’s the limit: Suppose 1 out of every 25 potatoes and 1 out of every 20 carrots looks like an animal or face. If you go shopping and buy 100 potatoes and 60 carrots, are you likely to end up with more fun potatoes or more fun carrots?
Answers:
Wee ones: Items might include books, construction paper, shirts, socks, Lego blocks, or crayons.
Little kids: 5 bumps. Bonus: 7 carrots, since there are 2 extra carrots in total.
Big kids: 17 photos. Bonus: 140 minutes (5 x 28), which is 2 hours 20 minutes.
The sky’s the limit: More fun potatoes. Chances say you’ll get 4 fun potatoes (1/25 of 100) but just 3 fun carrots (1/20 of 60).