The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston - various times Pick
The Houston Zoo - 9:00 AM
Children's Museum of Houston - 9:00 AM
The Houston Zoo - 9:00 AM
Children's Museum of Houston - 9:00 AM
Old MacDonald's Farm - 10:00 AM
Meow Wolf Houston Radio Tave - 4:00 PM Pick
The Houston Zoo - 9:00 AM
Old MacDonald's Farm - 10:00 AM
Froberg's Farm - various times
St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church - various times
The Houston Zoo - 9:00 AM
Children's Museum of Houston - 9:00 AM
The Houston Zoo - 9:00 AM
Children's Museum of Houston - 9:00 AM
Old MacDonald's Farm - 10:00 AM
Froberg's Farm - various times
St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church - various times

Texas Renaissance Festival Fair Grounds

Dewberry Farm

Crossover Athletics
Activity Guides
- Beaches & Lakes
- Best Of Lists
- Birthday Parties
- Boats
- Boredom Busters
- Camps
- Childcare
- Christmas/Hanukkah
- City Guides
- City Hacks
- Classes & Enrichment
- Community
- Crafts & Recipes
- Earth Kids
- Easter
- Fairs & Festivals
- Fall Activities
- Family Travel
- Farms & U-Pick
- Free Activities
- GoList
- Halloween
- Holidays
- Hotels & Resorts
- Indoor Activities
- Museums
- News & Openings
- Outdoors
- Parent Talk
- Parks & Playgrounds
- Play Gyms & Sports Centers
- Pools & Spray Parks
- Preschools & Schools
- Restaurants
- Shows
- Skiing & Winter Sports
- Special Needs
- Special Occasions
- Sports
- Spring Activities
- STEM
- Stores & Services
- Summer Activities
- Theme & Water Parks
- Trains, Dinos & Heroes
- TV, Film & Movies
- Virtual
- Visitors Guide
- Weekend Events
- Weekend Trips
- Winter Activities
- Zoos & Gardens
Recycled Packing Peanuts Animals Craft

I like to help out in my son's Pre-K classroom when I can. This morning some of the kids were doing a really cute little craft project that I had never seen before. Apparently if you take those potato starch packing peanuts and wet them, they dissolve just enough that they can stick together. So simple!
Kids can then use them to build anything their imagination thinks of and no fasteners are needed, which is great for toddlers and preschoolers and just plain cool for older kids.
OUR LATEST VIDEOS
Just dab the peanut on a damp sponge where to want it to stick to something. They can even be stuck onto other objects, like paper to create a 3D picture. In the classroom they had special colored peanuts, but I bet you could even draw on white ones with markers to make them more colorful.
So next time you get a package full of those really annoying packing peanuts, don't toss them, use them to make kid art! It's a perfect indoor activity for when you're stuck inside.
See our post on how to make a bean bag chair out of recycled packing peanuts, all of our Crafts and Projects posts or find more great activities like this in our
.
About the Author
Founder of Mommy Poppins
A fourth-generation Brooklynite, Anna started Mommy Poppins in 2007 to help families find the best things to do with kids in NYC, with a particular emphasis on sharing activities that are free, affordable, and enriching. The site, used by millions of families, has grown to become the ultimate resource for parents in the major US cities, plus travel guides for 100s of destinations.
Anna is a believer in the magic of summer camps, traveling with kids, and that you can raise kids on a budget and still have a rich life full of amazing memories. Anna's first Mommy Poppins book, The Young Traveler's Journal and Activity Book, published in 2025 and co-written with her daughter, Amelia Eigerman, brings that ethos to life, in addition to this website.
Featured Local Savings

newsletters.
