FALLing for Books

Hello, all! Liz the Librarian here. We’re already coming into the final stretch of the year! Where did all that time go??

Our clubs are doing great! There was a bit of a lull during the summer, and then we didn’t have any at all during July, but they’re picking back up again.

I wanted to let everyone know all at once: Chess Club and Board Game Night will never change. Chess Club is my personal love and will never leave as long as I’m here, and Board Game Night is just too much fun (and everyone’s favorite, so far) to ever let go. That being said, the first Chess Club in August didn’t have any attendees, and the first one this month only had three, but we had a great game going! We will continue it at the next Chess Club, which is on October 2nd.

The five attendees playing Bingo – while library board member Connie Kaup calls out the numbers

Our new Bingo Club has already been a hit! It was a hit before we even had it! We had our first adult patrons come to a club night, all because of Bingo. The next one is THIS Wednesday, September 11th. For every bingo you get, you get to pick a prize out of the prize box (I have one for kids AND one for adults now!), and we will have snacks and drinks there for you while you play! We try to do a theme for each one: the first one was ‘School Days’, and this one might be pirate-themed, since September 11th is International Talk Like a Pirate Day (thanks, Pete the Cat)!

For the Gym Day in August, we had SIX patrons come! That’s the highest number that day has ever had, so far. We played tag, Red Light Green Light, basketball, and all kinds of fun games! Come join us for the next one, next week on September 18th!

Board Game Night is the favorite and has been for a while, with five patrons showing up for the one in August! We played a new ship/dice game I had heard of, UNO, cards, Connect Four, and many more! We’ve got a great selection of games now, thanks to many wonderful donations! Thank you all so much!!

15+ games and counting!

Don’t forget about our annual shindig on Halloween night – our Halloween Party!! There will be a costume contest, food and drink, and games!! If you’ve got ideas, decor/games/stuff to donate, or want to donate your time and help us decorate and run the party, please let me know!! We would LOVE to have your help!
More details on the party coming in next month’s blog!

The library board and I are also working on a new project for the the library! Stay tuned!

We hope to see you in YOUR local Snyder Public Library soon!

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Our 2019 Summer Reading Program

Hey, everybody! Hello, August! Halfway done with the year already and still so much to do! But this summer was a BLAST! I want to give a HUGE thank you to my amazing library board ladies, without whom the Summer Reading Program wouldn’t have run smoothly at all!! They do so much at every single event the library has, and they do not get enough credit or praise for it! Be sure to tell them how much you appreciate them the next time you see them! I know I have 🙂

This year’s Summer Reading Program theme was “A Universe of Stories” and all about space and S.T.E.A.M. (Science Technology Engineering Art Math). We learned all about planets, stars, the moon, rockets, and did science experiments! It was a lot of fun and we learned so much! We had NINETEEN participants and they checked out a total of 111 books all together!!!

The first week was about planets. For the science experiment to start off the program, I did what is called ‘Foam Explosion’: I added dry yeast to dish soap, food coloring, and hydrogen peroxide to get a foamy reaction! For crafts, the kids got to make Galaxy Bottles, drew their own planets, and then got to craft alien houses for their planets. I read ‘There’s No Place Like Space!’ (with the Cat in the Hat) by Tish Rabe, ‘One Day A Dot’ by Ian Lendler, and ‘Space Boy & The Space Pirate’ by Dian Curtis Regan to the kids, which introduced them to our solar system, explained how Earth was made, and how to use your imagination to create your own world to play in.

Making Galaxy Bottles

The second week was about stars. For the science experiment, I did something called ‘Lava Lamp’, where you add Alka-Seltzer tablets to food coloring, water, and vegetable oil to make your own little lava lamp to look at! The crafts the kids did were Nebula Jars, Marshmallow & Pretzel constellations (while learning about famous constellations and their own personal zodiacs!), and Star Jars. I read ‘The Sun Is Kind of A Big Deal’ by Nick Seluk (The Awkward Yeti) and ‘The Lost Stars’ by Hannah Cumming, which taught us all about our sun and its place in the solar system and what it does for Earth, and a fun little story about what would happen if there were no stars to light up our night sky.

Our third week was about our Moon, since the 50th anniversary of the Moon Landing was July 20th, 2019. For a science experiment, I did the ‘Unleakable Baggie’, where you put water in a Ziploc bag, get rid of the extra air and seal it, and then pierce the bag all the way through with pencils. No leaks! For crafts, the kids got to make Moon Sand, Moon Rocks, do Oreo Moon Phases, and make Moon Rovers for their alien houses they made in week one. I read ‘Papa, Please Get the Moon For Me’ by Eric Carle and ‘Curiosity: The Story of a Mars Rover‘ by Markus Motum, a cute story about a father getting down the moon for his daughter, and a story all about the famous Mars rover up on Mars right now.

Alien Houses

Our fourth and final week was about rockets and aerodynamics. For the science experiments, I did M&M Rockets (Alka-Seltzer tablets, water, and mini M&M tubes!) and Coke & Mentos, using other kinds of pop to turn it into an experiment to see what kinds of sodas will react to Mentos. The answer is: all of them! Dark pops seem to have a better reaction, though. Our final crafts were Balloon Cannons (had to make a balloon aerodynamic enough to fly straight) and Wind-Powered Cars. I read ‘Mousetronaut’ by Astronaut Mark Kelly, ‘Life on Mars’ by Jon Agee, and ‘Pete the Cat: Out of This World!’ by James Dean. We ended the program with fun and games and a promise to have the best end-of-program pizza party ever!

And by golly, we sure did! Rainbow Trout came and painted everyone’s faces, did a magic show, and gave every single kid a cool balloon shape (flowers, bows and arrows, swords, and poodles!). We had pizza from Pizza Ranch (they DELIVERED!) and desserts made by the library board, along with chips and drinks. The kids had a great time with Rainbow Trout and playing games with their new balloons!

Wind-Powered Cars

The award for Most Enthusiastic went to Jack Diekemper.
He was always so excited and happy at every single program, eager to please, learn, and to get his hands on whatever we were doing that day.

The award for Most Courteous went to Izzy Schnoor.
She was always so polite and wonderful at every program, and so patient and so sweet to us all, always willing to wait to be called on, and never pushy about it.

The award for Best Sharer went to Oliver Belina.
He was always willing to stop whatever he was doing to help the other kids, at one point taking apart his own craft to give the pieces to another one of the participants. He always shared, whether it was his materials, his time, or his smile.

Moon Rovers

And the award for All Ears went to Cooper Kreikemeier.
At every single program, whether I was reading a book or talking about space, science, or whatever we were doing that day, I would look up to see Cooper’s eyes on me. He always paid complete attention and seemed to absorb everything we learned like a sponge, eager to respond quickly when I quizzed the kids on something.

These awards were chosen before all the reading logs were tallied up. Each award winner received a free full-day Carnival Ride pass to the Dodge County Fair from the Dodge County Agricultural Society! 

Nebula Jars

The requirements for K-3rd were that they had to read at least six age-appropriate books, and each program they attended counted as one book. So if they read six, they get a completion certificate, and for exceeding the six, they get a certificate of excellence. The requirements for 4th and Up were that they had to read at least one book that was over 200 pages, or a total of 200 age-appropriate pages from any book, and each program counted as 25 pages. So if they read at least 200 pages, they get a completion certificate, and for exceeding the 200 pages, they get a certificate of excellence. Every single Summer Reading Program participant received a free kids’ lunch gift certificate from Subway and a free kids’ lunch buffet from Pizza Ranch!

The Kindergarten through 3rd Grade Runner-Up was Allyanna Besmer.
She read 42 books and came to three programs, which adds up to 45 books!

The Kindergarten through 3rd Grade Top Reader was Edyn Besmer.
She also read 42 books and came to three programs, which adds up to 45 books, but she read 11 more pages than her sister and came out on top this year!

The 4th Grade and Up Runner-Up was Oliver Belina.
He read 2,001 pages and came to three programs, for a grand total of 2,076 pages!

4th & Up Top Reader (Cooper Kreikemeier) and K-3rd Top Reader (Edyn Besmer)

The 4th Grade and Up Top Reader was Cooper Kreikemeier.
He read 2,276 pages and came to three programs, for a grand total of 2,351 pages!

Each of the runner-up winners received tickets to the Omaha Storm Chasers (courtesy of the Three Rivers Library System) and a big prize, and the top readers won a coupon to Dairy Queen, a big prize, and a rocket ship playhouse! 

We also had four wonderful volunteers at all of the programs: Desirae Svehla, Stephana Svehla, Felicia Harding, and Kelley Clark! Thank you so much for all of your help!

Thank you so much to all of those who donated to our Summer Reading Program this year! We had so many donations this year; please let me know if I missed you!
Nancy Markel, Hunke Manufacturing LLC, Central Valley Ag (Snyder), Leona’s Place, Snyder Mini Mart, Scribner Bank, Dodge County Agricultural Society, Three Rivers Library System, Subway (West Point), Dairy Queen (West Point), and Raising Cane’s (Fremont), Pizza Ranch (West Point)

And a HUGE thank you to Rainbow Trout for coming and performing for us at our party!!!

This summer went amazingly and we already can’t wait for next year. I hope all of the kids come back and bring new kids to join them!! Please let me know if YOU would ever like to participate, volunteer at, or run a program here at YOUR little Snyder Public Library!!!

This is Liz the Librarian, signing off. <3

 


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The In-Between

Hey, everybody! I have a feeling that this is going to be a weird June. How about you?

Our Dr. Seuss party was swell! We had ten kids come to it, and each of them got a goodie bag with a bunch of neat stuff inside. We started off with me reading ‘One Fish, Two Fish’, and we played The Cat Says (Simon Says). Then we moved on to Miss Beverly’s station, where she read ‘Green Eggs and Ham’ to the kids and did a coloring craft with them. We then took pictures as a group, picked a stuffed animal to cuddle, and moved on to Miss Karen’s station, where she read ‘The Foot Book’ to the kids and then played Hokey Pokey with them. Then we ate! We had lots of good stuff, like Green (Deviled) Eggs and Ham, Lorax Snax, Truffula Treats, Pink Ink Drink, and more! We didn’t have much food left, which was great! I led the kids in a few games of Musical Chairs before letting them check out books, and then the party was over! We ran out of time faster than I thought we would, and didn’t read all the books we planned on reading, but for my first Seuss party, I think it was a success!

We may keep the party a Spring thing from now on. What are your thoughts on that? We feel that since the kids do so much with Dr. Seuss week at school, we’d be piling too much onto them with our party at the end of such a full week, and that having it in May instead would work out better. We’ve got the rest of the year to figure that out!

Board Game Night is officially our most popular club at the moment, with seven kids showing up to it in May! Unfortunately, nobody came to the second Chess Club last month, and no one came for the Writing Club last week. But it’s summer and a lot of the local kids and patrons are out and about doing other things, so I’m not too worried. We’ve still got Gym Day this week, and a Board Game Night and Chess Club for this month. There will be no clubs in the month of July, due to the Summer Reading Program, and they will resume in August.

Speaking of the Summer Reading Program, that’s starting next month already! Registration is open to children ages 4 to 12, up until the first day of the program. We will be having the programs on Tuesdays instead of Thursdays (the 2nd, 9th, 16th, and the 23rd), from 1:00 pm – 3:30 pm. The end-of-program pizza party will also be on a Tuesday, the 30th of July, and we’ll be having a special guest there to entertain everyone! This year’s theme is ‘A Universe of Stories’, and will be all about space and S.T.E.A.M. We hope to see you there!

[Remember, if you have stuff around the house that you don’t use (such as toilet paper tubes, loose beads, little rocks and shells, little boxes, stickers, paperclips, clean pop bottles to cut in half, clean popsicle sticks, toothpicks, cotton balls, foil, craft corks, small washers, nuts, screws, springs, etc, discarded/broken jewelryanything you can think of!) that could be used to make little robots, alien houses, spaceships, and other assorted crafts that we will be doing, please consider bringing it all to the library instead of throwing it away! We will be using the materials for this summer and for future events! Or if you want to come volunteer your time and help us out during the programs, talk to the kids about space and STEAM, donate snacks and/or items; anything you can think of would be a huge help to us. Thank you again!]

This is Liz the Librarian, signing off!

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