![]() ![]() The green one pranced away, and then there were two. I saw three little unicorns, but as near to them I drew I watched the orange one prance away, and then there were three. I saw four little unicorns resting by a tree I watched the blue one prance away, and then there were four. I saw five little unicorns – creatures from folklore (Rhyme and idea taken from Story Time Secrets, template found from Google image search) Then we stomped some more like rhinos, pranced like ponies, and swam like narwhals. The ground gets under his feet gets worn (stomp)īut goodness gracious look at that horn! (make a horn with your hand) He’s terrible wide and he’s terribly fat (hold hands out to your sides) The rhinoceros moves like this and that (stomp from one foot to the other) I showed kids pictures of narwhals, a rhino from books, and put up a flannelboard unicorn I had made to see if they could tell me what they all had in common. Narwhal Whales Up Close by Jody Sullivan Rake ![]() MOVEMENT: “Clap Your Hands” from Wiggleworms Love You by Old Town School of Folk Music This storytime brought together creatures from all over the world and folklore to celebrate those with a single horn or tusk: unicorns, narwhals, and Indian rhinos (on my!).įun fact learned while prepping for this storytime – the greater one-horned rhinoceros and the Javan rhinoceros have one horn, while black, white and Sumatran rhinos have two! ![]()
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