Many people email and ask how to put together an igloo. To answer this, I must first say that you don’t really need directions [and I have none to offer]. All you need is a general idea of what you want the igloo to look like, a bit of imagination, lots of milk jugs, a HIGH temperature hot-glue gun, glue sticks (high temp, LONG glue sticks), and a bit of patience. 🙂
Our igloo was made using roughly 535 jugs. We could sit in the igloo as a class of 12 KINDERGARTEN students (plus teacher). I don’t have the dimensions of our igloo and don’t plan on making another one anytime soon. There just isn’t enough time…!
A Few Igloo Facts:
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We started collecting jugs at the end of October.
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Many students shared that their neighbors and extended families were also involved in the collecting of milk jugs.
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We started the construction phases just before Winter Break.
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We had originally planned to collect 155 milk jugs as we thought that would do the job nicely.
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As we collected the jugs, students helped remove the caps, allowing the jugs to air dry.
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We observed that sour milk turns bright green! A day later we noticed that sour milk jugs smell horrible!
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When we were ready to construct, students counted jugs, reunited jugs with their caps, and helped form the igloo’s shape.
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As we added rows, the igloo began to expand (outwardly!).
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Somehow the Door County Advocate found out about our igloo (they wouldn’t disclose the “source”) and took pictures!
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We were in the newspaper two times!!
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We had many staff members and classrooms come to see our creation.
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Although the igloo looks a bit lopsided, it is VERY sturdy. We can easily move it to different locations in our classroom.
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When we were finished with the igloo, we took off all the caps and grouped them into groups of 10.
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We put 10 groups of 10 together, practicing counting by tens.
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We had 50 groups of 10. That’s the same as 5 groups of 100!
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We noticed that some of the jugs didn’t have caps, because the opening were glued into the bottoms of other jugs (door).
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We also purposefully left on a few caps, due to the terrible smell some of the jugs were giving off!
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All in all, we figured that nearly 35, give or take a few jugs, didn’t have caps that we could count.
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We are fairly sure we used a total of 535 jugs!
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