A Riddle a Day, Day 3

Animals are great riddle subjects, but what are some of the everyday objects around the house that would make good subjects?

Here is one of my riddles about something I use every day.

A faithful servant, tall and thin,

to students and pharaohs and laboring men.

Great stories, love letters, and truth get their start

as words on paper from my black heart.

What am I?

What is something you use every day? Your phone? A water glass or coffee cup? A hand towel? What can’t these be the subjects of riddles?

Do you need to research these everyday objects? It doesn’t hurt. You never know what you might learn about something you thought you knew all about. Once again, even though my riddle rhymes, yours doesn’t have to.

A Riddle a Day, Day 2

I love crows. I throw out grain and seeds for them in the winter. When they see me coming, they call to each other. I think they’re saying, “Here she is!”

Today is the first day of spring, and they are starting to find plenty of food for themselves in these woods. But all winter I’ve watched them congregate with doves, cardinals, jays, wrens, and sparrows. Roadrunners and a family of woodpeckers also call these woods home. And soon the warm weather birds will be here.

I wrote my crow riddle many years ago because a lady in the small town where I once worked as a newspaper editor had rescued a baby crow. She worked in the convenience store near the newspaper office, and when she would drive to work, the crow would fly alongside her car, keeping her company.

I knew they were smart birds. And when I did my research and found that they could learn to talk, I thought I had a little-known fact for my riddle.

When I posted the riddle to Twitter, children’s author Ame Dyckman guessed that it was a myna bird. Myna birds talk.

What if my riddle can have another true answer?

Do mynas eat corn, I asked. That sent us both off to do research. They are omnivores, according to our research, but so are crows. Mynas, however, don’t normally eat seeds and grain in the wild. Crows do, if they can find it. That’s why there are scarecrows.

Blackbird, she guessed next. Children’s writer Francis S. Poesy guessed starling. More research!

Guess what! Blackbirds and starlings can learn to talk, too.

At this point, I knew I had to add more lines to my riddle to make it specific enough.  See, when I set out to teach a lesson, often I am the one who learns the most.

Did I say these birds are smart?

Problem solving is their art.

Is this enough? Do I also need to add how sociable crows are? They congregate in groups. Would saying a group of them is called a murder give away too much?

I can see I have more research to do.

A Riddle a Day, Day 1

Here’s a rhymed riddle and a challenge for newly-minted homeschool teachers.

I’m black as a crayon. I love corn.

My cry is as loud as a rusty horn.

But like a parrot, I can learn to speak.

I’m a smart, dark bird with a yellow beak.

What am I?

Now, help kids do their own research on any topic. It doesn’t have to be about an animal. Have them write their own riddle, based on their research. It can be rhymed or unrhymed, formal or informal. What matters is that the information is correct. They should try to sneak in odd facts and little-known tidbits.

I hope you’ll share their riddles.