The moon is bright, the bugs are out, the weather is perfect…for a bat beach party!
We reads Bats at the Beach by Brian Lies (Clarion Books, 2006). As night rises, a bevy of bats head to the shore for some sand, waves, snacks, and a moon tan. Clever, sweet, and filled with absolutely gorgeous illustrations (the moonlight shining through the bats’ wings!), this book is an extra charming read, any time of day.
Our story time project was inspired by this amazing flying bat craft by Raising Veggie Lovers that our friend Franny spotted on Pinterest and tagged Katie…
Their version is smaller and utilizes a free printable template and a drinking straw, but we wanted to make something a little larger for our program!
You’ll need:
- Black poster board
- 1 paper towel tube
- Black construction paper
- String
- Scissors and tape for construction
- Metallic markers for decorating
- Hot glue
- Optional: paper cup beach bucket
Here’s a bird’s eye view of our version of the project. First, cut your bat’s body out of black poster board (the wing span for our bat ended up being 21.5″). Fold the bat’s head upwards, then add eyes, a nose, and a smile with metallic markers. Wrap a paper towel tube in black construction paper, then hot glue it on top of the lower half of the bat’s body.

Above, you can see where we used tape (and black dot stickers) to attach two pieces of string to each bat wing (our strings were 27.5″ in length). Thread both strings through the length of the paper towel tube, then knot them together at the bottom. We also anchored the strings to a purple foam bead to make it easier for kids to grab. Your bat is complete! Pull the strings and watch the wings flap!
How about a beach bucket? Cut the sides of a paper cup about halfway down, leaving a strip on each side that fold together at the top to form the bucket’s handle. Color and cut the shells from this beach shell template and drop them in your bucket! Finish by hot gluing the bucket to the underside of your bat.

No beach night is complete without some activities and refreshments, so Katie and I turned out the gallery lights and let kids and their bats navigate to this lighthouse (yes, that is a spinning disco light):

And here I am staffing the bug juice bar where bats could order various flavors of juices (color cotton balls in little sample cups):

Meanwhile, Katie had the beach grill going with marshmallows. These were packing peanuts mounted on craft sticks roasted over red holidays lights:

Deluxe bugmallows were also available…these were mallows with wings and legs added, very much like the ones depicted in the book. Sooooo CUTE.

* Yes, this is a Taylor Swift reference

Replace the paper library template with a piece of black construction paper. Tape the corners of the black construction paper to a tabletop, then tape the corners of the plastic to the tabletop as well. Really to explore the library? Slide the flashlight’s light beam between the construction paper and plastic to “illuminate” the scene!