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The document discusses Halloween traditions and decorations, including a former mayor who decorates his home with thousands of carved pumpkins.

A former mayor in West Virginia decorates his home with 3,000 carved pumpkins for Halloween.

According to one legend, you might see a witch if you put your clothes on inside out and walk backward on Halloween night.

NATGEOKIDS.

COM • OCTOBER 2020

SPECIAL
HALLOWEEN
ISSUE
ANIMALS
WITH
PUMPKINS,
DEADLY
CUTIES,
AND MORE!

YOUR
FAVORITE
PETS HALLOWEEN
IN COSTUME CANDY MUMMIES!
ADVERTISEMENT

… but Weird But True! books are


ALL AROUND YOU. Mua-ha-ha!

NASA namuelad—
a neb s and dust On
O n Halloween night,
a cloud oftegraspace— according to one legend, you might
EE A WITCH if you put
SEE
S
in ou your clothes on inside out and
WITCHbHeEcaAuDse it walk backward.
looked like FOR HALLOWEEN,
A FORMER
MAYOR IN WEST
VIRGINIA, U.S.A.,
DECORATES HIS
HOME WITH
3,000 CARVED
PUMPKINS.
99

Experts
aren’t sure
WHY WITC
are shown weariHE
ng
S
POINTY HATS;
in the Middle Ages, witches
were often drawn
WITHOUT HATS.
One fast-food
Choose from nearly
restaurant sold a A company made
“Scary Black Cherry”
40 frightfully fun books slushie at Halloween
time
that made people’s
about the weird side tongues turn black. cotton
of everything—from 72 candy.
Halloween, the U.S.A.,
73
and Greek mythology to
animals, dinosaurs, food, and more!

AVAILABLE WHEREVER BOOKS ARE SOLD

Watch the Weird But True! television series on


© 2020 National Geographic Partners, LLC
IN THIS ISSUE

Editor in Chief and Vice President,


Kids Magazines & Digital
Rachel Buchholz
Design Director, Magazines Eileen O’Tousa-Crowson
Editorial Kay Boatner, Senior Editor / Digital Producer;
Allyson Shaw, Editor / Digital Producer
Photo Shannon Hibberd, Senior Photo Editor
Production Sean Philpotts, Director
Digital Laura Goertzel, Director

PUBLISHED BY NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC PARTNERS, LLC


14 Tricks for Treats
Chairman of the Board of Directors Check out six sneaky ways zookeepers keep animals playing.
Peter Rice
Chief Executive Officer
Gary E. Knell
Editorial Director
DEPARTMENTS
Susan Goldberg
Managing Editor, Magazines
10 Halloween
4 Weird
David Brindley Pet Parade But True!
Advertising Offices John Campbell, Senior Vice President, These furry trick-or- 5 Guinness
Partnerships, [email protected] treaters show off their World Records
Detroit Karen Sarris, [email protected] awesome costumes.
Los Angeles Eric Josten, [email protected] 6 All About Money
New York Hilary Halstead, [email protected] 7 Bet You Didn’t Know!
International Magazine Publishing Yulia Petrossian Boyle, 8 This or That?
Senior Vice President; Jennifer Jones, Director;
Leanna Lakeram, Editorial and Marketing Coordinator
28 Fun Stuff
Finance Jeannette Swain, Senior Budget Manager; 20 Monster
Tammi Colleary-Loach, Senior Manager, Rights Clearance;
Joey Wolfkill, Senior Business Specialist
Myths Busted!
Consumer Marketing John MacKethan, Vice President and
Five terrifying tales
General Manager; Mark Viola, Circulation Planning Director; get debunked.
Janet H. Zavrel, Manager, Circulation Planning
Consumer Insights and Analytics
Jessica Bates, Senior Director
Advertising Production Kristin Semeniuk, Director;
Julie A. Ibinson, Manager
Publicity Anna Kukelhaus (202)912-6724;
Kelsey Taylor (202)912-6776 22 Deadly Cuties
Parents, contact us online: [email protected] The adorable slow loris
has some seriously
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Please recycle.
Check out these CHECK OUT
THE BOOK!
outrageous facts.
BY MARILYN TERRELL

A
giant
A company
fungus Various
in England
created
in Oregon covers fish eggs
an area the size of hatch in the dad’s CHEESE-
SCENTED
20,000 mouth.
perfume.
basketball courts.

A cow in Canada $ A
building
sold for
in
1.2 million Poland
dollars.
$ looks
like it’s

mucus
Sea snail melting.
was once used to make
purple dye.

CREAM); PHOTOBLISS / ALAMY (BUILDING); ALEXEY STIOP / ALAMY (GRAND CANYON); JIRI HERA / ALAMY (PLATE)
SHUTTERSTOCK (SILK) IMAGE DIGITALLY COMPOSED; JULIDE DENGEL / NG STAFF (BANKNOTE WITH COW, DYE, ICE
© IMAGEBROKER / ALAMY (FUNGUS); SEBASTIAN_K / ALAMY (BOTTLE), © D. HURST / ALAMY (CHEESE), ALEXPI /
In Japan
The you can buy
oldest
rocks in the octopus-
Grand Canyon flavored Giraffe
are almost ice hooves
2 cream. are the size of
dinner
billion plates.
years
old.

4 NAT GEO KIDS • OCTOBER 2020


GUINNESS Get more cool stuff

WORLD in the new book


GUINNESS WORLD
RECORDS 2021!

RECORDS BY BRANDON McINTYRE

JACK-O’-LANTERNS WHO
TURNED

INVADE PARK ON THE


LIGHTS?

You won’t need a flash-


light walking around
these guys. With can-
dles burning inside
each gourd, 30,581
pumpkins became
the largest display
of lit jack-o’-lanterns.
Volunteers gathered in
Keene, New Hampshire,
to carve letters to
spell out the names
of local businesses
into the pumpkins,
which were later com-
posted. That’s a lot of
pumpkin guts!

SARCOSUCHUS SKELETON,

EXTRA-LARGE
NATIONAL MUSEUM OF
NATURAL HISTORY,
PARIS, FRANCE

SPACE ARM

RSIZE
SUPE
CROC
If you think regular-size crocodiles are scary, you’re The Canadarm2 always lends a helping, um, hand to
definitely not going to like this one. Sarcosuchus astronauts. Built by the Canadian Space Agency, the
(pronounced sar-COH-su-cus) was a 40-foot-long 57-foot-long robotic arm holds the record for the
crocodyliform, or crocodile-like reptile, that roamed longest robotic arm in space. Attached to the
the Earth some 112 million years ago. As long as three International Space Station (ISS), Canadarm2 can
small vehicles lined up front to back and weighing up reach out and grab approaching cargo ships carrying
to 18,000 pounds, it’s the largest crocodyliform supplies for astronauts aboard the ISS. What’s next,
ever. No wonder its nickname is “Super Croc.” the longest robotic leg in space?

GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS (PUMPKINS); KEVIN SCHAFER / ALAMY (SARCOSUCHUS); NASA


(CANADARM2). INFORMATION PROVIDED BY © 2020 GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS LIMITED. OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS 5
ALL
ABOUT
MONEY FLAPPING BIRD
BY KRISTIN BAIRD RATTINI

A $5 bill
from
Australia
uses special
inks to make
a bird
“flap” its
wings and change
color when tilted.

Denmark’s 50-ore coin


In Thailand, oval
has a heart on it. bars of silver once
used as money
were called
“tiger tongues.”
Jordan’s
half-dinar
coin has

VDOVIN / ALAMY (HALF-DINAR COIN); FRITZ GORO / THE LIFE PICTURE COLLECTION / GETTY IMAGES (TIGER TONGUE); PHOTOSTOCK-ISRAEL / ALAMY
7 sides.

IVAN VDOVIN / ALAMY (50-ORE COIN); TAFFPIXTURE / SHUTTERSTOCK (AUSTRALIAN $5 BILL); BULLET74 / SHUTTERSTOCK (STACKS OF BILLS); IVAN

(TIGER); SPLASH NEWS / NEWSCOM (LIBERTY HEAD NICKEL); NATTIKA / SHUTTERSTOCK (POTATOES); KELLEY MILLER / NG STAFF (PIGGY BANK)
A 1913 U.S. Liberty Head
nickel—one of only 5 in
existence—
1
To spend $ billion
a dollar at a time, sold at
you’d have to pay auction for
a buck a second for more than MONEY TIP!
nearly 32 years. $3.1 million. WrIte down
the Items you’d
lIke to buy,
such as toys

Potatoes were and games.


KeepIng a
once used as currency wIsh lIst wIll
motIvate you
on the South to save your
money.
Atlantic
island of
Tristan da Cunha.

6 NAT GEO KIDS • OCTOBER 2020


spooky facts for
Halloween
BY ERIN WHITMER

1 Phasmaphobia
is the
2 Cat
fear of
urine ghosts.
can glow
under black
light. 4
The
3
A man
“corpse
sculpted a flower”
grows up to 12 feet
statue of himself tall and smells
using his own hair, like rotting
teeth, and meat.
nails.
6 In ancient
Egypt,
5
Mike the mummies’
chicken
set a world record brains
by living for were removed
through the
18 months
without a head, nose.
ERIC ISSELEE / SHUTTERSTOCK

from
1945 to 1947.

OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS 7


CHOOSE If you
THIS: CHOSE
Have
a sleepover
in a vampire’s
castle.
THIS
You’d never forget a night at BRAN CASTLE. This 13th-century
fortress is thought to be the inspiration for the VAMPIRE’S
HOME in Bram Stoker’s spooky novel, Dracula, even though
THE AUTHOR NEVER ACTUALLY VISITED IT.
Located in central Romania, a country
in Europe, the castle is currently
a museum that occasionally
hosts overnight
guests. Just
remember to
lock your
bedroom
door!

CHOOSE
THAT:
ALPINEGUIDE / ALAMY (BRAN CASTLE); STAMATOYOSHI / GETTY IMAGES (MUMMY)

Play
hide-and-seek
with
mummies.

8 NAT GEO KIDS • OCTOBER 2020


If you
CHOSE
THAT
The mummies are hiding and you’re doing the seeking if
you pay a visit to the TIMBAC CAVES in the Philippines,
home of the FIRE MUMMIES. (They’re called this
because part of the process to create these mummies
included setting the bodies over a fire to dry them out.)
The mummies were stashed in these caves about 800
years ago by the Ibaloi tribe.
But good luck trying to FIND
THEM: The exact locations of
most of the caves are kept
secret to prevent vandalism, CHECK
OUT
and the caves have been THE
named as one of the most BOOK!
endangered sites in the world.

OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS 9


A BIRD?
WHERE?

I’M GUILTY
OF STEALING
YOUR SOCKS.

BEASLEY THE
ENGLISH BULLDOG
IS IN TROUBLE FOR
BARKING UP THE
WRONG TREE.

You won’t get a sugar


rush from these Halloween
treats—just an overload of
adorable. Millions of pet
owners will dress up their
furry friends this October,
and Nat Geo Kids found a
few of the silliest costumes.

HALLOWEEN
PET PARADE
10 NAT GEO KIDS • OCTOBER 2020
BRIAN HARKIN (BEASLEY, MIMZI); TZU-FANG WANG / ALAMY
(MIKA); MLADEN ANTONOV / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES (MOUSE)
I’M A
VERY CUTE
These VILLAIN.
pets like wearing
costumes, but your
pet may not. Never
force your pet to do
something it does
not want to do.

MIKA THE
SUPERCAT
IS HERE TO
RESCUE CUTE
KITTENS FROM
OVEREXCITED
PUPPIES.

BEST-DRESSED
PETS
Check out the most-
popular costumes worn
by party animals last
Halloween.
1. pumpkin
2. hot dog
3. superhero
4. bumblebee
MIMZI THE
MUTT IS 5. cat
READY TO TAKE
OVER THE 6. witch
WORLD AS THE 7. lion
PENGUIN, ONE
OF BATMAN’S 8. dog
ENEMIES.
9. devil
10. shark

MOUSE THE
CAT SEEMS AT
HOME—HOME
ON THE RANGE,
THAT IS. If you dress up
your pet, check that
the outfit is comfortable
GET ALONG, and allows the animal
LITTLE to breathe and
DOGGIE. walk safely.

OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS 11


Maybe
I’ll catch All
a mouse aboard!
WIth thIs
dISguIse.

TOFFEE THE CAT


CHEESES FOR
THE CAMERA
WHILE POSING
IN HER MOUSE
EARS.

Please
Clap
for me.
HAZEL THE BOSTON
TERRIER MAY BE
WONDERING IF SHE GET IT?
CAN FLY IN HER FISHER THE
TINKERBELL GREYHOUND
COSTUME. IS A GREY-
HOUND BUS!
I always
feel lIke
THIS
on the
INSIDE.
(BUTTERCUP); INK DROP / SHUTTERSTOCK (GHOSTS, ALL); DENISNATA / SHUTTERSTOCK (WITCH), PEERAWIT / SHUTTERSTOCK (FRAME), IMAGE DIGITALLY COMPOSED;
YELLOWJ / SHUTTERSTOCK (PUMPKIN); PICSFIVE / SHUTTERSTOCK (WOOD SIGN), IMAGE DIGITALLY COMPOSED; VOVAN / SHUTTERSTOCK (MOON); ADIKE / SHUTTER-
FRANCK ROBICHON / EPA / SHUTTERSTOCK (TOFFEE); BARBARA RIES (HAZEL, FISHER, TINI); JENA ARDELL / GETTY IMAGES (BENJI); KUBAN_GIRL / SHUTTERSTOCK

STOCK (ALIEN); PORQUENOSTUDIOS / GETTY IMAGES (CAPITOL BUILDING); DANNY SMYTHE / SHUTTERSTOCK (CANDY CORN)

BENJI THE
KITTY IS
READY TO
ROAR LIKE
A LION.

The top kids’ Botanists A full moon


costumes of categorize A bay in will shine on
2019 included pumpkins Florida is Halloween
named

GHOST
princess, Spider- as fruit. A man this year.
Man, Avengers carved a

COVE°
character, jack-o’-
Batman, and lantern in
witch. 16.5
seconds.

12 NAT GEO KIDS • OCTOBER 2020


I WONDER
IF THE OTHER
COWS WILL
SAFETY
BUTTERCUP’S
COW COSTUME
SPOT ME. IS THE CAT’S
MEOW, ER,
MOO.

FUR-ST
It might be okay for you
to get a little spooked
on Halloween, but it’s
not fun for your pets! Use
these tips to keep your
furry friends safe and
happy this season.

Keep your trick-or-treat


bags and bowls of
candy off the floor and
out of reach of your
pets. Chocolate can
make them very sick,
WHAT and the wrappers might
WILL I TURN cause them to choke.
INTO AT
MIDNIGHT?
If you want to give your
pet a costume, intro-
duce the getup slowly
with lots of treats and
pats, and remove the
costume if your pet
seems uncomfortable
or upset.

Does the sound of the


doorbell make your pet
hyper? Put a sign on
your door asking trick-
or-treaters to knock
ALL DRESSED
UP FOR THE instead.
BALL, TINI THE
CHIHUAHUA
PULLS CINDER-
ELLA’S COACH. Keep jack-o’-lanterns
out of the reach of your
pets: Moldy pumpkins
could make them sick,
and lit candles could
burn pets or start fires if
your pet tips them over.
Last year a few dozen people Legend says
gathered outside Area 51, a the spirit of
military facility in Nevada, a black cat Place your pets in a
to rescue aliens ... as a joke. closed room on
haunts the
Halloween night so
(They didn’t U.S. Capitol. they don’t accidentally
find any.) Candy corn get outside. Fill the
was once room with blankets,
nicknamed their favorite toys, and
“chicken feed.” plenty to eat and drink.

OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS 13


A raccoon
might use up to
20 den sites at

Tricks
one time.

for
Treats sneaky ways
6 zookeepers keep
animals playing
BY KITSON JAZYNKA
Red pandas painting pictures? Penguins popping bubbles?
Yes, please!
Thanks to fun activities thought up by creative zookeepers,
captive animals around the world get to experience the wild
life while having fun. Called enrichment, the pastimes encour-
age natural behaviors that help keep the critters physically fit
and entertained.
“Our most important job is to keep our animals happy,” says
England’s Bristol Zoo keeper Precious Bayliss. “Enrichment
activities are the best way to do that.” To see how, check out
ROCKY THE RACCOON
LOOKS FOR MEALWORMS these six stories about animals having fun at the zoo.
IN A JACK-O’-LANTERN.

14 NAT GEO KIDS • OCTOBER 2020


ANDREW MATTHEWS / PA IMAGES VIA GETTY IMAGES (ROCKY);
© ZSL LONDON ZOO (MEERKAT PAIR, SOLO MEERKAT)
1 TWO MEERKATS POKE
HOLES IN A PAPER
EGG TO GET TO THE
MEALWORMS INSIDE.

PUMPKIN
PARTY
BRISTOL ZOO
BRISTOL, ENGLAND

Every October Rocky


the raccoon got to
celebrate Halloween at
the Bristol Zoo. But he
didn’t dress up in

2
costume—he played It’s breakfast time at the ZSL London Zoo. The meerkats
with pumpkins. In the don’t take their eggs scrambled, fried, or sunny-side up
wild, raccoons dig for though. Instead, the eggs are made from recycled news-
food such as bugs and paper and filled with mouth-watering mealworms. Keepers
bird eggs. To encourage
Rocky and his brother, EGG HUNT hide the eggs so the meerkats have to hunt for them by
ZSL LONDON ZOO scent, like they would in the grasslands of southern Africa.
Meeko, to mimic this LONDON, ENGLAND “Some eggs are only partially buried and pretty easy to find,”
natural behavior, keeper keeper Thomas Lawrance says. “But we hide others under
Precious Bayliss hid rocks to challenge them and encourage digging.”
their favorite treats in The zoo’s mob of meerkats—which includes Frank, Archie,
pumpkins. First she Penelope, and Timone—either roll the eggs around until
drilled holes into the they tear, or they poke small holes in the eggs and pull out
gourds, then filled them the worms. “Part of the enrichment is figuring out how to
with mealworms. That get their food,” Lawrance says. The mob must also protect
way the raccoons had to their food from others that want to eat it, just like they
use their opposable would in the wild. Neighborhood crows and robins that live
thumbs—or fingers near the zoo drop in almost every day for lunch. “Luckily the
capable of grasping meerkats are super speedy when it comes to eating,”
objects—to dig out the Lawrance says. “Their guests don’t get much!”
insects. “Rocky was
clever and a bit sneaky,”
she says. “When he
picked out mealworms
from his pumpkin, he’d
steal Meeko’s.” Bayliss Meerkats
also put the pumpkins at distract
different heights to predators by
encourage the raccoons digging up
to climb, like they’d scale clouds of
dust.
trees in the wild. “We
wanted to make sure A MEERKAT STANDS
NEAR ITS NEXT
they weren’t sitting SNACK—MEALWORMS
around all day,” she says. HIDDEN INSIDE
PAPER EGGS.
So what did Rocky
snack on after scarfing
down the mealworms?
The pumpkin itself!
Raccoons love the
squash’s seeds and tasty
flesh. Talk about a real
Halloween treat.

OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS 15


RAFTING FUN
3 CIKANANGA
WILDLIFE CENTER
SUKABUMI, INDONESIA
At Cikananga Wildlife Center,
animal caregivers work to
provide enrichment that keeps
things fresh for their otters.
That’s why Asian small-clawed
otters Molly, Olivia, Brian, and Sophie
have a floating raft in each of their enclosures.(Molly and
Olivia share one enclosure; Brian and Sophie share the
other.) The rafts are made from wood, just like the logs
otters climb on in the Southeast Asian wilderness.
The four otters spend most of their time climbing atop
their rafts and wrestling each other off. It’s fun, but the
activity also helps them build strength and improve their
balance. For extra enrichment, the keepers sometimes give
Asian the otters cans of stones to pound, much like they’d use
small-clawed rocks to break open shells of crabs in the wild. The keepers
otters are the also hide food in the rafts’ cracks for the otters to sniff out.
AN ASIAN SMALL-
smallest species CLAWED OTTER TRIES
of otters. TO CLIMB ATOP THE
“The rafts give them fun and food,” says conservationist
WOODEN RAFT IN ITS Willemijn Eggen. “Of course they love it!”
ENCLOSURE.

4 PAINTING PANDA
ROSAMOND GIFFORD ZOO
SYRACUSE, NEW YORK
Most
red pandas
have tails about
When Basil the red panda paints, he gets color on more than just the as long as
canvas. “It’s almost always in his fur somewhere,” zoo director Ted Fox says. their bodies.
Other species of animals have been known to paint, but the activity is a BASIL THE RED
natural fit for Basil. “Red pandas have a false thumb, or an enlarged wrist PANDA USES HIS
WANICARE (OTTER WITH RAFT); JUERGEN & CHRISTINE SOHNS / MINDEN PICTURES (STANDING OTTER); PETER GEIGER /
EYEEM / GETTY IMAGES (RED PANDA IN FOREST); HANNAH LAPLANTE (BASIL); RZSS / SIÂN ADDISON (PENGUIN, BOTH)

FALSE THUMB
bone, which helps them grip bamboo in the wild,” Fox says. “So we just TO GRIP A
swap the bamboo for a paintbrush.” Red pandas, which live in the moun- PAINTBRUSH.
tains of Nepal, Myanmar, and central China, are also playful and curious,
which makes them more eager than most animals to try new activities.
The activity also helps Basil’s keepers care for him. For example, when
his front paws are busy painting, zoo vets are better able to exam-
ine his belly and feet.
Basil, who now lives in Virginia at the Smithsonian Conser-
vation Biology Institute, where he still paints, uses his art to
get what he wants—more food. “Sometimes Basil would
stop painting and wouldn’t start again until we gave
him a snack,” Fox says. “He loved dried cranberries!”

16
5 POPPING BUBBLES
EDINBURGH ZOO
EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND
When keepers at the Edinburgh Zoo turn on group get so excited they make a noise called
the bubble-blowing machine in the penguin an “ecstatic bray,” which is similar to the
enclosure, dozens of penguins immediately sound a donkey makes. The penguins at the
waddle over to investigate. “It’s almost like Edinburgh Zoo get other enrichment too. The
a traffic jam of penguins,” keeper Kirsty birds can lounge on floating platforms similar
Leighton says. “Seeing the shiny bubbles to how penguins in the wild rest on ice. They
triggers their natural hunting response.” can also whoosh down a waterslide for fun
That’s because the bubbles resemble small and exercise.
shimmering fish the penguins would hunt in Still, chasing bubbles is the most popular
the wild in their subantarctic range. activity with the penguins. Once, a rock-
Realizing that the bubbles aren’t food hopper named Maui wanted all the fun for
doesn’t seem to upset the birds. “They can’t himself. He nipped other penguins to keep
get enough of watching the bubbles float and them away. “When the penguins get naughty,”
then trying to pop them with their beaks,” Leighton says, “we have to put the bubble
Leighton says. Sometimes the penguins in the machine away.”

Gentoos are the


GENTOO (AT FRONT) fastest water-diving
AND ROCKHOPPER
PENGUINS GATHER birds, plunging
TO CHECK OUT THE down at 22 miles
BUBBLES IN THEIR
ENCLOSURE. an hour.

WATCH MORE PENGUINS AT PLAY!


natgeokids.com/october

OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS 17


how many
pumpkIns ARE

6
too many
STAYING SHARP pumpkIns?
CALDWELL ZOO
TYLER, TEXAS
Mac the blue-and-gold macaw uses her beak the same
way humans use their hands—to move things around
and feed herself. That’s why, to make it easier for her
to grip things, her beak always needs to be sharp.
In the tropical regions of South America where they
live, macaws chew on tree limbs to trim their beaks. But
28-year-old Mac gnaws on something more fun: a colorful
toy. Dozens of colored wooden blocks are strung onto a
thick piece of rope. The rope is then hung from a tree at just
the right angle for chewing and shredding. “The wood is MAC THE MACAW
good for sharpening her beak,” bird supervisor Nikki SHARPENS HER
BEAK BY BITING A
Hartman says. “The rope provides soft material to tear and PIECE OF WOOD ON
shred just for fun.” Zoo employees also keep Mac busy by hid- HER COLORFUL TOY.
ing her food in leaf piles. In the fall, she gets pine cones and
pumpkins to shred with her beak.
Known as supersmart birds, macaws need lots of enrich-
ment activities. “We don’t want a bored bird,” Hartman says. Blue-and-gold
macaws can live
“Macaws in captivity can be very destructive!” up to 80 years. A GORILLA INSPECTS
A STICK STACKED
WITH CARVED PUMP-
KINS AT ENGLAND’S
PAIGNTON ZOO.

WHERE
THEY
LIVE RED PANDA PENGUINS OTTERS

EDINBURGH,
SCOTLAND
LONDON,
ENGLAND
BRISTOL,
ENGLAND
SYRACUSE,
TYLER, NEW YORK
TEXAS

SUKABUMI,
INDONESIA

MACAW RACCOONS MEERKATS

A BOLIVIAN BLACK-
SARAH A. MILLER / TYLER MORNING TELEGRAPH (MAC, MAP INSET); PETER
GEIGER / EYEEM / GETTY IMAGES (RED PANDA INSET); RZSS / SIÂN ADDISON
CAPPED SQUIRREL MON-
(PENGUIN INSET); JUERGEN & CHRISTINE SOHNS / MINDEN PICTURES (OTTER KEY AT ENGLAND’S ZSL
INSET); ANDREW MATTHEWS / PA IMAGES VIA GETTY IMAGES (RACCOON LONDON ZOO DIGS FOR
INSET); © ZSL LONDON ZOO (MEERKAT INSET); RICHARD AUSTIN / SHUTTERSTOCK RAISINS IN A PUMPKIN.
(GORILLA); ANDREW COWIE / SHUTTERSTOCK (TIGER); ANDY RAIN / EPA / SHUTTERSTOCK

18 NAT GEO KIDS • OCTOBER 2020


(GIRAFFE); FACUNDO ARRIZABALAGA / EPA-EFE / SHUTTERSTOCK (MONKEYS); AMIEE STUBBS /
NASHVILLE ZOO / NEWSCOM (PORCUPINE); SUE OGROCKI / AP / SHUTTERSTOCK (ELEPHANT)
I THINK JACK-
O’-LANTERNS
ARE CLAW-
SOME.

Pumpkin
Playtime A TIGER CUB AT
ENGLAND’S ZSL
LONDON ZOO TEARS
INTO A PUMPKIN
Zoo animals get COVERED IN CATNIP.

Halloween treats I’m always


wIllIng to
too—pumpkins! stIck my
neck out for
snacks!

A GIRAFFE AT THE
ZSL LONDON ZOO IN
ENGLAND USES ITS
TONGUE TO SCOOP
SOME JUICY LEAVES
OUT OF A PUMPKIN.

who’s up
It’s for a
hard to tell game of
WHICH IS pumpkIn-
cuter—me or ball?
thIs mInI-
pumpkIn.

I dIdn’t
know
pumpkIns MALEE THE ASIAN
had long ELEPHANT CHECKS
taIls too! OUT A PUMPKIN IN
HER ENCLOSURE
AT THE OKLAHOMA
CITY ZOO.

CHARLIE THE POR- SEE MORE ANIMALS PLAYING WITH PUMPKINS.


CUPINE HOLDS A natgeokids.com/october
TEENY PUMPKIN
AT TENNESSEE’S
NASHVILLE ZOO.
OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS 19
5 TERRIFYING
TALES
DEBUNKED
BY KITSON JAZYNKA
ART BY DEAN MACADAM
MYTH 1
THE LOVELAND FROG, A BIG
AMPHIBIOUS CREATURE, PROWLS
AN OHIO TOWN.
Are monsters more than
just the stuff of freaky
HOW IT MAY HAVE STARTED
films? Some people think This slimy, froglike beast is said to stand four feet
so. They believe that big, tall and walk on two legs. In 1972 a police officer
bad beasts lurk just out of claimed he caught sight of it on a roadside while
sight in areas around the driving through Loveland, Ohio, at
world. Luckily scientists have night. When another officer also
explanations that bust these reported seeing the freaky frog, The calls of
the rumor took off. the Blanchard’s
tales. Check out five monster
cricket frog—found
myths that have been in Ohio and other U.S.
WHY IT’S NOT TRUE
defanged. states—sound like
An investigation by local police found no evi- two marbles
dence of the creature. Later, one of the police clicking.
officers stated that he didn’t actually believe
that he had seen a monster, and that people had
exaggerated his story. It’s probable that the Loveland
Frog was actually an escaped pet monitor lizard—
some types can stretch 10 feet.

MYTH 2
SHAGGY-HAIRED BEASTS CALLED YETIS
ROAM ASIA’S PEAKS.
HOW IT MAY HAVE STARTED
Yetis are allegedly hairy ogres that look like a human-bear hybrid
with jagged fangs. The legend of the yeti probably originated in
Tibet, a territory nestled near Asia’s Himalaya mountain range.
Sherpas, a once nomadic people from the area, may have
spread the myth to what is now Nepal and elsewhere during
their travels in the 16th century. Sightings of yetis (which is
Tibetan for “little manlike animals”) continue today.
The Nepali WHY IT’S NOT TRUE
name for When scientists did DNA tests on strands of hair found where
Mount Everest
means
yetis were supposedly spotted, results showed that some of the hair
“Forehead of samples came not from an unknown beast, but from a descendant of
the Sky.” an ancient polar bear species that may live in the area. It’s likely that
those who claimed to have seen a yeti really just saw one of these bears.

20 NAT GEO KIDS • OCTOBER 2020


MYTH 3
Lough
THE DOBHAR-CHÚ—PART DOG, PART OTTER, Corrib, a huge
ALL MONSTER—LURKS IN IRELAND. lake in western
HOW IT MAY HAVE STARTED Ireland, contains
more than 360
An otter-dog mix, the Dobhar-Chú(Gaelic for islands.
“water hound”) supposedly inhabits Ireland’s lakes.
It’s known for unleashing eerie whistles and having
an appetite for humans. No one knows where the
legend of this beast came from, but it dates
back to at least the 1700s, when a carved
image of the creature appeared on the
tombstone of one of its alleged victims.
WHY IT’S NOT TRUE
It’s more likely that Dobhar-Chú is a
Eurasian otter. The animal is found in
Ireland’s rivers and lakes and often
whistles to communicate.

MYTH 4
THE KONGAMATO, A FLYING REPTILIAN
MONSTER, ATTACKS BOATERS IN AFRICA.
HOW IT MAY HAVE STARTED
Reportedly seen soaring over southern and central African swamps, the
Kongamato (meaning “breaker of boats” in Kaonde, an African language) is
said to have leathery wings, a snout filled with sharp teeth, and a bad habit
of swooping down from the sky to smash boats that paddle into its territory.
Some say the creature is a pterodactyl—a prehistoric flying reptile. Although
this myth has been circulating for about a century, its origins are unknown.
WHY IT’S NOT TRUE
Scientists know the Kongamato couldn’t be a pterodactyl,
which went extinct at least 66 million years ago. But it
MYTH 5
could be a swamp-dwelling hammerhead bat, the largest IN THE AMERICAS, THE
bat in Africa, with a wingspan that can stretch three feet. BEASTLY CHUPACABRA
It could also be a big type of stingray that tips boats as DRINKS THE BLOOD OF
it leaps from the water. FARM ANIMALS.
HOW IT MAY HAVE STARTED
When several goats and chickens in
areas of Puerto Rico turned up dead
with their blood seemingly drained in the
1990s, rumors spread that the culprit was a vampire-
like monster with fangs, a forked tongue, and quills running
down its back. A rash of similar deaths that occurred a few
years later in Texas were also blamed on the Chupacabra (which
roughly translates to “goat sucker” in Spanish).
WHY IT’S NOT TRUE
In the
Investigators looking into the deaths of chickens folklore of Native
in Texas found no real evidence that the animals’ Americans from Texas
blood had been drained, making the possibility of and other southwestern
a vampire-like slayer way less likely. And sightings states, coyotes are
of the Chupacabra have usually turned out to be often seen as
The wetlands of sickly coyotes or dogs suffering from mange, a skin tricksters.
Lake Bangweulu in condition that gives them a sinister appearance.
Zambia are home to
roughly 390 species
of birds. OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS 21
DEADLY
CUTIES
This adorable animal has some seriously killer traits.
BY JAMIE KIFFEL-ALCHEH

Don’t be fooled by the crazy-cute


slow loris. The snuggly looking
creature is the only venomous primate
on the planet—and their bite packs
enough toxin to kill a human. “We call
them tiny little fur balls of death,” says
Anna Nekaris, a biologist who studies
the animals in rainforests and bamboo
groves throughout their Southeast
Asian habitats.
A slow loris’s painful bite can have
an immediate impact—its prey usually
feels the effects in just a few seconds.
The not-so-fun results of the venom
range from extreme swelling to
(yikes!) death. But it’s very rare for the KILLER LOOKS
slow loris to bite a human without first
being provoked. A slow
And venom isn’t the only killer loris’s sweet face
move the slow loris has. Check markings might say “Oh, he-ey!”
out five ways the adorable to you, but they say “Danger!” to other
slow loris is actually down- animals. The markings are called aposematic
I A
IC O CEAN

right dangerous. S (pronounced a-puh-sih-MA-tik) coloration, which


A means the markings warn off predators. To a potential
predator like a large snake or orangutan, the markings
CIF

CHINA are like flashing red lights near the loris’s mouth, warning
PA

IA
IND
IND

LAOS them that the loris could fight back with its deadly venom.
N
IA

INDIA Scaring away predators is good for slow lorises because,


OC
MYANMAR EAN
well, they can be slow. The threat of painful venom means a
BANGLADESH
VIETNAM predator will think twice before attacking a slow loris, giv-
PHILIPP

THAILAND
Bay of
South
China
ing time for the primate to make its escape. And a baby
Bengal Sea slow loris’s venom might even be more intense than an
INES

CAMBODIA adult’s, plus they have extra face markings to signal


BRUNEI that to predators. “Baby slow loris saliva con-
Eight species tains proteins that cause extreme pain,”
INDIAN M A L AY S I A
OCEAN of slow lorises Nekaris says. “The babies are dan-
live throughout
I N D O N E S I A
Southeast
gerous, for sure.”
Asia.
Where slow
lorises live

22 NAT GEO KIDS • OCTOBER 2020


TWICE AS TOXIC
Unlike
other venomous ani-
mals that produce venom in one
place, slow lorises produce toxins in
two places: in their saliva and in a gland in
their underarms. When lorises lick that gland
and mix it with their venomous saliva, they cook up
an even more toxic mixture they can inject with a bite.
But why do they even have venom at all? Researchers
aren’t sure. The primates are sneaky enough to catch
and kill their prey—insects, lizards, and small snakes—
without venom; they also have other ways to ward off
predators, like camouflage. Nekaris thinks the
defense might be a way to ward off other lorises.
“Lorises are territorial, or defensive of the
areas they live in,” Nekaris says. “We think
they make this mixture to wound
other lorises and protect
their space.”

HIDDEN HUNTER
Huge
eyes make slow
lorises look harmlessly
huggable. But those peepers also
make them effective hunters. Their
oversize eyes have a special layer behind
the retinas called a tapetum lucidum
(pronounced tuh-PEE-tum loo-SUH-dum),
which is tissue that reflects light back
A JAVAN SLOW
through the retina. That gives lorises LORIS HANGS
better nighttime vision than most OUT IN THE TREE
CANOPY OF JAVA,
creatures, allowing them to AN ISLAND IN
INDONESIA.
hunt in near-total
darkness.

NATURE PICTURE LIBRARY / ALAMY (MAIN IMAGE); MARTIN WALZ (MAP) OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS 23
A BABY JAVAN
SLOW LORIS
CLINGS TO A TREE
BRANCH ON THE STINKY SMELLS
ISLAND OF JAVA
IN INDONESIA.
Slow lorises
bite only if they have no
other way to escape predators
or chase away other lorises in their
territory. If they do sink their teeth
into another animal, their venom does
more than just potentially harm its
victims—the stench warns off other
predators or lorises nearby. “Their
venom smells like rotten eggs, but
stronger,” Nekaris says. “It’s
truly the worst smell.”

COBRA CONNECTION
A slow
loris has another
secret weapon: a snake dance.
By raising their arms and shoulders
to create what looks like a cobra’s raised
hood and then swaying from side to side,
slow lorises can mimic deadly cobras. (Their fur
pattern even resembles a spectacled cobra’s
skin.) “Slow lorises also have a long, dark stripe
down their backs and an extra vertebra, or bone
in their spinal column, like snakes do,” Nekaris
says. “So when a slow loris moves, it really
does look like a snake!” And if the dance
doesn’t scare off predators, hissing
like a serpent often gets the
message across.
HOW SNAKEY, UH, SNEAKY
SLOW LORISES TRICK PREDATORS

A crested hawk-eagle spies a napping The crested hawk-eagle has landed—but


1 Javan slow loris.
2 the loris has an idea to avoid being eaten.

IAR / BARCROFT MEDIA VIA GETTY IMAGES (SLOW LORIS); CHRIS WARE (COMIC); ROLF NUSSBAUMER / NPL / MINDEN PICTURES (TEXAS

24 NAT GEO KIDS • OCTOBER 2020


HORNED LIZARD); DOUG PERRINE / NPL / MINDEN PICTURES (HAGFISH); SEANJOH / GETTY IMAGES (BOMBARDIER BEETLE); MILAN ZYGMUNT /
GETTY IMAGES (GILA MONSTER); FREDER / GETTY IMAGES (KING VULTURE); SILVIA FRIGERIO / EYEEM / GETTY IMAGES (OPOSSUM)
PLAY!

DANGEROU S A Spewing D Sliming its

Defenses B
stinky vomit
Spraying boiling E
enemies
Playing
The slow loris isn’t the only animal that has liquid from its rear dead
powerful protection skills. Match the creatures C Shooting blood F Injecting venom
below to their surprising defense method on from its eyes from its teeth
the right.»

1 TEXAS HORNED LIZARD 2 HAGFISH 3 BOMBARDIER BEETLE

4 GILA MONSTER 5 KING VULTURE 6 OPOSSUM

ANSWERS: 1. C, 2. D, 3. B, 4. F, 5. A, 6. E.

Is it a slow loris? A spectacled cobra? Loris for the win! It’s fooled the
3 The bird can’t tell from the loris’s stance.
4 crested hawk-eagle.

OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS 25


DINO It’s been 66 million years since the dinosaurs
went extinct. So scientists should know
everything there is to know about these

SECRETS
creatures, right?
Well, not exactly. (It’s not like there
were cameras or even people back then!)
But thanks to technology like lasers, 3D
models, x-rays, and even robotics, scien-

LED
tists are making amazing discoveries about

REVEA what dinosaurs really looked like and how


they behaved. For instance, “we’ve been
able to pull all of these extinct bones into
a computer, where we can do things with
them,” paleontologist Larry Witmer says.
“We can reconstruct missing bits … and run
Cool technology shows surprising simulations and better understand how
discoveries about dinosaurs. these animals actually functioned.”
Check out three surprising dino
BY MICHAEL GRESHKO discoveries that modern technology
ART BY DAVIDE BONADONNA has helped scientists unearth.

SPINOSAURS
HUNT A
PREHISTORIC
SAWFISH.

River Beast
The Sahara seems like a strange place for a river-dwelling dino- site in 2018, they dug up a 17-foot Spinosaurus tail—one
saur. But more than 95 million years ago in what is now Morocco, vertebra at a time.(Those are the same bones that make up
a country in northern Africa, today’s giant desert was actually your spine.) Ibrahim then teamed up with paleobiologist
lush with waterways deep enough for car-size fish to swim in. Stephanie Pierce and biologist George Lauder to use high-speed
That’s where Spinosaurus—a predator longer than T. Rex— cameras and robots to figure out how the tail worked. Attaching
made its home. an eight-inch-long cutout of the tail to a device that would send
At first, scientists believed that the sail-backed creature had information to a computer, the scientists watched the mechanical
some kind of watery lifestyle, perhaps hunting fish like a bear tail paddle in an enclosed waterway.
would. But after finding a partial skeleton in 2014, National What’d they learn? That the beast swam through rivers like a
Geographic Explorer Nizar Ibrahim and his team discovered crocodile and could propel itself with eight times more power
that the dinosaur probably spent a lot of time in water. than related land dinosaurs. In fact, Spinosaurus is the first large
And the paleontologists didn’t stop there. Returning to the dino found that had a tail designed for swimming in the water.

26 NAT GEO KIDS • OCTOBER 2020 ADAPTED FROM THE OCTOBER 2020 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE ARTICLE “REIMAGINING DINOSAURS.”
A YOUNG
MUSSAURUS
CHECKS OUT TWO
RHYNCHOSAURS
(PRONOUNCED
REEN-KOH-SOARS)
AS AN ADULT
LOOKS ON.

Baby Steps
Dinosaurs lumbered on all
fours like a Stegosaurus or
scrambled around on two
legs like a Tyrannosaurus.
But not all dinosaurs
moved the same way as
they grew up.
Paleontologist
Alejandro Otero found
that out by using a high-
tech machine called a CT
scanner to take x-rays
of Mussaurus bones
(pronounced moo-SOAR-
us). He then turned the A NEWLY HATCHED
DEINONYCHUS
x-rays into 3D models
using a computer program Cracking the Case CHICK IS WATCHED
OVER BY DAD.

and then simulated how


the dinosaur stood at dif- A fossilized dinosaur egg looks kind of like a rock. So scientists were surprised to discover
ferent ages. that the eggs of Deinonychus(pronounced die-NAHN-uh-kus) were probably blue!
What’d the simulations When exposed to heat and pressure, microscopic dino remains can transform into stuff that
show? It turns out that, can last for millions of years. That lets scientists take a closer look. When paleobiologist
like human babies, Jasmina Wiemann struck the Deinonychus eggs with a laser, the light reflecting back revealed
Mussaurus hatchlings compounds that give modern eggs bright colors and speckling.
walked on all fours—but That helped her figure out the blue color, but it
started walking on their also suggested something else: Like modern birds
CHECK OUT MORE COOL DINO FACTS.
two hind limbs as they with similarly colorful eggs, Deinonychus likely sat natgeokids.com/october
grew older. on open-air nests to hatch their eggs.

OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS 27


STUFF
GAMES, LAUGHS, AND LOTS TO DO!

PLAY
»

SCHOOL
SPIRIT
Everyone is dressed up
for Halloween. But only
one person is wearing
a unique outfit. Can
you figure out which
JAMES YAMASAKI

costume isn’t a copy?


ANSWER ON PAGE 35

28 NAT GEO KIDS • OCTOBER 2020


TOP ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT): © EXCESSMIND / DREAMSTIME; © GHM MEUFFELS / DREAMSTIME; © SWEETCRISIS / DREAMSTIME.
MIDDLE ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT): © SYDEEN / DREAMSTIME; © ANTONIO VERALDI / DREAMSTIME; © UNTEROFFIZIER / DREAMSTIME.
BOTTOM ROW (LEFT TO RIGHT): © MIKHAIL KOKHANCHIKOV / DREAMSTIME; © FOTOSUTRA / DREAMSTIME; © DERRICK NEILL / DREAMSTIME.

DIEPSR

OMWSR
RETITMSE
RCSOOINP

NEIECTEDP

ALAEMNRASD
ANSWERS ON PAGE 35
SQUIRMY WORMY

GSUL
ELETEB
These photos show close-up views of
creepy little critters. Unscramble the
letters to identify what’s in each picture.

OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS


H RAC KC O C O

29
Zeus the hamster lives with his friends at a pet
rescue center. But he thinks he’s a Greek god! Check out
what happens when his two worlds collide, then go online
1
to learn more about the book Zeus the Mighty: The Maze
of the Menacing Minotaur. ZeusTheMighty.com

3 5

6 7 8

STRIKA ENTERTAINMENT

CHECK
OUT
THE
BOOK!

30 NAT GEO KIDS • OCTOBER 2020


Do your part to help prevent single-use
plastic items from reaching the ocean.
Check out ideas here,
then go online for more. natgeokids.com/KidsVsPlastic

MAKE A
DIFFERENCE!
See how many kids have
pledged to reduce their
If you single-use plastic trash,
plan to go trick-or- then go online to take
treating this year, make the pledge too!
sure you follow all local
and state health guide- natgeokids.com/
lines to keep you—and KidsVsPlastic
everyone else—safe.
To make your bag
more festive, grab a
parent and cut bats or
pumpkins out of felt,
then attach them to
your pillowcase with
safety pins.

AMOUNT
NOVSKY / SHUTTERSTOCK (CARDBOARD BOX IN BAG), P MAXWELL PHOTOGRAPHY / SHUTTERSTOCK (ORANGE CANDY), INCOMIBLE / SHUTTERSTOCK (BATS AND PUMPKINS ON
LORELYN MEDINA / SHUTTERSTOCK (ARMS); MICHAEL C. GRAY / SHUTTERSTOCK (TAFFY); ROMAN SAMOKHIN / SHUTTERSTOCK (BROWN CANDY WRAPPER IN BAG), DEN ROZH-

INSTEAD
PILLOWCASE); TACOJIM / GETTY IMAGES (PILLOWCASE), IMAGE DIGITALLY COMPOSED; THOMAS NORTHCUT / GETTY IMAGES (PLASTIC BAG); CAYMIA / GETTY IMAGES (FOIL);

OF

CHOOSE
ANGIE KNOST / ALAMY (PAPER); DEN ROZHNOVSKY / SHUTTERSTOCK (CARDBOARD BOX), JUJHUNAKA / SHUTTERSTOCK (GUMMY CANDIES), IMAGE DIGITALLY COMPOSED

YEAR PLEDGES
OF 2020 28,421

THIS THAT
PILLOWCASE PLASTIC
TRICK-OR-TREAT TRICK-OR-TREAT
BAG BAG
WHY?
Single-use plastic bags are scary—and not in the spooky-fun way! Sea turtles, dolphins, 2019 11,200
and other ocean-dwelling creatures sometimes mistake the bags for food, and
these animals could die if they eat too many.
Your plastic-busting family has probably already swapped out the plastic bags
for reusable ones—easy! But what about a Halloween bag for trick-or-treating? 2018 3,195
Instead of buying a new candy container (which is probably made of plastic), just 1,000
use a pillowcase! (Bonus: You’ll be able to fit way more candy inside.)

CANDY FOIL PAPER CARDBOARD

CRUSH
Want to avoid
plastic-wrapped
goodies? Ask your
parents to look for
candies in these
other types of
packaging to hand
out on Halloween.
GET MORE TIPS FOR A PLASTIC-FREE HALLOWEEN!
natgeokids.com/KidsVsPlastic

OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS 31


W

In the book Explorer Academy: The Star Dunes, 13-year-old


Cruz Coronado breaks secret codes in order to fight
dangerous villains and solve mysteries. Test your own skills
by cracking the code on this page, then check out more
about the book series at ExplorerAcademy.com .
TEXT AND PUZZLE BY GARETH MOORE

THE CODE: Letters in Morse code are represented by a combination of dots and
MORSE CODE dashes. Check out the written Morse code alphabet below.

A B C D E F G H I J

K L M N O P Q R S T

The first
U V W X Y Z Morse code me
ss
was sent by tele age
g
from Washingto raph
n,
Baltimore, Mary D.C., to
land
1844—a distan , in
ce
CRACK of 40 miles.
THIS Decode this Morse code message. ANSWER ON PAGE 35
CODE!

TRY
THIS! Grab a friend and try to send secret messages by tapping your
finger on a table. For a dot, use a quick tap; for a dash, hold your
finger on the table for a beat before tapping the next letter. Be
sure to pause between each letter with your finger in the air so CHECK
your friend knows when a new coded letter starts. OUT
THE
BOOK!

BREAK MORE CODES!


ExplorerAcademy.com

32 NAT GEO KIDS • OCTOBER 2020


RYAN ETTER / IKON IMAGES / GETTY IMAGES (HEADER BACKGROUND); ALHOVIK /
VECTORSTOCK (MORSE CODE); DIGITAL_ART / SHUTTERSTOCK (BACKGROUND)
Check out how Nat Geo Kids readers
responded to this poll, then go online
to vote in the next one!
natgeokids.com/whatchathink

36%
ANYTH G
CHOCOLIN
ATE

CHEWING
What’s
the 33%
GETTY IMAGES (GUM); CREPESOLES / SHUTTERSTOCK (CHOCOLATE); MICHAEL C. GRAY / SHUTTERSTOCK

GUM
tastiest
(TAFFY); TOBIK / SHUTTERSTOCK (GUMMIES); HAYATI KAYHAN / SHUTTERSTOCK (HARD CANDY)

17 % candy? SOUR
GUMMIES

7%
TAFFY

7%
HARD
CANDY

OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS 33


ART ZONE
SPOOKY
JACK-O’-LANTERN
Nat Geo Kids readers drew
some pumpkins that are perfect
for anyone’s porch!

S Something’s
Witchy
Zoë P., 14
Encinitas,
California
ELEGEYDA / SHUTTERSTOCK (BACKGROUND)

Fire-Eyed X S Jack-o’-Bite
Pumpkin Emmett B., 5
Jacob B., 8 Grand Rapids,
Waltham, Michigan
Massachusetts

34 NAT GEO KIDS • OCTOBER 2020


Nat Geo Kids— Include your name, address, phone number, date of birth, a title for your drawing, a statement that

Draw a cool ghost


or ghoul.
Send us
your
original
drawings:
Ghost Art Zone
P.O. Box 98002
Washington, DC
20090-8002
it is your own work, and the name of your parent or guardian. Your parent or guardian must sign a
release for publication if your illustration is selected. Submissions become the property of National
Geographic Partners, and all rights thereto are transferred to National Geographic Partners. Submis-
sions cannot be acknowledged or returned. Selection will be at the discretion of Nat Geo Kids.

Monster X
Scare
Lucas H., 6
Littleton,
Colorado

W
Jack
Scare-o
Chloe A., 8
Eliot, Maine

W
Surprise!
Judith W., 14
Asbury, Iowa

Frank-o’-Lantern X
Sydney J., 11
Neosho, Missouri

S Hallo-rific Haunted X
Raam N., 8 Pumpkin
Dundas, Canada Anna F., 14
Clayton,
Delaware

(page 32): Beware of spies.


“Explorer Academy”
W
Your Worst worms, salamander, slug.
Nightmare centipede, cockroach. Bottom row:
Liam C., 9 pion, beetle. Middle row: termites,
Chagrin Falls, (page 29): Top row: spider, scor-
Ohio “What in the World?”

The unique costume is the bee.


“School Spirits” (page 28):
Answers

OCTOBER 2020 • NAT GEO KIDS 35

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