Storytime: Yetis

Winter monsters, come play! Yetis (or yeti, looks like either can be plural) have a pretty good representation in picture books, as well as some popular media. Smallfoot, Abominable, and Missing Link are all fairly recent animated films featuring yetis. I was also reminded of the yeti character in the old stop-motion Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer television special as well as the Pixar film Monsters, Inc by families who came to the program. So it wasn’t too difficult to plan a whole storytime around yetis! I did this theme back in 2020 (pre-blog) and enjoyed revisiting it and adding some new songs and activities. Props to Lady Librarian Life, who first inspired this theme and from whom I borrowed a lot of activities!

Early Literacy Tip: The concept of loud and soft plays an important role in music and throughout life. Children need to know when a loud voice is okay and when a soft voice is required. Through music and rhymes they can have fun learning the difference between loud and soft, and practice the right time for the right volume. -The Early Literacy Kit: A Handbook and Tip Cards by Betsy Diamant-Cohen & Saroj Ghoting

Welcome Song: Hello, Friends* (TT) (TB) (FT)** †

Hello Friends rhyme sheet. Includes a smiling rainbow and two yellow ducks at the bottom. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Warm Up Song: Wake Up, Feet* (TT) (TB) (FT)
This is a repeated song that everyone seems to enjoy. I always begin and end with feet and tummies, but find two other body parts to wiggle in the middle. I rotate between elbows, cheeks, hips, noses, arms, chins, thighs, heads, shoulders, ears, knees, and fingers.

Wake Up Feet thumbnail, with a graphic of three pairs of baby-sized shoes. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Lifting Rhyme: Toast in the Toaster* (TT) (TB) (FT)

Toast in the Toaster thumbnail, with a graphic of a toaster with a piece of bread hovering above it. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Intro: Today we are talking about a mythical creature called a Yeti. A mythical creature is one that we tell stories about, but doesn’t really exist in real life, like a unicorn or a dragon. A yeti lives high in the mountains where it’s cold and snowy most of the time. They have fuzzy white hair all over their bodies and walk on two feet like a person. They usually don’t like to be out in the open and are shy around people. Some stories say they are ferocious and like to roar! Can I hear a mighty yeti roar?

Yes, we did this rhyme last week, but it never gets old.
Fingerplay: Two Little Yetis (TT) (TB) (FT)
(style of Two Blackbirds)
Two little yetis playing in the snow
One was fast and one was slow
Go away fast, go away slow
Come back fast, come back slow

Two little yetis looking at the clouds One was quiet and one was loud…
Two little yetis getting kind of chilly, One was serious and one was silly…
Source: Lady Librarian Life

two little yetis thumbnail, with a graphic of two white and blue yetis.  click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Now, let’s pretend to be a yeti ourselves.
Action Rhyme: Yeti, Yeti, Turn Around (TT) (TB) (FT)
Yeti, Yeti, turn around
Yeti, Yeti, touch the ground
Yeti, Yeti, reach up high
Yeti, Yeti, blink your eyes
Yeti, Yeti, show your teeth
Yeti, Yeti, stomp your feet
Yeti, Yeti, slap your knees
Yeti, Yeti, sit down, please
Source: Lady Librarian Life

yeti turn around thumbnail, with a graphic of a white and blue yeti waving. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Transition: If You’re Ready for a Story* (TB) (FT)

This was a fun title, but one that my library didn’t own. Thankfully, I was able to get a copy from my home library because it worked so seamlessly with the Yeti Hunt theme.
Read: No Yeti Yet by Mary Ann Fraser (TT) (FT)

no yeti yet book cover, featuring two children in the snow, looking at a large footprint. a yeti is peering at them from behind a mound of snow.

I tried this one with my older group, but they were pretty wiggly through it. Cute title, but they maybe were just not in the mood that day.
Read: The Thing About Yetis by Vin Vogel (TB)

The thing about yetis show a cute yeti in the snow wearing a red earflap hat and holding a small stuffed yeti

Yetis are such mysterious creatures! Let’s see if we can go find some.
Everyone seemed to enjoy this one and I’ve started to figure out some ways to make the “hunt” flow well for me and be enjoyable for my groups. Just to keep things moving, I’ve started skipping the “can’t go over it” part, and it still works really well. We slap our knees in rhythm during the “chorus” part. For the flannel, I was able to reuse the penguin ice floe from last week to add to my various bear/dragon hunt pieces. No more than four terrains (including the cave) are a good amount for my age group. This has taken a good amount of trial and error – the very first time I did Bear Hunt, it was a mess! But tweaks along the way have made it a favorite.
Chant: Going on a Yeti Hunt (TT) (TB) (FT)
(chorus, repeat between each terrain)
​We’re going on a yeti hunt (We’re going on a yeti hunt)
We’re gonna find a big one! (We’re gonna find a big one!)
With great big feet (With great big feet) (stomp feet)
And fuzzy white fur (And fuzzy white fur)
Look, it’s a great, big field of snow
We have to ski across it – put on your skis! Swoosh, swoosh, swoosh!
Look, it’s a wide, frozen river
We have to skate across it – get your skates on! Glide, glide, glide!
Look, it’s a great big mountain with snow on top
We have to climb up it! Do you have all your climbing gear? (pretend to climb, then when you get to the top, slide down the other side: whee!)
Look, it’s a deep, dark cave! Just like where the Yeti lives.
Let’s go in: Tiptoe, tiptoe, tiptoe!
Whoops, what is that? I see two great big feet!
And fuzzy white fur! It’s a Yeti! RUN!
(backwards through terrain)
Back to the house, shut the door, up the stairs, jump in bed, put the blanket over your head – are we safe? whew!
Source: adapted from Adventures in Storytime

yeti hunt flannel, with a snow field, river, snow capped mountain, and cave. A yet figure is show at the cave mouth.

going on a yeti hunt thumbnail, with a graphic of a tall sasquatch like yeti going into an icy cave. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

I made this felt set back in 2020, and I’m not sure where I got the pattern! It’s very hard to tell from the pictures, but the beard part was made from glittery white felt – I love it! As a transition from the Yeti Hunt, I set this one up like this:
Let’s peek out the window and see if it’s safe outside. Oh, no!! I see not one, not two, three, four, but FIVE enormous yetis out there! Maybe they will go away if we wait.
Counting Rhyme: Five Enormous Yetis (TT) (TB) (FT)
Five enormous yetis letting out a roar
One stomped away and then there were four
Stomp, stomp, stomp, stomp, ROAR!

4… hiding in the trees…
3… didn’t know what to do…
2… having lots of fun…
1… saw the setting sun…
Source: Lady Librarian Life

flannel with five yets with white beards and blue faces, each with a different expression.

five enormous yetis thumbnail, with a graphic of a five blue yeti heads peeking around the sides and bottom of the sheet. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

We found a yeti, let’s see what they do.
This was not the most engaging, so I dropped it after the first session.
Action Song: The Yetis In the Snow (TT)
(tune of Wheels on the Bus)
The yetis in the snow go roar, roar, roar
Roar, roar, roar, roar, roar, roar
The yetis in the snow go roar, roar, roar,
All through the snow

Additional verses:
…stomp their feet
…slide down the hill – whee!
…creep by the town sh, sh, sh
Source: Lady Librarian Life

yeti in the snow thumbnail, with a graphic of yeti creeping in front of a darkened town. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Time to get our scarves out. What a snowy day! Yeti love the snow.
Scarf Song: Snowflake in the Sky (TT) (TB) (FT)
(tune of Twinkle, Twinkle)
Snowflake, snowflake in the sky
Love to watch you floating by
Down you fall upon the ground
Down you fall without a sound
Snowflake, snowflake in the sky
Love to watch you floating by
Source: Jbrary

snowflake in the sky thumbnail, with a graphic of a brown indeterminate monster wearing a red scarf and sticking its tongue out to catch falling snowflakes. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

I was looking for more snowy scarf rhymes to add, and found this one about the robin which I rewrote to fit with yetis.
Oh, the weather is changing again – the wind is blowing! Can you make your scarf blow in the wind?
Scarf Rhyme: When Cold Winds Blow (TT) (TB) (FT)
When cold winds blow
And we shall have snow
What will the shy yetis do?
They’ll run outside
With their arms open wide
Then slide down the mountain with a “yahoo!”
Source: adapted from King County (WA) Lib Sys

when the cold winds blow thumbnail, with a graphic of a blue yeti raising his arms in front of a mountain. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Another kind of a stretch to fit with the theme, but I could just imagine a bunch of yetis rolling around in the snow! I demoed rolling the scarf by holding both ends and rolling your hands, or by letting go of one end and letting it fly free. Either works.
Yetis like to roll around and play in the snow.
Scarf Rhyme: Roly Poly (TT) (TB) (FT)
(roll scarf accordingly)
Roly poly, roly, poly, up, up, up
Roly poly, roly, poly, down, down, down
Roly poly, roly, poly, out, out, out
Roly poly, roly, poly, in, in, in
Roly poly, roly, poly, BIG, BIG, BIG
Roly poly, roly, poly, very, very small
Roly poly, roly, poly, fast, fast, fast, fast, fast!
Rol…ly… po…ly… to… a… stop! (clap)
Source: Rebecca Jane Flanagan

roly poly thumbnail, with a graphic of a snowboarding yeti doing a loop de loop. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Action Song: Zoom, Zoom, Zoom!* (TT) (TB) (FT)

zoom zoom zoom thumbnail, with a graphic of a rocket ship. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Craft: Yeti Fork Painting (TB) (FT)
Inspired by this post at the Our Kid Things blog, we painted yeti fur with white paint and forks. I didn’t want to mess with two colors of paint, so I made and cut a head and chest shape out of light blue construction paper and pre-glued it down to black construction paper. I also drew big eyes and a toothy mouth/nose combo on white cardstock and made copies. So the kids only had three small things to glue down, then they could go to work painting the fur. They came out very cute, and unique with interesting combinations of feature placement (one kid did a cyclops yeti!) and though most painted with the forks, some abandoned them and did finger painting. It’s all good! I love that they can do their own thing and most of our parents are willing to let them.

craft showing a blue head above a blue chest on black construction paper. big eyes and a large smiling toothy mouth are pasted to the head, and fork lines of white paint are all over the head and chest for hair

Play Time
The toddlers have two laundry baskets of baby toys – rattles and cars, sorters and stackers, toy phones and spinners. For the older kids, I have foam blocks, soft food toys, puzzles, and a few other items that are a little more sophisticated than the baby toys. For Family Time, I gauge the overall age of the group and put out what seems right for them. We play for 5-10 minutes at the most, then I ring the bell and ask the kids to help me clean up. I think the clean up bit is good practice for them!

Goodbye Song: See You Later Alligator* (TT) (TB) (FT)

See you later thumbnail, with a graphic of a green alligator, brown crocodile, ladybug, and jellyfish. click the image to download a non-branded PDF

Other books I had available for families to browse (and may work for you on this theme)
(There are a good number but not a huge number on yetis, so I supplemented with Bigfoot books!)
Are We There, Yeti? – Ashlyn Anstee
Dear Yeti –
James Kwan
Henry and the Yeti – Russell Ayto
How to Catch a Yeti –
Adam Wallace & Andy Elkerton
Itchy, Scratchy Pants –
Steve Smallman & Elina Ellis
Not Yet, Yeti –
Bethany V Freitas & Maddie Frost
Yetis Are the Worst –
Alex Willan
Elwood Bigfoot –
Jill Esbaum & Nate Wragg
Bigfoot Cinderrrrrella –
Tony Johnston & James Warhola
Larf –
Ashley Spires
Bigfoot’s Big Heart –
Sarah Glenn Marsh & Ishaa Lobo

This storytime was presented in-person on 1/20, 1/21, 1/22, & 1/30/25.

Storytime Handout:

handout with suggested books, rhyme and song lyrics.

*Lyrics to these songs can be found on the Repeated Songs & Rhymes page.

**These symbols indicate the program sessions I used the activities for:
(TT) Toddler Time, ages 1-2
(TB) Teddy Bears, ages 2-3.5
(FT) Family Time, ages 0-3.5

† Click the image of rhyme/song sheets to download a non-branded PDF

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Early literacy librarian near Indianapolis, Indiana.

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