The Curious Kidcast Podcast Por Andy Irving arte de portada

The Curious Kidcast

The Curious Kidcast

De: Andy Irving
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The Curious Kidcast is a fun and educational podcast for kids aged 7 to 11 who love exploring science, nature, and curious questions about the world. Each episode answers fascinating questions kids ask—like “Why is the sky blue?”, “Do fish sleep?”, and more! Perfect for parents and families looking for an entertaining kids’ science podcast full of fun facts, discovery, and learning adventures. Tune in for engaging stories, easy explanations, and exciting explorations of the weird and wonderful things kids wonder about.Andy Irving
Episodios
  • Do Cats, Lions and Tigers Understand each other? | Animal facts for kids
    Apr 1 2026

    In this episode of The Curious Kidcast, host Charlie dives deep into the science of animal communication to find out whether cats, lions, and tigers can actually understand each other.

    This episode is packed with fun facts about animal communication, the feline family, body language in big cats, and even whether cats from different countries around the world speak the same language. It is a brilliant episode for curious kids aged 7 to 11, perfect for science learning at home, homeschool nature study, family car journeys, or just satisfying that brilliant, never-ending curiosity your child carries everywhere.

    What Your Child Will Learn

    This episode introduces kids to real science concepts in a fun, accessible, and laugh-out-loud way. By the end of the episode, young listeners will be able to:

    • Explain what the feline family is and which animals belong to it
    • Understand how cats, lions, and tigers use body language, sound, and scent to communicate
    • Describe what a slow blink means in cat communication
    • Explain why cats from different countries can still understand each other
    • Understand the difference between species-specific signals and universal animal communication
    • Answer fun quiz questions about animal science with growing confidence

    Key Science Topics Covered

    The Feline Family

    Cats, lions, and tigers all belong to the biological family Felidae, commonly called the feline family. This shared ancestry means they have a lot of physical and behavioural traits in common, including sharp claws, strong hunting instincts, excellent night vision, and overlapping communication systems. Understanding this helps children build foundational knowledge in biology, taxonomy, and the natural world.

    Do Cats From Different Countries Understand Each Other?

    A standout section of this episode explores whether a cat from England would understand a cat from Japan or Canada. The answer is a resounding yes. Domestic cats are all the same species and use the same core set of signals regardless of geography. This connects to big ideas in biology around species identity, universal behaviour, and the difference between learned habits and instinctive communication.

    Why This Episode Is Great for Homeschoolers and Families

    The Curious Kidcast is designed to make science and nature irresistibly engaging for children aged 7 to 11. This episode on feline communication ticks a wide range of curriculum boxes, including animal biology, ecosystems, classification of living things, and communication in the natural world. It also encourages children to ask questions about everyday life, like wondering why your cat behaves the way it does, and to turn those observations into genuine scientific curiosity.

    About The Curious Kidcast

    The Curious Kidcast is a fun, facts-filled science and nature podcast for children aged 7 to 11. Every episode starts with a real question sent in by a real kid, and host Charlie investigates the answer with plenty of humour, surprising science, and an end-of-episode quiz. Episodes are screen-free, family-friendly, and designed to make learning feel like an adventure. The Curious Kidcast is perfect for curious kids, busy parents, homeschool families, and anyone who believes that asking big questions is always a great idea.

    Subscribe and never miss an episode.

    If your child has a question they would love Charlie to investigate, head to curiouskidcast.com and send it in. You can also find The Curious Kidcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and wherever you listen to podcasts.

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    9 m
  • Why are bubbles always round? | Science for kids explained
    Mar 25 2026

    Ever watched a bubble float past your nose and thought, "Hang on, why is that round?" In this episode of The Curious Kidcast, your host Charlie dives deep into one of the most brilliant questions a curious kid can ask. Packed with fun facts, gentle laughs, real science and everyday examples from nature, this is family learning at its best. Whether you are a kid, a parent, a homeschooling family or just someone who never quite got a proper answer to this question, you are in exactly the right place.

    In this episode you will learn:

    • What a bubble actually is and how it forms
    • What surface tension means in simple, fun language
    • Why a sphere is the most efficient shape in nature
    • How air pressure and the soap film work together
    • Why shaped wands still make round bubbles
    • How bubble science connects to raindrops and everyday nature
    • What minimal surfaces are and why scientists actually care about soap films

    Episode Summary

    This kids science podcast episode starts with a brilliant question from Priya, a listener from Birmingham, England, who was blowing bubbles through a straw in her living room when it suddenly hit her: why are they always round. Charlie takes that question and turns it into a fun, fact filled journey through physics, nature and the hidden maths that shapes the world around us.

    Kids discover that bubbles are round because of a force called surface tension, which pulls the thin soap film inward while the trapped air inside pushes outward. When these forces balance perfectly in every direction, the shape that uses the least surface area and the least energy is always a sphere. The episode uses real life comparisons, silly observations and easy examples to make sure the science sticks.

    Along the way, there are fun digressions about water strider insects walking on ponds, why the middle seat on a packed bus is a terrible experience for bubbles and people alike, and why being scientifically lazy is sometimes the most correct thing you can do. It is the kind of episode that sparks dinner table conversations and garden experiments in equal measure.

    Science Concepts Covered

    • Surface tension and why water molecules are extremely clingy
    • Spheres and minimal surface area as a geometric and physical principle
    • Energy efficiency in natural systems
    • Air pressure and how it balances with surface tension inside a bubble
    • Soap chemistry and why plain water does not make good bubbles
    • Minimal surfaces and how mathematicians and engineers use soap films
    • Nature connections including raindrops, water droplets and foam

    Why Kids and Families Love The Curious Kidcast

    The Curious Kidcast is a science and nature podcast built around the questions real kids actually ask. Every episode takes a single brilliant question and answers it properly, with real facts, fun storytelling and plenty of comedy. It is designed to make kids feel like their curiosity matters, and to give parents and homeschooling families a reliable, entertaining and genuinely educational listen they can enjoy together.

    Episodes cover science, nature, the human body, animals, space, everyday physics and much more. If your child has a question they would love to hear answered on the show, you can submit it directly on the website.

    Have a Question for Charlie

    No question is too silly, too weird or too random on this show. If your child has been wondering about something and cannot get a satisfying answer, send it in. It might just become the next episode. Visit curiouskidcast.com to submit your question and subscribe so you never miss an episode.

    If you are listening on a podcast app, leaving a review really does help other curious kids and families find the show. Share this episode with a friend, a classmate, a parent or anyone who has ever looked at a bubble and wondered why it is round.

    Keywords: science for kids, educational podcast, homeschooling, family learning, kids podcast, fun facts, nature science, parenting, curious kids, surface tension, bubble science

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    12 m
  • Are there other earths out there? | Amazing Space trivia for kids
    Mar 18 2026

    What if there was another planet, somewhere far out in space, that looked just like Earth? What if it had oceans, mountains, clouds, and maybe even its own version of pizza? In this episode of The Curious Kidcast, your host Charlie tackles one of the biggest questions curious kids ask: are there other Earths out there?

    What Your Child Will Learn

    • What scientists mean when they talk about "another Earth"
    • What an exoplanet is and why they are so exciting
    • Why liquid water is one of the most important ingredients for life
    • What the Goldilocks Zone is and why it matters
    • Real exoplanets scientists have discovered, including Kepler-452b and TRAPPIST-1
    • How scientists find planets using the transit method and the wobble method
    • What biosignatures are and how future telescopes might detect life
    • Why the universe is probably too big for Earth to be completely unique

    Episode Highlights

    • Why a year on Kepler-452b is slightly longer than on Earth, which means waiting even longer for Christmas
    • A star system called TRAPPIST-1 that has seven Earth-sized planets orbiting the same star
    • Why "Earth-like planet" headlines can be a little sneaky, and what scientists actually know
    • The wobble method, possibly the greatest name in all of science
    • A three-question fun quiz to test what your kids have learned

    Perfect For

    • Curious kids aged 7 to 11
    • Families who love learning together on car journeys, walks, or at home
    • Homeschool science lessons on space, astronomy, and the solar system
    • Parents looking for safe, funny, and genuinely educational content
    • Teachers looking for a fun supplement to KS2 science topics
    • Anyone who has ever looked at the night sky and wondered "is anyone else out there?"

    Episode Quiz Questions

    At the end of every episode, Charlie runs a fun multiple choice quiz. This episode's questions cover:

    • What do scientists call planets outside our solar system?
    • What is the nickname for the "just right" distance from a star?
    • How does the transit method work?

    Can your child get all three right? Listen and find out.

    Fun Facts From This Episode

    • Scientists have discovered more than 6,000 exoplanets outside our solar system
    • On some planets, it rains molten iron
    • The Goldilocks Zone is the region around a star that is not too hot and not too cold for liquid water
    • Kepler-452b is often called Earth's cousin and takes 385 days to orbit its star
    • TRAPPIST-1 has seven planets orbiting the same star, some in the habitable zone
    • The Milky Way contains hundreds of billions of stars, many of which have their own planets

    Keywords and Topics Covered

    kids science

    exoplanets

    space for kids

    homeschool science

    family podcast

    are there other earths

    Goldilocks Zone

    Kepler-452b

    TRAPPIST-1

    alien life for kids

    fun science facts

    nature and science

    educational podcast

    learning for kids

    curious kids

    parenting

    KS2 science

    biosignatures

    transit method

    wobble method


    Got a question you'd like Charlie to answer?

    Head to curiouskidcast.com and send it in. It could be about space, animals, the human body, food, weather, or why adults always say "we'll see" when they clearly mean no. We want to hear from you.

    About The Curious Kidcast

    The Curious Kidcast is a fun, funny, and properly researched science and nature podcast for kids aged 7 to 11. Each episode takes a real question asked by a real child and turns it into an audio adventure packed with facts, comedy, and a short quiz. It is completely safe for kids, loved by parents, and the perfect companion for families who love learning together.

    New episodes are released weekly. Subscribe so you never miss one, and if your child has a burning question about the world, the universe, or anything in between, visit curiouskidcast.com to send it in.

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    13 m
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