US Curriculum Alignment
CCSS SL.K.5, NGSS K-LS1-1
Nature Scene Poster – Lion Cub
- Instant digital download after checkout
- Print at home, as many times as you like
- High-resolution PDF — ready for A4 & US Letter
- Formats
- A2, A3, A4, Arch C, Tabloid, US Letter
- Type
- Nature Scene Poster
This Nature Scene Poster features a Lion Cub within its African savanna habitat, an instant printable digital download suited to Montessori animal and geography lessons. The scene format helps children associate the young lion with its natural surroundings, not just an isolated image.
Print in A2, A3, A4, Arch C, Tabloid, or US Letter. Combine with other Africa nature posters for a broader continent study.
No invented anatomy.
No blurred or fused details.
The same hand-drawn look across the whole collection — verified against the real species, animal by animal.
“The closer you look, the more it should hold up.”
Every animal is reviewed against real species references before it becomes part of a product. We check the body structure, proportions, joints, feet, paws, hooves, beaks, horns, tails and species-specific markings.
Where toes and claws are visible, their number and arrangement match the real animal. There are no fused paws, missing limbs, unexplained extra toes or shapes that fall apart when you look more closely.
The illustration remains soft and hand-drawn, but the anatomy underneath it must make sense.
Often
asked.
Lionesses in a pride often give birth around the same time and nurse each other's cubs, sharing the care of the entire litter.
Cubs begin practicing stalking and pouncing on each other and on adults' tails from around 3 months old, joining real hunts near 11 months.
A lioness hides her newborn cubs in a den away from the pride for the first six to eight weeks to protect them from predators and rival males.
Young lions typically leave the pride or are pushed out around two to three years old, when males in particular must find or form their own territory.


