10 fun things to do with your kids
Let’s face it – parents are overworked and overstressed and don’t have tons of creative energy to come up with interesting things to do with their kids. I know the feeling! Sometimes we just need a little push in the right direction to wake us up from our boredom and repetition. Here some things you can try with your kids, and although they may not all be a hit for every child, your kids will appreciate the change of scenery and the personal interaction with you. This is not rocket science, just simple and fun things to do.
1. Build fortresses
This is a great creative activity and works especially well for boys. You will need to collect a bunch of odds and ends like: nails; wire; glue; cardboard; elastic bands; bits of metal and wood; tins of various sizes; paints; and those great pieces of polystyrene packaging that surround appliances which look like fortresses just waiting to be cut and painted! Then dive in and start building. Turn tins into towers and cardboard and string into draw bridges with chains. Make moats and elevators and stairways. Just let the imagination flow. Add to the fortresses those cheap plastic world war two soldiers and your kids will have hours of fun.
2. Build a race car game
Get a big sheet of cardboard or paper and draw a grand prix style track. Intersect the track with lines every 5cm or so. Then either use small toy cars or cut out little cardboard car shapes and paint the each one a different color. You will need a dice. Each member of the family chooses a car and places it on the starting section. Then race around the track by rolling the dice in turn. You can add your own rules like: 6’s roll again; 1’s miss a turn; etc. Have a statistics sheet and record each game’s positions, working out averages, best ‘times’ etc. I have had hours of fun and laughter doing this with my kids. They keep upgrading the track and the cars and the rules with each game.
3. Go to the zoo
Kids absolutely love animals, and city kids seldom get to go see them live, so book a Saturday at the zoo. When you get tired you can always hire one of those golf buggies – the kids LOVE that!
4. Have ice cream at a park
There are great parks with lakes and playgrounds all over the place. This gets the kids out into the sun and costs virtually nothing. Take a ball along and kick it around for a while. Take the dogs.
5. Have your kid’s friends over for a braai
Get the family into the garden with your kid’s friends. Kids get bored with their parent’s company and need to spend time with friends their age. Light a fire, make boerewors rolls and let them have fun. When they start running out of ideas, start a game of boules or croquet on the lawn.
6. Read to your kids
Just pick up an interesting book and read. It’s always warm and cozy to read together as a family all cuddled up in bed. Read with expression.
7. Broken story
As you all sit in the lounge start a story. Literally tell a story starting with “Once upon a time…” say three sentences and then ‘pass the story on’ to the person on your left. That person must continue the story and say three more sentences. You will have great fun going around the room several times and seeing how each child throws their own personality and creativity into the story. You also learn a lot about your kids this way.
8. Have a dance party
Clear out the coffee table, turn up your kids’ favorite music (I feel your pain if it’s the Jonas Brothers), and have a family disco. Invite their best buddies over and do all sorts of crazy moves and dances. Have each child demonstrate their own dance while everyone copies them. Make pink and blue non-alcoholic cocktails and even dress up for the occasion in fancy dress.
9. Go fishing
Find a nearby lake or dam where fishing is permitted, pack some chairs and a picnic and get your kids cheap fishing rods for the occasion. Show them how to attach a hook and bait and how to cast. If the fish aren’t biting and they start getting bored, unpack the picnic and have a feast.
10. Go camping
Camping is one of the greatest things you can do with your kids, ever! Campfires at night; fishing at dusk; collecting wood; hiking; pitching tents; cooking camp food; exploring; keeping out the bugs; horse riding; bird watching… the healthy, soul-restoring things you can do on camp is endless. Your kids will unwind, relax and be kids again – and so will you. Camping requires a small investment up front but it is one of the best investments into your family you will ever make. Once you have the stuff you need, camping is very budget friendly. I suggest the following minimum basics which can be found at camping stores, Macro, Sportsman’s Warehouse… pretty much anywhere:
- Tents
- Gas cooker
- Lights for inside the tents and walking around
- Portable table and chairs
- Ground sheet and tarpaulin for a central gathering/social area
- Inflatable mattresses and pump
- Sleeping bags
- Fishing equipment
- A box of cheap kitchen crockery and cutlery (plastic or tin)
Share your ideas for fun and inexpensive things to do with your kids. Leave a comment.
Here are some more, I have a daugher, so most of these are probably more “girly”:
Bake biscuits – Dig out your kids’ play-doh shapes and use them to cut out unusual and fun shapes.
Make “Marie Art”- Make up a batch of icing and then divide into at least 3 parts. Add food colouring to the icing, throw in some smarties, edible silver balls, vermicilli etc. and…VOILA! Move over Picasso…
Keep an “Art Box” – Fill it with cheap stickers, pipe-cleaners, felt, scrapbooking supplies, coloured paper, old egg boxes…anything you can think of, and get creative!
Teach your child how to train your dog to do tricks – or involve both in doggy obedience classes (if you are lucky the obedience thing will rub off on the kids…)
Play the “other uses” game – Pick an ordinary household object and challenge your kids to come up with alternative uses for it (e.g. CD’s – smash up and use as mosaic pieces, use as a painting canvas, play frisbee…etc.) This is great for stimulating creative thinking, and is a great game for long, boring car trips. You will be truly impressed with what your children come up with!
Sing silly songs – Make up your own if you fancy.
Take a walk and en route collect all kinds of leaves and flowers. Press them between tissues inside a heavy book (alternative use for a Bible?) for about two weeks, and you can then use them in your creative projects.
Great response Penny. Look forward to more. These are great ideas I know Robyn would love.