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Tag Archives: backyard activities

Since we were not going anywhere cool like Florida were going to have a fabulous “stay-cation” for Spring Break, I decided we would have fun filled theme days.  This was part of my Happiness Project for March.  Here’s our week in photos…

Monday:  Play Day with friends…

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Tuesday:  Craft Day…We made fairies…2-DSC08371

and an Easter craft…

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Wednesday was Treasure Hunt Day…

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I planned two…a picture one for the non-readers…and a written clue one for the oldest child…

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The weather was beautiful so I could utilize the outdoors…

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And hide one of the treasures in the tulip patch…

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Thursday was nature day.  I taught the older two how to make collages.  I think they turned out pretty cool…

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Lots of hard work finding the perfect nature pictures from magazines.  My oldest kept saying, “Mom, why do all these pictures have runners in them?”  Too many Runners World magazines laying around…

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The weather continued be warm and sunny.  We rode bikes at the park…

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Threw rocks in the river…

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And enjoyed being outside…

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Friday was “Water Day.”  I won five passes to the Kroc Center at a triathlon club meeting.  We had a great afternoon of indoor rock climbing and swimming.

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And water slides…

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On Saturday we had Family Game Night and played the board game Life  which was rather interesting.

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Some tears shed over having “athlete” as a career instead of police office and getting stuck with a mobile home versus the Victorian mansion.  Rob had so many kids he needed an extra car.

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At the conclusion of the game, my son threw his wife out of the car and said, “I’m getting rid of my girl.”

My high school teacher called the day after Spring Break “BS Monday.”  There is NO break until Memorial Day which seems like forever…and summer is a little ways off.  But thankfully we’ve had some warm sunny days here.


Our town puts on one of the largest kid’s races in the country called the Awesome 3000.  Last year my husband suggested our oldest (who was five at the time) run in it.   It is for kids as young as three all the way up to middle schoolers.  Depending on their age, kids can run anywhere from 300 meters to a 3 kilometers.  My daughter had to run a 1.5k which is about a mile.

With all my running experience, I figured I could help her train.   I started by taking her on a very condensed versions of my own training runs around the neighborhood.  The first run she loved.  By the third run it was a lot of complaining, frustration, and boredom.  How can I make this fun?  It was a question I struggled with.

As we entered into Awesome 3000 training again for her second experience, here is what I am doing.

1)  Encouragement!  If you have ever run a race, you know how the cheering (even if it is from total strangers) gets you across that finish line.  I daresay kids need it even more.  I find myself having to cheer her through every single training run.

2)  Find a common parking lot, track, or course.  As much as I find lap running boring, it does help my daughter measure her own progress.  She can run a whole lap without stopping.  Next she will try for two laps.  Once she is comfortable running a few laps without stopping, we will run on a trail or someplace more scenic.

3)  Make it fun with games. While we may do a lap or two, we also play simple games.  Lately we have been playing “triathlon.”  We pretend to swim, then jump on our bikes and do a lap around the parking lot, put our bikes down and run one lap.  Or we played a version of Red Light, Green Light called “Red Light, Green Light, Disco.” When you yell “Red Light” everyone has to stop.  “Green Light” means “go.” Yelling Disco means standing in one place and dancing.  The kids love it!

4) Make a rewards chart.  For every fitness activity whether it is swim lessons, running laps, playing tag, walking to the store, or riding bikes, the kids put a sticker on a chart.  I let them pick out their own stickers.

5) Set an example.  I remember an article in runners world about a father and son doing a Ironman triathlon together.  A friends was sharing with the pair how he bought his own son a very expensive racing bike and it sat in the garage.  The son said, “Well did you ever ask him to go biking with you?”  The father had not.  I grew up biking and swimming with my dad.  I want the same for my own kids!  It’s more fun when you can do it together.

 


Last year was the first year I planned a kid’s birthday party and I learned a lot.  Although it went well, I felt frazzled, overwhelmed, and spent too much money in the wrong places.  This year my oldest wanted a camping party.  I thought, “How cool of an idea is that!?”

These are the tent invitations we made.  I found this idea from Kelli over at Random Thoughts of a Supermom.  I let my oldest put bug stickers on it.

And the “paper tent” opens up with the invite…

I happened to be near Michael’s Craft Store when they were having a big end of the summer sidewalk sale.  I got twelve packs of plates, twelve napkins, ten glow in the dark bracelets and this banner for less than $5.00.  It is not a camping theme, but we chose green, pink, and yellow as theme colors–so they worked perfectly.  My oldest likes big and bold.  This is where I spent too much money last year–on the table decorations.

Originally since we decided on a backyard party, we were going to have everyone eat outside.  But with all the bees and the cooler temperatures we roasted hot dogs outside on the fire pit and ate inside.

But the girls loved roasting hot dogs by the fire pit.  We also roasted marshmallows at the end of the evening before the girls went home.  As you can see we set up our big tent in the backyard as part of the decor.

For activities I set up a few craft tables with “Dollar Store” type crafts.  The girls made their own tote favor bags  and door hangers with foam shapes.

I did a special treasure hunt based on the Clifford book “Camping Out.”

I read the story to the girls in the tent.  After I finished, I told them Clifford and his friends had been camping in our backyard the night before and they left behind some objects.  Each girl got a guide and they had to find things my husband hid all over the backyard.  Some of the items were Clifford’s bone, water bowl, a snippet of his fur (which was the end of a duster dyed red with markers).  Other items were from the story like Jetta’s computer mouse, shooting stars etc.

For the cake I did dirt cupcakes with gummy worms.  This was in Family Fun a couple months ago.  I am not a cake decorator and I actually dread making cakes.  But this idea was simple enough for me and my daughter loved it.  And make cake decor friend let me use her cupcake tower.

The whole party was only two hours, but we were pretty wiped out by the end of it.  It was wonderful to see my daughter having a blast.  She told us it was the best birthday ever!


We live in Oregon which is about as “green” as you can get.  The longer you live in a place, the more you immerse yourself in the culture.  So when Rob told me he was bringing home a composter, I did not really question it. But I had no idea what was going in my yard.

This is our composter.  Most of the time it has a lid on it.  We keep it in the very back corner of the garden.

This is what we put our food waste in.  It is usually kept under the sink.  You can put just about any food waste in there as long as it is not meat or dairy.  You can even put household items in like dryer lint, paper towels, and coffee filters.  You are supposed to empty it every 2-3 days. Unfortunately, ours is currently outside airing out.  We forgot to empty it for like well over a week and it was pretty nasty.  I am not even going to show you what it looked like…trust me…it was DISGUSTING!

Once your food waste turns into soil, you can lift this little latch up at the bottom of your composter and there you go–rich soil to put in your garden.  The composter comes with a guidebook of what to put in there and what to leave out.  But we did not follow it as close as we should have.  This summer we saw little green leaves growing in and around our corn.  This is where Rob spread out the soil from the composter.  We assumed the seeds from last year’s squash sprouted.  I do remember putting leftover squash in the composter last fall.  But it turned out to be…

Pumpkins!  Apparently one of us put Hailey’s Halloween pumpkin in the composter and the seeds sprouted and took over our garden.  So our corn now looks like this…No corn for us this year.  Either the pumpkins stole all the nutrients from the soil or the unusually cool summer kept it from amounting to more than this.  Oh well…at least we will have pumpkins to carve in a few weeks.


Every preschooler loves sand and water tables!  As the temperature rises, we often take the sand out and replace it with fresh water. My kids float plastic boats and grab their bath tub toys.  We gather squirt guns and plastic cups and start a water fight. Yesterday my nineteen month climbed in it and used it as kiddie pool.  Last summer by late August they started to get bored with the sand and water. So I added about a half cup of dish soap into the table as I squirted water from the hose.  The kids loved the suds and making “bubble castles.”  The clean-up was easy.  It did not matter if it got on their clothes—it’s soap after all.  If you do not have a sand/water table, you can use a kiddie pool, plastic tub, or even a large plastic container from your kitchen.  Have fun this summer in your own backyard!

Suds in the sand/water table



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