Summer activities, because I’m a fun mom

On the first day of summer break we shared a big bowl of watermelon on the porch, then kids made a mud pit in the back yard while Anna and I sat on a blanket at a safe distance. When we got too hot and dirty, we all jumped in the pool. Before nap time, the kids had the idea to climb into Thomas’s crib while David read a book.

It was exactly what I’d been looking forward to in the weeks leading up to the end of school. But before you roll your eyes and write me off as one of those “my life is perfect and my kids are made-for-Instagram cherubs” let me add: the kids bickered ALL MORNING. I set up an activity that lasted about five minutes until Mary started SCA-REAMING because David drew a picture of her wearing boots. BOOTS! As if that even belongs in the category of “mean big brother caricatures.”

Then I told them to go outside, and they spent the next 15 minutes finding excuses to come back in, so I started threatening them with things I won’t write here because this is a family blog.

But then, after all that struggle, our morning unfolded into mud and imagination.

I have a lot of ideas about our summer. We’ll spend a lot of time at home, a lot of time together, doing a lot of unstructured play. I want to shield this time from structure and allow for independent play, but I also know that kids don’t always respond to their mom shouting, “GO PLAY!” from the couch.

After preschool ended I could tell that my kids were getting restless. I realized that the ideal of free play isn’t realistic. Not for my kids, anyway. I was expecting them to take initiative when they needed a little guidance. Maybe this is confusing to you because your kids dive into play without 30 minutes of whining. Or maybe you’re reading this thinking, “Um, duh, your kids need guidance.” Either way, this is how things ended up in my house with the low level of patience God has blessed me with in this season of life.

Armed with this new realization, one morning when Mary and Thomas were especially whiney, I made a big batch of cloud dough and handed them some scoops. They played all morning. And when they were done, I filled up the water table and they washed everything. By then it was lunchtime and we’d had our best morning in weeks.

That’s when I decided to create a list of activities that are easy, require little planning, little prep, and are hopefully fun-ish for kids ages three to six.

Here’s what I have so far. This is different than a summer bucket list. Rather, this is a list of ideas that I hope will redirect our day. This is for when the kids are listless and I’m at my wits end and am tempted to turn on the TV. In those moments, I want to opt for a big bowl of cloud dough. Because that makes for a more memorable morning than a screen, and that sort of thing is why I’ve been looking forward to summer vacation.

These mostly require little to no planning or prep, few supplies, and are either not messy, or are mess that is best enjoyed outside. 

Here’s what I have so far. But this isn’t going to last all summer, so help me out and share your favorite summer activities with kids.

Note: All of this stuff involves different levels of supervision and some will happen only while Anna is napping because they (water beads!) aren’t safe for babies. Where clarification is necessary, I either linked to instructions or wrote a brief description. If you’re the Pinning type and would like to launch my blog into Pinterest fame, there’s an image to pin below. 

Easy summer activities with kids

  • Cloud dough
  • Blow up balloons
    Keep a stash of balloons and blow up a bunch
  • Shaving cream on the slide
  • Ice smash!
    Freeze some toys in ice cubes overnight, then let them rescue them outside by breaking or melting the ice
  • Clean the walls
    Give the kids a spray bottle and a rag, and let them clean some of the grime
  • Wash outdoor toys
    Fill a bucket with soap and hand them sponges (works regardless of if the toys are actually dirty)
  • Hot Wheels in bubbles
    Fill the water table with bubbles (or shaving cream) and toss in a bunch of Hot Wheels cars
  • Bake a cake
    Requires a lot of involvement and patience, but worth it because, cake. 
  • Photo from above
    Check out the hashtag #scenefromtheceiling on Instagram and challenge the kids to make their own
  • Write letters to cousins/grandparents/friends
  • Make melted crayon rocks
  • Play with baking soda and vinegar droppers
  • Create landmarks with Legos
    I love this idea, and encouraging creativity with Legos
  • Body tracing
    Trace their body on craft paper and let them fill in the details
  • Water beads!
  • Make milk plastic
  • Salt dough beads (or other creations)
  • Choose a craft from our craft book
    We love looking through this craft book for fun crafts

 

 

6 Comments

  1. Gayle Ann June 20, 2018

    The Today Show had a segment on activities, and they made a bubble snake… https://www.today.com/video/-mr-science-jason-lindsey-shows-how-to-make-a-bubble-snake-1251247683965

    Another fun activity is ice cream in a bag. There are several recipes for it, But, something they might really like is an ice cream ball. https://www.amazon.com/Yaylabs-Cream-Ball-Blue-Quart/dp/B009GFKPDM

    The ball is the same idea as the ice cream in a bag, just more heavy duty as they can be a lot rougher with it.

    We belong to the pool on post, and they put out various activities for kids when there is lightening in the area, which can occur on a remarkably beautiful day with a blue sky. One of the games they have is the bean bag toss. I was watching a little girl, around 3, I’d say, tossing and tossing without luck. Finally, she gathered up the bean bags, walked up to the target, dropped the bean bags in the holes, and walked away with a “conquered that” look.

    Crayola also has 3D and glow in the dark sidewalk chalk.

    You have a pool…. each year the pool has an event called a float-in. Following a BBQ, they set up the outdoor movie screen, and give anyone who wants one a pool float. Then, a movie with a water theme is shown, and one can watch the movie in the water. All one would really need is a white sheet, or an old movie projector/slide screen, and a projector attached to a laptop, and some speakers. The machines are fairly cheap on shopgoodwill.com. I picked up one because I’m occasionally invited to be a speaker, and not every organization has the projector. I just wanted something that worked, and didn’t want to spend a fortune. But, it would be a fun activity for a family BBQ evening.

    Hula hoops are also popular at the pool, as is the limbo game.

    I remember liking my sand box. Long before the castle molds, we used plastic containers and castoff baking pans to create castles, forts, etc.

    However, ice cream is probably my favorite of these ideas. Ice cream makes any day better. If you make a strawberry, with an egg base, and serve it on a sugar cone, it is a mobile version of Frosted Flakes with strawberries, with the added benefit of the protein in the egg. Of course, a version of Ben and Jerry’s Chunky Monkey is better. Bananas, caffeine in the chocolate chunks as well as anti-oxidants, and protein from the eggs and walnuts. Nothing like a breakfast ice cream to get the day off to a wonderful start.

    Reply
  2. Gayle Ann June 20, 2018

    PS… I noticed the watermelon… why not cut it into the round slices and lay out cookie cutters? You can get the mini cutters for other melons.

    Reply
  3. Tizzie June 20, 2018

    I know this involves a screen and isn’t exactly the point, BUT cosmic kids yoga on YouTube!
    Its colorful and fun and has themes like star wars or Moana. Maybe a rainy day activity

    Reply
  4. Lynsie June 21, 2018

    We got a big bucket of soapy water and scrub brushes and our kids had so much fun scrubbing the deck and porch.

    They also love to wash our cars, a few rags and soapy bucket and a little help from an adult with the hose and where they cant reach.

    My little two love taking the medicine dropers that you squeeze at the top and cups if water and moving the water around.

    Recently my boys have been looking for snakes, not an activity I am fond of. 🙁

    Two that I have pinned but haven’t tried is wrapping parchment or the rolles drawing paper around a tree trunk to do a bark rub with crayons and also setting up figurines and toy animals when the sun will cause a good shadow and have them trace the shadow.

    Thanks for reminding me about water beads, I found an old package and haven’t got them out yet. Just dont try to store them for a long time, I had a box of them and they all molded and they were NASTY!

    Reply
  5. Water beads are so much fun! I only recently learned about them but I can see why they can occupy hours of time.

    Reply

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