Frugal activity ideas to keep your kids entertained, both indoors and outdoors, this winter.
Frugal Winter Fun with Kids by Sara Noel
Winter Activities: Winter is upon us. The kids get cabin fever quickly when their outside free time is limited. You're looking for some fun things to
do before you all start climbing the walls. You don't need a wallet
full of cash to enjoy the cold, snowy days. There are all kinds of
frugal ways to enjoy the winter season together both indoors and
outdoors. Here are a few frugal boredom busters to have as your
911 "plan" for the winter blahs.
Outdoor Winter Fun for Kids
1. Homemade Snowman Kit
It's just not winter fun without building a snowman. Assemble a
snowman kit to have handy. Your kit can contain the following:
A hat, scarf, mittens, plastic (or real) carrot nose, charcoal briquettes,
(place in plastic baggie) buttons, and can add two dowels or
branches for arms.
2. Obstacle Courses or Winter Olympics
Jump over the mounds of snow or have relay races.
3. Snow Paint
Mix food coloring and water and add to spray water bottles and spray
the snow to make colorful works of art outside.
4. Homemade Bird Feeder and Bird Identification
Need large pine cones, peanut butter, and birdseed. Add peanut
butter to pine cones and roll in birdseed. Keep a journal of birds
in your yard. Can borrow a field guide from your local library.
See our article on Safe Bird Feeding [1] for safety tips and Homemade Bird Food [2] for Suet Muffin and Ground Toss Bird Food recipes.
5. Snow Ice Cream
Mixing together a quart of milk, an egg, 1 cup sugar, ¼ teaspoon
salt, and 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract in a pan. Cook on stove top until mixtures thicken and cool to room temperature. Pour this mixture over fresh snow.
Or try this Snow Ice Cream Recipe:
3 cups loose clean snow
2 Tablespoons milk
1/4 cup sugar
1 tsp. vanilla extract
Mix all the ingredients.
For another way to make snow ice cream, in ziploc bags, see Making Ice Cream with Snow [3] on Steve Spangler's science site.
6. Snow Golf
Use a tin can buried in the snow for the holes or just carve out
holes in the snow.
7. Winter Photography
Take pictures of nature. Icicles, birds, trees, etc.
8. Identify Tracks in the Snow
Check out a book from your local library on animal tracks.
Indoor Winter Fun for Kids
1. Paper Snowflakes Snowflake Links [4]
2. Paper Snowman 3D Paper Snowman [5] model prints on one page. All you need to add is a twig broom handle.
3. Make a Snow Gauge
Mark inch lines on a coffee can or plastic liter bottle with the top
cut off and setting it outside to catch snow in.
4. Mister Grass Head
nylon knee stocking
Grass Seeds
Potting Soil
Baby Food Jar
Wiggle Eyes or glass paint/markers
Using hosiery, place some grass seeds in the toe which is where you
want the grass to grow. The hosiery is the head and the excess will
be placed in the baby food jar to soak up water. The toe of the hose
is the head and the grass will look like hair as it grows. The baby
food jar is the body. Add some potting soil in the end of the
hosiery on top of the seeds. Make sure the hosiery of seeds and soil
is bigger than the opening of the baby food jar.
Tie a knot in the hosiery to keep the seeds and soil in. Completely
soak the soil/seed ball. Place the hosiery in a baby food jar filled
with water making sure the head is above the mouth of the jar.
Decorate the jar to look like Mister Grass Head's clothes and add a
face onto the head.
5. Smores
Indoor Smores
1/3 Cup light corn syrup
1 Tablespoon. butter
1 (12 oz.) package chocolate chips
4 cups honey graham cereal
1 1/2 cups miniature marshmallows
Bring corn syrup and butter to boil. Lower heat and add chocolate.
Stir until chocolate melts. Add cereal and marshmallows and stir.
Put in square pan, covered with foil. Let set and cut into bars.
6. Shadow Drawing
Take brown grocery bags and tape together until you have enough
paper to be the same size as your child. Have your child lie down on
the paper bags and trace your child's outline. Your child can then
color her "shadow" drawing to look anyway she wants.
7. Homemade Toys
Decorate a paper towel tube. Paper punch a hole about an inch from
the end. Now tie a mason jar ring to a piece of string about one
foot long. Attach and tie the loose end of the string through the
hole in the cardboard tube. Hold the tube and flip the ring up and
try to catch it onto the tube.
Or
Try taking a plastic, Styrofoam, or paper cup and poking a small
hole in the bottom, running a piece of yarn through and tying it
securely in place and adding a large button on the loose end. Catch
the button in the cup.
8. Bubbles in the Bathtub
How fun to blow bubbles indoors. Here are some homemade recipes. [6]
9. Homemade Bowling
Use empty water bottles or coffee creamer containers as the pins and
find a spare ball to roll.
10. Indoor Snowball Fight
Wad up newspaper balls and have a snowball war inside.
11. Homemade Hot Cocoa
Nothing beats the winter chills away after a day of snow fun
outdoors than hot cocoa. Make your own with this recipe.
2 Cups nonfat dry milk
1 Cup white sugar
1/2 Cup cocoa
1/2 Cup non-dairy creamer
1 pinch of salt
Miniature marshmallows
Combine ingredients and mix well. Store in an airtight container.
Add 4 tablespoons of mix to a mug and add boiling water. Stir.
[7] 12. Window Fun
Crayola Window Writers are a product that writes and easily washes
off of windows. You can also purchase spray snow for windows, or Christmas Window Art [8] which is a book of make-yourself holiday window decorations, including step-by-step instructions, peel-off glass paints and 101 easy-to-trace Christmas designs.
Sara Noel is a freelance writer and the Editor/Publisher of FrugalVillage.com [9] and HomesteadGarden.com [10]
and Homekeeping100.com [11]
Visit these sites for information on
getting back to basics through frugality, gardening, organizing,
home keeping, lost arts, simplicity, homesteading, and natural
family living.
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