Free Play


It’s the time of year when we all think about our lives and how we can improve them over the next year.  We typically do this in the form of a New Year’s Resolution. 

Wikipedia defines a New Year’s resolution as a commitment that a person makes to a lasting personal goal, project, or the reforming of a habit. 

 

g2g challenges you to make a New Year’s Resolution that will be fun for your entire family!  How about speding MORE time outdoors this year than you did last year?!?!

Think about how many hours per week you or your kids spent just playing outside this year (sports practices doesn’t count).  Now, can you add an hour?  How about doubling the time? 

Our lives get pretty busy, so schedule outdoor play time!  I know it seems contrary to the word “play,” to schedule it.  But, if it’s on the calendar you wont be tempted to skip playtime or start doing something else instead.  Once the kids are outside playing they will soon forget that this was a scheduled activity. 

Save time for kids to play outdoors on their own, time together as a family, time exploring new places, and time just relaxing and observing the world around you.

 

 

Tell us what your outdoor play resolution is this year!  Post in the comment section below! 

Resolution Ideas:

  • Our family will play outside for at least an hour 4 times each week.
  • I will send the kids outside to play for, at least, the first 30 minutes they are home from school.
  • Our family will go camping at least twice this year.
  • Our family will take a vacation to a national park this summer.
  • We will try out a new park each month this year.
  • The whole family will take time to read outside every Saturday as long as it is not too cold or rainy.  (We have an umbrella and a tent, so we’ll even try in the rain!)

What are your resolutions??????

It’s the time of year where families and friends get together A LOT!  Had enough togetherness yet???

I know that my cousins and I spent MANY Christmas Break days driving our parents up the wall.  Fortunately, my uncle lived on a farm and we were often sent outside to run around, get our energy out, explore, and most importantly give our parents a little peace.

Don’t be afraid of a little cold. Once the kids are moving and playing they wont even notice the temperature.  Just be sure to give them proper clothes (hats, gloves, coat, good socks and shoes).  My family lives in North Dakota…it was REALLY cold up there.  We didn’t mind the fridged temps because there was too much to explore!

Ready for some ideas to get your kids, their cousins, friends and neighbors out of your house?  Try this:

  • Christmas Hide and Seek – Hiders are the presents, the Seeker is Santa.  Santa has to load all the “presents” onto the sleigh.  The sleigh could be an old cardboard box or whatever you have in the garage.  Presents can escape the sleigh if they are tagged by another present.  If presents are tagged they get loaded onto the sleigh.  Last present loaded is the next game’s Santa.
  • Shadow Games – Kids can make up all sorts of games with the shadows created by trees, the house, bushes, etc.  Have them try to get from one side of the yard to the other without stepping in a sunny spot.  Then, let them make up a game involving the shadows.  The fun thing about shadow games is that the “playing field” changes as the day goes on and the sun moves across the sky.
  • ART – Provide the kids with some basic art supplies (glue, tape, paper left over from Christmas wrappings, scissors is age appropriate).  Send them outside to collect materials to make New Year’s Decorations.  Things like pine cones, leaves, pine needles, bark, rocks, sticks and grass seed-heads make great art projects.

The kids have had a few days off school.  Everyone’s full from too much feasting.  Having the family over is making the house feel small.  The children are getting loud and the parents are getting frustrated…sound familiar?  Well, send those kids outside to play!  Here are a few ideas for inspiration:

  • Rake up leaves and jump right in!
  • Create a tag game involving characters named Turkey, Yam, The Gravy, and Pumpkin Pie.
  • Refashion “Duck, Duck, Goose!” into “Ham, Ham, Turkey!”  or “Yam, Yam, Pie!”
  • Hunt down nature objects (seeds, pine cones, leaves, sticks, etc) and make turkeys out of them.
  • Make up a Thanksgiving song and sing it outside using nature as your instruments (ex: drum on a tree, grass blades can make a great whistle)
  • The Thanksgiving Olympics may become your family’s new tradition.  What crazy events can you come up with?

Well the Christmas decorations are out in the stores, so I guess it’s not too early to start talking holiday gift ideas for the kiddos.

I was chatting with a teacher-friend the other day, and she was telling me that after a classroom science experiment using funnels, sand and water that her students were asking her if they could take the funnels home.  Of course Mrs. Grafton can’t just give away her classroom science supplies, but what a simple, low-cost gift idea!  (Shout Out to Mrs. Grafton and her 5th grade class!)

Mrs. Grafton’s students are 5th graders and they were so excited about funnels and all the potential play opportunities that funnels presented.  She blew their minds when she told them that funnels come in all different sizes; from micro-mini to huge!

Kids today love the complicated, the electronic, and the digital, but they can be facinated with the simple as well.  Try to think a bit more about what kinds of simple, hands-on toys and games your kids would enjoy.  And, hey even if they don’t play with them forever they were less than $10.  And, a funnel can’t be ruined by dropping it or getting it wet!

More Funnel Ideas:

  • You can buy funnels of all sizes at big box or auto-part stores.
  • Use a funnel to play with sand, rice, water, cereal, etc.
  • Check out this game that uses a funnel (it’s Halloween themed, but you could change the ghosts for anything – mini cars, spools of thread, pine cones, etc)

What other inexpensive kids gift ideas can you think of?  At g2g at the WATER Center last Thursday, we used socks to make puppets that could help us collect seeds from plants.  What else????

It’s about time we all get outside to play together!  Join Wichita’s 3rd annual Play Day at OJ Watson Park from 1-4pm. 

Your family will be able to:  Canoe, pedal boats, walk on stilts, play on inflatables, paint, miniture golf, play basketball, take a train ride, and much more!

Click here for more information.

This morning I had a great time at Gordon Park Elementary.  I met lots of new kids and parents.  I hope they all went home and are checking out our blogsite, right now!  With a rash of new blog readers I thought I’d take a moment to re-tell what g2g Outside is all about.

Why g2g Outside? 
Today’s children are spending less time outdoors than any previous generation.  This is a concern because kids who spend unstructured time outside on a regular basis:

    • Play more creatively
    • Have lower stress levels
    • Have more active imaginations
    • Become fitter and leaner
    • Develop stronger immune systems
    • Experience fewer symptoms of ADD and ADHD
    • Have greater respect for themselves, others and the environment

(Green Hour, National Wildlife Federation)

Playtime is not wasted time.  Unstructured play outdoors shapes kids’ interests, social skills, academic abilities, and time management.  It’s a fun and inexpensive way to raise a well-rounded, healthy child.

What is g2g Outside?   We are a program that encourages outdoor play for the health and wellbeing of your family.  g2g Outside provides ideas, inspiration and support via a blog (www.g2goutside.org), Facebook, &  Twitter.  We also have regular g2g Outside events where we model and give you ideas about how to promote outdoor games and play with your children.

g2g Outside is a free, non-profit program that’s only goal is to get you and your family out- the-door for play and fun.  g2g is brought to you by the Sedgwick County Extension Service, the City of Wichita WATER Center, and the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks. 

Keep watching our blog and read past posts for all sorts of ideas for outdoor play.  We will also let you know about other outdoor play events in our community that you can participate in as a family. 

See you at our next g2g Outside event! 

One of our regular g2g parents just gave me a great idea for a blog post.  I hope this inspires your family too.  (Thanks Laura!)

Laura’s family is trying to get to all the Wichita City Parks.  They have been going down the list and trying them all.  They’ve found some that they love and others that don’t really fit their needs.  But, they have fun on every outting! 

Click here for the listing of Wichita’s Parks.  How many have you been to?  Which new one will you visit next. 

The cool thing about Wichita’s parks is that they’re all VERY different.  Read the descriptions.  I found traditional parks with playground equipment and lots of open space.  Then, I just found one with a Wichita Wild Habitat Area (Cottonwood) and one with a mountain bike trail (Chapin).  I haven’t been to either of these, and I’m going to go to at least one this week.  (I’ll let you know how it goes.)

So be sure to look up what the park you’re trying out has going for it, pack accordingly and head out!  (I think I’ll need my bike for Chapin this week.)

Last week, we spent a few days up in Wisconsin at my parents’ farm. My husband, not having grown up on a farm, wanted to try his hand at a little tractor driving and hay baling.

While my dad and husband were busy with the baler, I decided to wander around the edges of the field and take some pictures.

This is a wild, unfarmed area to one side of the part that was being baled. It isn’t really the “edge” of the field, but more of an island that has never really been cleared or tilled, probably because there is either a low spot that isn’t worth the hassle of disturbing or because there was no desire to clear all off those trees. Maybe if I asked, my parents would know why. At any rate, it gave me something to photograph! You can see all the different kinds of grasses and lots of goldenrod in this area.

This is actually a picture of part of the field that hasn’t been cut for hay yet. This field has a pretty nice stand of grass, clover, and alfalfa, and hopefully has some good protein for my parents’ cows. Unfortunately, even though the alfalfa and clover flowers make for pretty pictures, it is best if the hay is cut before full bloom. Unlike here, my parents have had too much rain, and so it was too wet to get into the fields without damaging the crop or the soil.

I eventually wandered all the way along the field to the fence row on the west side of the field. There was quite a diversity of plants! I had to take this picture, because it illustrates a horticultural concept that we talk about, but isn’t always fully grasped. In this case, we have a larger maple tree (the lighter green leaves at the top) and underneath it, growing as a large shrub, is a dogwood tree. Dogwood do prefer some shade, and are more of an understory tree (like Japanese Maples). They don’t do very well planted in full, scorching sun. This is a great example of how these trees would grow on their own, without intervention, so we should keep that in mind when planting things.

There were also some nice healthy vines of wild cucumbers growing over various trees and shrubs in the fence row. I remember playing with these prickly fruits as a kid, and tearing them open to look for seeds and whatever there was to see. I actually saw a cucumber beetle on these vines, but didn’t quite manage to get it in the picture. Interestingly, I’ve never seen a cucumber beetle in my parents’ garden, so it was interesting to see that they do actually exist that far north. Maybe the cold winters keep the population low enough that they are content to subsist on wild cucumbers?

I was a little surprised to find milkweed in the fence row, although I don’t know why I should have been. I guess I always associated it with the swampy area on the farm more than the edge of the fields (although sometimes they are one and the same!). These pods are not quite ready to burst yet, and they were about the biggest I saw. There were several plants with smaller pods and even a few plants that still had some flowers on them. I was hoping to find some monarch caterpillars, but no such luck. I did find some kind of tussock caterpillar and a spider, but not monarchs.

There was also a kind of ugly, short little tree that had these fun shaped clusters on them. I’m pretty sure that I’m correct in identifying it as a filbert (aka Hazelnut); this is probably just a wild one growing here. It’s still very green, and not at all close to being ripe, but I think there are going to be some happy animals later this fall, thanks to this tree.

Now, I’ve just been showing pictures here, and certainly photography is a great way to interact with nature and make observations. But…I’m also a compulsive feeler, “dissector”, leaf shredder, and flower stripper. I like to pick a clover flower and pull it apart, pull off a milkweed pod and break it open, tear leaves along the veins, strip seeds off of grass, pick a green filbert and tear it open, etc. I’ve always done this, and I remember a lot of “play” as a child that involved pulling seed pods off of weeds and tearing them open or pulling the seed heads off of grasses. On one hand, this seems kind of destructive. I would argue though, that this sort of thing is important for kids in getting to understand the natural world.

It’s one thing to see something or take a picture of it and learn about it. It’s completely different to feel it and take it apart, getting your fingers sticky in the process. I think there’s a lot of learning that happens through something that might seem very destructive. Certainly, kids should learn that you don’t want to disturb natural areas or be unnecessarily destructive without reason, but sometimes I think we go too far the other way, and don’t let kids really immerse themselves in what’s around them. It isn’t their job to save the planet. It IS their job to learn to look on the natural world with wonder and find “cool” things to touch and experience.

Think about it this way. How much more will a child who has spent time experiencing plants this way understand when they get to a science class that talks about plant identification, pollination, seed formation, vascular systems, parts of the seed, etc? They may not have known all the scientific terms when they were out playing, but they know what they saw, touched, smelled, and even tasted. They can now assign those terms to things they already know.

I remember some of the biology and horticulture labs I had to do in high school and college, and I always thought that the lab exercises where we dissected flowers, seeds, etc were incredibly lame! After all, I had torn apart many a flower and already knew what I would find. It never occurred to me that some of the other students may have never seen those things in real life.

Where am I going with this? Well, I would argue that sometimes we get a little too up tight about having everything perfectly manicured and tamed (How dare there be weeds in the ditches!) or too protective of every blade of grass (Don’t pick the flowers!) that we prevent kids, especially those in an urban environment, from really gaining a very tactile experience of nature that will give them great benefits in the future. Of course, I’m not advocating for taking hordes of kids out to trample a wetland or tear into endangered wildflowers. But is there really anything wrong with letting some places be a little overgrown where no one cares if kids act like kids in that space?

Okay, that’s the end of my rant for today! If you want to see more pictures from Wisconsin, you can check them out at Flickr.

Most kids will be heading back to school in a few days or weeks.  I hope this means that as soon as they get home you’re kicking them out the door to play outside until dinnertime. 

Research (and more research) shows that kids who play outside, especially unstructured play, do better in school and are able to concentrate more on their studies. 

What is unstructured play?  Well, it is when the child is in charge of the play.  When their imagination gets to run wild and they are able to role-play, pretend, figure out what to do next on their own, and create their own rules.  (And by rules, I mean “don’t touch the ground because the aligators will eat you;” not the REAL RULES like “don’t cross the street and come home when the street lights come on.”  The REAL RULES are non-negotiable.)

So parents – be sure that in this new school year with all the structure of the classroom, sports practice, music lessons, etc that you find time for your kids to let loose and play.  If they’re not used to this much freedom they may say they are bored at first.  But give it time.  Encourage and prompt them to use their imaginations.  In no time, they’ll be leaving the video games in the house and heading outside for the new game of “the martians chase the masked superhero who escapes into the tree fort of safety.”  You may start having a hard time getting them in to dinner.  But, what a great “problem” to have!

Dee McKenna is one of Sedgwick County Extension’s most involved and energetic Master Gardeners.  I don’t know how she does it with 3 kids and all the different projects she works on.  Check out her blog about unplugging her kids and taking them outside, even in the heat. 

g2g Outside applauds all the moms and dads who make it a priority to take their kids outside and share nature with them even when it’s not as easy as popping in a video! 

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