Monday, January 19, 2015

Indoor Snowball Fun



When the weather is cold or the snow doesn’t pack well, it’s time to be creative indoors. Children love to read and do quiet activities, but they also need to be active even if there is crazy weather outside. It’s the way they are. When adults put them in front of DVD’s to quiet them, too often behavior problems occur when the DVD is finished because they still need to run around.
Snowballs Inside
  Snowballs can be made from crumpled paper towels or newspapers and secured with cellophane or duct tape. They are fun to make and easy to store until needed again. Keep the balls soft, remove the breakables, and have a snowball fight.
  If families want the real feel of snowballs there are fluffy balls on-line that are fuzzy and squishy.  Google “fake snowballs.” These snowballs are durable,
washable, and don’t hurt.
Design Forts
  The quickest defensive forts are behind the couch or chairs covered with blankets.
  If there are some cardboard boxes around children can design their own fort held together with duct tape. Families can split up and discuss strategy of attack and defense. Often the youngest has fun sneaking around gathering snowballs and supplying older throwers.

Families can also throw snowballs in a laundry basket or paper bag for target then add up the points. How far can each person throw and measure the distance. Invite grandparents over for an inter-generational snowball fight and hot chocolate on a wintery evening.
Snowball Launcher
  Picture a tube within a tube with a rubber band slingshot at the end. For this launcher families will need two cardboard sturdy shipping or wrapping tubes about the same length. One must slide easily inside the other. Also needed are four sturdy rubber bands, duct tape, pointed scissors and pom- poms.
  Adults poke one hole one inch from the edge on either side of the larger tube and insert, tie, knot the rubber band and reinforce the hole with duct tape so it will not rip the tube.  Cut the smaller tube in half to be the pom-pom stuffer.
  Affix the rubber bands the same way as the large tube. Secure the two sets of rubber bands to each other with the remaining bands. The tubes and rubber bands are now connected. The tubes may need to be reinforced as they are used.

  Stuff a pom-pom in the launcher with the extra tube, pull back gently on the rubber bands and let go.
The technique will require a little practice.

  Later relax with a few newly published snow books:

“Blizzard” by John Rocco; “Outside” by Deirdre Gill; and “First Snow” by Peter McCarty.

More Ideas and Activities....See the authors’ book “Learning Through the Seasons” at area bookstores and grandparentsteachtoo.org. For more help to prepare young children for success in school see the authors’ web site: www.grandparentsteachtoo.org. Also check our audio Podcasts WNMU Radio 90Youtube video activities; and join us on Pinterest

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