Some of us like winter better than others. The “others” are kids. We’re pretty sure they invented the term “ cabin fever”.
This winter help your kids create play areas in your yard. Enjoy fun times – outdoors!
Snow Angels: There is nothing more charming than a yard decorated with snow angels. Creating snow angels is a great way to burn off “kid energy” prior to your holiday festivities or to build an appetite for your holiday feast!
If it’s been awhile since you created a snow angel, we have a few tips and tricks for you.
First, find a patch of snow that is large enough for your entire body. Carefully lay back in the snow, with your arms and legs outstretched. Move your arms back and forth across the snow, keeping them straight. As you are doing this, move your legs in and out. Slowly and carefully get up. It helps if you have another person near that can help you. Stand back and admire your beautiful snow angel! If you’re a perfectionist, you can brush out your footsteps with a small broom.
Variations: Add Santa’s sled tracks with 2×4’s.
Snow fort:
Be the envy of your neighborhood with the biggest fort on the block. All you need is a square or rectangular Tupperware container filled with “wet” snow. Pack the snow firmly into the container until you have a strong, sturdy snow brick. Stack the bricks on top of each other to form walls. Keep making them until the walls are as high as you want. Use additional snow to fill in the cracks in between the snow blocks – a mortar of sorts.
If it’s cold enough outside, gently pour cool water onto the snow bricks. This will help your wall to ice over and last longer. Layer your bricks with more snow after you’ve done this. You can even use longer branches – preferably evergreens for their insulating properties – twined together as a roof. We guarantee that making the snow fort will be just as much fun as playing in it!
For the truly ambitious: Make a backyard skating pond
Wayne Dawe gives great instructions which we’ve excerpted here:
There are two major techniques for building a backyard ice rink, the traditional method and the high-tech method. Both methods require you to find a relatively flat spot to place the rink and to tromp down the snow in the area where you want the rink.
In the high-tech method, you then ring the area with scrap 2×4s and use a large plastic sheet as a liner, like a tarp. Fill the plastic sheet with an inch or two of water, and, if you have a suitably cold night, the next day you have a rink. It’s important not to use the cheap black plastic or you’ll have no grass at all next spring.
The more traditional method requires you to spray the tromped down snow base that you prepared above with water over a few days to “seal” it. It’s important that you also make some banks around the future ice surface and spray these with water so that you have something to hold the water in when you start adding more volume.
Important notes: Kids are small. The rink doesn’t need to take up your whole backyard…it can be the size of a playground sandbox. Don’t try to make a backyard rink unless you’re sure of below-freezing weather. And it works much better if you spray or flood your rink at night so you’re not fighting against the sun.
Last but not least – (our favorite winter memory):
Before the outdoor clothes are wet and the kids are cold and it’s time to come inside, prepare mugs of hot chocolate. We found 20 phenomenal recipes to share with you, including several that will stay warm in the slow cooker.
We hope you have a great holiday weekend and we’ll be back next week with another great tip.