The Top 5 Family Tech Trends of 2022

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1. Create Backyard “Rooms” for Comfort & Privacy

Give kids a feeling of privacy and intimacy for their play. Your yard may already provide this with nooks, corners, or trees (think a weeping willow hanging down to create a secret room or a climbing tree for older kids). But you can also create “rooms” by adding shrubs or trees, a trellis, an umbrella or canopy, or some sort of fort or hideaway.

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1. Create Backyard “Rooms” for Comfort & Privacy

Some other ideas for creating spaces: – A bean pole teepee (We’ve often had a bean pole teepee in the past and the kids are asking for one again this year.) – Or a fabric teepee – A frame playhouse – Sunflower house (on Let’s Lasso the Moon) – A DIY Play house – An Old tent – An Umbrella or a shade canopy

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2. Backyard Sand Play

A place to dig in the sand (or dirt), mold it, build with it, and touch it is an important element of a kid friendly backyard. Sand is both a wonderful sensory experience and fun to manipulate. The sand box has been one of our kids’ very favorite places to play in the past and we even built an easy and attractive natural sand pit in our backyard. You can 

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2. Backyard Sand Play

buy or build your own sand box, sand pit, or sand table and outfit it with a few basic sand toys, such as: – Scoops and shovels – Molds (we also love these cupcake molds!) – Buckets – Construction vehicles – Funnels or this funnel tower!

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3. Backyard Water Play

Water is another fun sensory experience for children, especially in warm weather. Kids love to run through a sprinkler on a hot day, play with water balloons, splash in the kiddie pool, and water the garden.  Here are a few more ways to incorporate a water element in your space. – A water table (for the littles) – Slip n slide

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3. Backyard Water Play

– A stream or pond (I wish!) – DIY water wall (on Tinkerlab) – A water fountain

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4. Outdoor Art Activities

You know we are all about art and creativity, whether indoors or out. Sometimes we do art outside, just because it’s so nice out and anything we do needs to be outside. And sometimes we do outdoor art activities that are best suited to the backyard, because they are big or messy projects or they involve nature or outdoor equipment.

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4. Outdoor Art Activities

We keep the kids’ easel on our covered porch for extended periods in the warmer months, or we sometimes take the easel to the backyard for a big en plein air painting experience, or just a change of scenery. The same is true for the sensory table. We like to bring messier sensory play outdoors during warmer weather which makes for an easier cleanup.

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4. Outdoor Art Activities

The nice thing about outdoor art is that you don’t need to worry about paint dribbles and splashes! Plus the paintings can be hung to dry on a clothesline or fence. (Just remember to take the easel or sensory table inside if it rains!)

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5. Chalk, Chalk, Chalk

Sidewalk chalk is a childhood staple (check out this fun set!) and is used for everything from sidewalk drawings and body tracings to games such as tic-tac-toe and hopscotch. Mandala stencils are a fun way for older kids to get into chalk art as well. Sidewalk chalk paint is another fun material to explore outdoors. And since chalk washes away easily 

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5. Chalk, Chalk, Chalk

with rain or the hose, kids can draw in many places including: rocks, fences, wood structures, cement and sidewalks. Create a DIY chalkboard by painting a large piece of wood with chalkboard paint. Then mount it on a fence or the side of the house.

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6. A Kids’ Garden

Any kind of garden that a child has ownership of is a wonderful experience. Watching a seed grow into a plant (and then into a fruit, flower, or vegetable!) is a magical learning experience. It’s also a wonderful opportunity to exercise responsibility for a child. I encourage any parent to give children their own garden space, whether in a pot or a small plot in the 

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6. A Kids’ Garden

ground––and the support to help make it a success. Some easy, kid friendly plants include: strawberries, peas, carrots, radishes, cherry tomatoes, and beans. Your kids might not like to eat all of those (yet) but they will love to grow and harvest them. For more ideas for gardening with kids, check out Roots, Shoots, Buckets & Boots by Sharon Lovejoy or The Garden Classroom by Cathy James.

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6. A Kids’ Garden

Some children’s gardening tools to consider: – Trowel and hand tools – Child-sized watering can – Bucket – Gardening gloves – Child-sized wheelbarrow – A small shovel and other gardening tools

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7. Attract Birds and Butterflies

Our kids LOVE watching the birds, hummingbirds, and butterflies in our garden. You can make your garden friendly to wildlife by planting native flowers, shrubs, and trees around the perimeter of your yard to provide shelter and food. Add bird feeders, a bird bath, and bird houses as well, if you can. We’ve painted bird houses in the past and even assembled our own

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7. Attract Birds and Butterflies

from kits. Or add a bee and bug hotel to help pollinators and beneficial insects. DIY your own or assemble a butterfly house for your garden.

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8. Nature Observation Kit

Treat your backyard like a natural science lab by having a few key observation tools handy: – Butterfly nets can be used for catching insects. – A jar with holes in the lid or a bug house can be a temporary insect observation room. – A magnifying glass or loupe is helpful for looking closely at your subject. – A set of binoculars allows kids to watch larger bird

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8. Nature Observation Kit

and animal life more carefully. – This small micro lite microscope is an easy way to observe plant life up close.

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9. Bubbles!

This is a no brainer. Bubbles are magical and fun for most children. They also arguably provide the biggest bang for the buck when creating a kid friendly backyard. We’ve tried all kinds of wands, machines, and bubbles and they are all a big hit. We’ve even made our own beaded bubble wands! We especially like the larger multi-bubble wands and a never-ending supply of 

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9. Bubbles!

homemade bubble solution in a pie dish or shallow bowl (it’s easy and cheap to make a big batch). Or try this bubble kit to create gigantic bubbles that will wow your kids!

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10. Kid Friendly Backyard Toys

Basic childhood toys, such as balls, hula hoops, frisbees, jump ropes, and stilts, are great for simple, active fun. One of our favorites, though, is a set of activity cones which are fabulous for open-ended play as they can be used so many different ways. They are perfect for setting up obstacle courses, made-up games, and races. A trampoline is another backyard element that you 

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10. Kid Friendly Backyard Toys

may want to consider. Our large 15 foot trampoline has been well worth the investment and doubles as a backyard room. The kids play there every day and it’s the playdate hangout of choice.  (Or you might try a mini trampoline that can be moved indoors or outdoors). For the budding gymnast, build this easy DIY balance beam for a safe and fun way to practice balancing.

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10. Kid Friendly Backyard Toys

Add to the imaginative play with walkie talkies for lots of fun!

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11. Backyard Swings

Swings are fun and soothing, great for developing equilibrium and balance, and a superb way to be active. The swing set at our old house (a big wooden DIY affair) got more use over the years than anything else in our backyard––even the much-loved sand box.  If you have space for a swing set or a tree swing, it can be a worthwhile addition. How about you? What are 

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11. Backyard Swings

your family’s favorite kid friendly backyard ideas? What do you have in place that’s working well for you? And what would you like to add to make your outdoor space more inviting and workable? Any other ideas to add to this list?