FREE School Holiday Events for Young Children in Wellington

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
10am-6pm: Dead Precious Fossil Trail

11am & 1pm: Zappo & Zappolina

11am & 2pm: Alice in Wonderland

1pm: Monty’s First Birthday

10am-6pm: Dead Precious Fossil Trail

10am: Kids DIY Clinic

10.30am: Brooklyn Library Fun

11am: Tawa Library Fun

11am: Cummings Park Library Fun

11am & 1pm: Zappo & Zappolina

11am & 2pm: Alice in Wonderland

1pm: Monty’s First Birthday

10am-6pm: Dead Precious Fossil Trail

10.30am: Newtown Library Fun

11am & 1pm: Zappo & Zappolina

11am & 2pm: Alice in Wonderland

1pm: Monty’s First Birthday

2pm: Kilbirnie Library Fun

10am-9pm: Dead Precious Fossil Trail

10am: Kids DIY Clinic

10.30am: Island Bay Library Fun

11am: Johnsonville Library Fun

11am: Karori Library Fun

11am & 1pm: Zappo & Zappolina

11am & 2pm: Alice in Wonderland

12pm: Storytelling with Dick Weir

1pm: Monty’s First Birthday

2pm: Miramar Library Fun

3pm: Khandallah Library Fun

10am-6pm: Dead Precious Fossil Trail

11am: Wadestown Library Fun

11am-12pm: Become a Fossil Expert

11am & 1pm: Zappo & Zappolina

11am & 2pm: Alice in Wonderland

1pm: Monty’s First Birthday

10am-6pm: Dead Precious Fossil Trail

10am: Kids DIY Clinic

10am: Emergency on the Waterfront

11am & 1pm: WotWots

IT’S MONTY’S FIRST BIRTHDAY AT WESTFIELD QUEENSGATE, LOWER HUTT

Swing on down to Westfield Queensgate during the school holidays for heaps of birthday giggles and tonnes of fun for everyone. There’ll be some really cool entertainment and I’ll be there every day to have a laugh, play or cuddle.

Date: Monday, 12 April to Friday, 16 April

Time: 1pm

Cost: Free

Location: Ground floor, Queensgate, Lower Hutt

ALICE IN WONDERLAND AT NORTH CITY PLAZA, PORIRUA

It’s party time with Alice in Wonderland, The Mad Hatter and The White Rabbit! Join them as they get their tea party started with dancing and singing. Anything can happen in the magical land and crazy tea party Alice has found herself at.

Date: Monday, 12 April to Friday, 16 April

Time: 11am and 2pm daily

Cost: Free

Location: Centre Court, Ground floor, North City Plaza, Porirua

DEAD PRECIOUS FOSSIL TRAIL AT TE PAPA

Collect a trail sheet from NatureSpace or outside the Te Papa Kids Store. Follow the clues to find facts about the fossil treasures that have been found in New Zealand. Enter your completed sheet into the entry box outside the Te Papa Kids Store – and be in to win a fossil prize pack!

Date: Now until Sunday, 18 April

Time: 10am-6pm

Cost: Free

Location: NatureSpace Discovery Centre, Level 2, Te Papa, Wellington

ZAPPO AND ZAPPOLINA’S MAGIC FRIEND’S SHOW AT JOHNSONVILLE SHOPPING CENTRE

Come and meet Zelda the Magical Dinosaur, Adelaide the singing Dodo Bird and see Zappo and Zappolina in an all new magical, musical show.

Date: Monday, 12 April to Friday, 16 April

Time: 11am and 1pm daily

Cost: Free

Location: Near the Food court, Johnsonville Shopping Centre, Carpark entrance on Broderick Rd & Moorefield Rd, Johnsonville

SCHOOL HOLIDAY PROGRAMME AT LIBRARIES AROUND WELLINGTON

Make sure you’re at a branch near you for entertaining, interactive stories, or mad-hatted activities and a chance to show us your artistic flair.

Date: Tuesday, 13 April to Friday, 16 April

Time: Variety of time

Cost: Free

Location: Variety of locations

KIDS DIY CLINC AT BUNNINGS WAREHOUSE, PORIRUA

Workshops are free for children over the age of 5 and must be accompanied by an adult.

Date: School Holiday DIY Clinics: Tuesday, 13 April and Thursday, 15 April

Weekend DIY Clinics: Saturday, 17 April and Sunday, 18 April

Time: 10am

Cost: Free

Location: Bunnings Warehouse, 9 Heriot Drive, Porirua

STORYTELLING WITH DICK WEIR AT TE PAPA, WELLINGTON

These holidays, be spellbound by famous tales from Ancient Greece, India, China, the Pacific, and beyond. Master storyteller Dick Weir tells of tricks played and lessons learned.

Date: Thursday, 15 April

Time: 12pm-12.45pm

Cost: Free

Location: Wellington Foyer, Level 2, Te Papa, Wellington

NATURESPACE DISCOVERY HOUR – BECOME A FOSSIL EXPERT AT TE PAPA

Kids, explore the strange and amazing plants and animals that flourished in New Zealand millions of years ago. Got a fossil of your own? Bring it in for Te Papa’s palaeontologist (fossil expert) to identify.

Date: Friday, 16 April

Time: 11am-12pm
Cost:
Free

Location: Nature Discovery Centre, Level 2, Te Papa

WOT? WOT? THE WOTWOTS!

Come and meet the wonderful WotWots. Join in as SpottyWot and DottyWot sing and dance to their favourite animal songs.

Date: Saturday, 17 April

Time: 11am and 1pm

Cost: Free

Location: Ground floor, Queensgate, Lower Hutt

EMERGENCY ON THE WATERFRONT

Come along and participate in this fun filled, action packed interactive day. See Fire Engines, Ambulances, Police Vehicles, Helicopters, Coastguard and Live Rescue demonstration and much more!

Date: Saturday, 17 April

Time: 10am-3.30pm

Cost: Free

Location: Waitangi Park and Chaffers Marina Waterfront

You may also be interested in:

Is it possible to not spend any money during the school holidays?

Spending detox: Day 1

Spending detox: Day 2

Spending detox: Day 3

Spending detox: Day 4

Spending detox: Day 5

Spending detox: Day 6

Lessons Learned & Spending detox: Day 7

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Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

10am-6pm: Dead Precious Fossil Trail

11am & 1pm: Zappo & Zappolina

11am & 2pm: Alice in Wonderland

1pm: Monty’s First Birthday

10am-5pm: Dead Precious Fossil Trail

10am: Kids DIY Clinic

11am & 1pm: Zappo & Zappolina

11am & 2pm: Alice in Wonderland

1pm: Monty’s First Birthday

10am-6pm: Dead Precious Fossil Trail

11am & 1pm: Zappo & Zappolina

11am & 2pm: Alice in Wonderland

1pm: Monty’s First Birthday

10am-6pm: Dead Precious Fossil Trail

10am: Kids DIY Clinic

11am & 1pm: Zappo & Zappolina

11am & 2pm: Alice in Wonderland

12pm-12.45pm: Storytelling with Dick Weir

1pm: Monty’s First Birthday

10am-6pm: Dead Precious Fossil Trail

11am-12pm: Become a Fossil Expert

11am & 1pm: Zappo & Zappolina

11am & 2pm: Alice in Wonderland

1pm: Monty’s First Birthday

10am-6pm: Dead Precious Fossil Trail

10am: Kids DIY Clinic

10am: Emergency on the Waterfront

11am & 1pm:

WotWots

Friday Fun Day: Revisiting the past

And the winner is….ME!! I won Spa Factory at Kiwi Mummy Blogs today!! Thank you Sarah!! I can’t wait to use this with my kids! (Why am I visualising my youngest daughter eating the lip gloss?!?)

Yay! The sun was back today…I missed you!

I am still trying to put in an effort once a week to do something a bit out of the ordinary with the kids.

Today, I took the kids to our old stomping grounds in Wadestown. I showed them our very first flat/apartment. This was my oldest daughter’s first home. I told them stories, and showed them the sights as we drove around. My son started asking about where his first house was, and where my parents used to live. They really seem to enjoy stories from the past. I still remember sitting in my grandmother’s study, and reading notebooks that she had complied with stories of my ancestors and black and white pictures to go along with them. I loved it! Even if we aren’t natural storytellers, or record keepers, I definitely think it is something that we can learn and develop….I think it is something that our kids would benefit from and perhaps even our kids’ kids!

So, after the trip down memory lane, we went to a local park, and just played in the sun. My favourite part was having my 9 year old on my lap on the swing and just lying back and swinging together. (How many more years can I get away with this?!?!)

No camera on hand today, just my trusty cellphone camera

We grabbed hubby on the way home and a HUGE 20 inch pizza from Wholly Pizzas..yum! It was so fun to watch the kids try and put the HUGE pieces of pizza in their mouths!

Off to have our in-house date night tonight…yay! Hubby’s been out 3 nights this week, so it will be nice to relax together.

Fun Kids Activity: Having fun with Water!

My son hammering ice at Playcentre when he was 3

I ran my first Water Play workshop for Playcentre today. It went well *phew*

(Playcentre is a parent co-operative that provide early childhood education. In other words, the parents run the sessions and the management of the centre. In order to provide quality sessions we participate in the adult education (which is free!). We learn lots of stuff, from child development, creativity, positive guidance, communication etc. We can also attend workshops to learn about how we can provide science, literacy, maths, music, and tons of other topics (like waterplay) to our pre-schoolers)

The hit activity today was the “magic picture”…This is where you make a picture using white crayon on white paper. You then spray it with watered down food colouring/dye. If you provide spray bottles with the primary colours (red, blue and yellow), you can mix your own colours as you spay them on your paper to reveal the crayon drawings.

Source google images

Here are a bunch of water play ideas that you could try at home.

Water Play:

Water Flow

Experiment with whirlpools, fountains, downwards flows, currents, pumps, dams, obstructions, different levels, swirling the water to make objects move. Try using piping and guttering and flow water or boats down.

Just Water

Put your hands in some water. How does water sound, feel, look, move?  Use warm water on cold days.

Measuring and pouring

Different size containers will give children experience with volume. Put a board across the water trough so the child can rest containers on it while pouring. Can also pour from a jug to fill several glasses. Tea parties.

Water Music

Help children make musical jars by filling a row of jars with different levels of water.  Have some beaters to hit the jars.  Use coloured water to make the levels more obvious.

Make a Sailing Boat

Use cardboard cartons (eg top cut from a milk carton). Attach a straw and paper sail (use of bit of clay to stick it down).  Blow on it to help it sail.

Wet and Dry

Add water to these things and watch changes in colour, shape, size, texture:

(Dry) Sand, sponges, paper, teatowel, flour, sawdust, disposable nappy, dried leaves.

Sinking and Floating

Collect things that float – wood, plastic bottle with lid, bark chips, cork, leaf, acorn, feather, pumice, plastic cups, sponge, ball, sawdust.

Collect things that don’t float – paper clip, nail, clay, stone, solid plastic, sand.

Things that do/don’t float – sponge, solid plastic, cups, dishes.

Try holding down something that floats, then let it go.

Can you weight down a floating object by using non-floating objects (eg wood, by using stones).

Drop balls of clay into water. (Sinks)  Now make a piece of clay into a boat shape and put it in the water. (Floats)

Potions

Make potions to encourage experience with floating/ emulsions, things that dissolve and things that don’t.

Have available: clay, flour, sawdust, leaves, grass clippings, bark chips, flowers, sand, earth, powder paint, salt, oil.

Put oil and dye in bottle and shake.  Watch the emulsion slowly separating again.

Dispersion

Add droppers filled with different coloured dye to water. Watch it disperse.

Water as Ice

Freeze: balloons filled with water, rubber gloves, ice cubes, containers with flowers/leaves, a small plastic toy frozen inside.   Use hammers or wooden mallets to chip the ice away.  (Put ice on a towel to stop slipping.) Use drills on big blocks of ice.  Make ice in a round cake tin and hang outside – watch it drip. Place coloured rock salt on the ice and see the coloured tunnels appear in the ice.

Have a snow day

Some industries (eg fish factories) will dump a load of snow/ice to your Playcentre.  Experiment with sliding, building, squirting dye.

Water in the sandpit

Children build hills, valleys, castles, roads, then add water (hose) until it all floods. Talk about floods, rivers, erosion, dams etc.

Water volcano

Prop hose upwards (use a pipe to feed the hose through), pile the sand around until it is covered, then get a child to turn the water on full.

Balloons filled with water and air

Insert one balloon inside another.  Fill the inner balloon with water and tie. Blow air into the outer balloon and tie.  Try throwing and bouncing it.

Water to drink

Small jugs for children to fill their own drinking cups at morning tea.  Add straws to blow bubbles.

Make banana milkshakes. Freeze iceblocks with pieces of fruit inside.  Freeze an orange then slice it cold to make fruit ices.

After the rain stand under a tree and shake the drops down.  Drink the rain.

Bubbles

Mix: 1/4 cup good quality detergent to a litre of water.  Add a little sugar to strengthen bubbles.  Bubbles work best on an overcast windless day.

Make bubbles by blowing through frames such as plastic rings (eg from 6 packs), plastic lids cut into shapes, pipe cleaners, electrical wire; or by swishing the frame (eg tennis bat, fly swat) through the air.

Rainbows

Turn the nozzle on the hose to a fine spray and make rainbows.

Painting on wet paper

Watch the colours run with mixed paint or sprinkle dry powder paint on wet paper  (use thicker quality paper).

Fishing

Fill a paddling pool.  Use hand held nets to catch a variety of floating objects.

Bubble prints

Put food dye and a little detergent in a cup.  Child blows through a straw until the bubbles spill over.  Gently press a piece of paper over the top to make the print. (Check child knows how to blow through the straw first!)

Fingerpaint and Coloured Ice

Warm finger paint in a trough with coloured ice blocks on sticks.

Water and big muscle

Waterslides (plastic sheet or gym mat) down a slope.  Use detergent and water to slide more. Or attach a garden sprinkler to the hose so children can run through it.

Mud hole

Make a mud patch for children to play in with dinosaurs or trucks.  Or use clay and water.

Nature display

Fish in tank, photos of waterfalls, cycles of water (rain clouds, floods, puddles) etc

Deserts, animals drinking, whales spouting.

Weather

Talk about the weather – clouds that bring rain.  Go out in the rain.

Flowers drink water too

Put white flowers in jars of dye and water and watch the flower change colour.

Washing

Washing hands, washing hair, washing dolls clothes, washing babies (dolls), washing down sandy things eg trucks.

Bring a car to be washed.  Bring a baby to be bathed. Let the children wash the outside windows.  Create a car wash for the children to ride bikes through. Wash a dog.

M.I.A – Missing In Action

I haven’t really been on my computer since Wednesday! Here is just a snippet of what we’ve been up to while I was “missing in action”.

Thursday:

School Picnic at Days Bay, Eastbourne. It was a BEAUTIFUL day!

This was the first year I didn’t have a baby, or two preschoolers or a runner (a child who just seems to run in all sorts of directions, and never comes back!), so I decided to go along as a parent helper. My 3 year old enjoyed being held by all the big girls.

I enjoyed watching my daughter’s team work really hard together on their turtle design for the sandcastle competition. The girls came up with their design and implemented it themselves …. and they won!

Had a nice evening out with some friends. What more could you ask for, good company and an endless supply of dessert (we went to “The Whitby” and had the dessert buffet). I got to hold a gorgeous wee baby….yes I am very clucky!

Friday:

In my effort to make Fridays a bit more special, I decided to take the kids to the Wellington Zoo after school. The tiger looked like it wanted to eat us for afternoon tea!

Saturday:

We went out to Yum Char to celebrate my brother’s 35th birthday. So yummy! Then my kids spent time with their cousin playing with a whole big tub of retro lego that used to belong to my brothers. They had a blast!

Sunday:

It was an eventful day, because my hubby became Bishop of our Ward. Although it is a big responsibility, we feel really good about it. My mum invited the bishopric and my hubby’s brother’s family for dinner at her place – spur of the moment! So we went home and checked what we had in each of our freezers and pantries, and managed to pull it off. Everyone ended up bringing something, so it worked out perfectly.

Reality Check: I love the fact that as I have looked back on the week, I seem to have forgotten all the odd, weird or frustrating moments. The only one I can remember is when I had to use food to entice my son out of his comatosed state so he wouldn’t have a nap in the middle of the day, and be up all night! ha! I love my short term memory!

Fun Kids Activity: Exploring rock pools

We had a fun Playcentre trip to Whiteria Park, which is about 20 mins drive towards Titahi Bay from our place.

The road gets pretty narrow as you are winding around the hills. I had to practice my backing skills when a car came the other way!

When we arrived, the kids all went to the rock pools in search of creatures and treasures.

I found a crab underneath a rock. We were able to have a close look at the crab before letting it go.

My youngest is a collector, so she stopped and picked up shells on the seashore. Others used the spades to dig up the heavy wet sand.

The water was warm, so the children ventured in. They jumped the waves and waddled around.

The time passed quickly, and it was time for morning tea. We sat on our picnic blankets eating our kai (food) and enjoyed the sun on our faces. The children enjoyed the nice cold lemonade ice block that were given out. We heard a lot of “please” and “thank yous”. Ka pai! (Well done!)

Some of the children got changed into their togs so they could wade deeper into the shallow water.

Some of the children stayed behind and listened to books about the beach.

The children had a great time playing together, and enjoyed the water, sand and searching for sea creatures!

You may also enjoy:

I want it to be summer all year, and live at the beach

and this AWESOME book:

The Life-size Guide to the New Zealand Beach

Andrew Crowe provides the best reference books I have come across. The pictures are clear and are “life size” as in, they are photographed in their actual size…which means children (and adults!!) can quickly identify things found in rock pools and the beach. (His book in this series about insects is even better! I have refered to the book many times to get the correct name for butterflies and spiders etc!!)

Fun Kids Activity: Ferry Trip

I woke up this morning, and hubby was buzzing about the amazing weather.

He has always said, that if you want to run an event that relies on good weather, you should run it on the “Seven’s” Weekend in Wellington. For some reason, we ALWAYS seem to have amazing weather on those days!

The Seven’s is an international rugby competition of 7 a side rugby, instead of 15 aside. The games are also shorter. 

The Wellington ”Seven’s” have become more about the party atmosphere than the game itself. The best way to describe it is, “New Zealand’s version of Halloween….but for adults”! Grown men and women, dress up in all sorts of weird and wonderful costumes! Today I saw Little Red Riding Hood and a wolf strolling down together, I saw a man dressed up  in green like the little plastic army figurines. I saw a bunch of grown men dressed as teddy bears. (Look at the guys below and their wigs!)

Hubby had the great idea of going on the East by West Dominion Ferry today. The kids were so excited!

We drove to Eastborne, boarded the ferry and made our way around different stops in the Hutt Valley and Wellington Region.

We had so much fun!

I noticed my girls snuggled up to each other on the top deck. On closer inspection, they were actually playing shadow puppets on the side of the ferry!

When we arrived back in Eastbourne, we all just went to the beach and swam….in our clothes! The seats in the car got very wet on the way home ;)

Fun Kids Activity: Storytelling with a Twist

Here are a couple of activities we did today for family study. You can easily do these two activities in the car, around the dinner table, as a family home evening activity, or when you put the kids to bed.

Choose a story that the children are familiar with. This could be a story from a movie or book they like. We decided to do a Bible story today.

Add on:

  • Everyone has a turn re-telling a part of the story (Preferably in order. Today the story of David and Goliath went from “David was a shepherd etc etc” straight to “David killed Goliath”! As you can imagine we had to creatively fill in the rest of the story…hehehe)

The next activity we did, kind of came out of the need to re-tell the story in order, but my hubby put a twist on it.

Spot the lie:

  • One person re-tells the story.
  • The people listening have to put their hand up if they think the storyteller is telling a lie.
  • The more funnier and/or sillier the lie, the more laughs you will get.
  • You can also take the opportunity to focus on the moral of the story, eg for David and Goliath, my hubby said, “And David was scared” and the kids put their hands up to signal the lie, and hubby went on to talk about how David wasn’t afraid etc etc.

We didn’t do this activity today, but this is another storytelling activity we really like. We also love role playing too!

Draw the Story:

  • One person reads or re-tells a story.
  • Those who are listening have a piece of paper and a pen to draw whatever they want about the story.
  • It could be a scene from the story, a person or animal, an abstract drawing representing the story.
  • At the end of the story, everyone has a turn to get up and talk abut the picture they drew.
  • We like to give the presenter a nice big clap after they show their picture.

Reality check: Keep in mind that the younger ones sometimes just potter around or just snuggle into mummy or daddy during the storytelling. When it comes to the drawing one, they usual do a scribble, but they still enjoy getting up and getting their applause.

Hope you have fun!

Fun Kids Activity: Going to the Bush

Yesterday “Windy Wellington” lived up to its name, and served up a blustery summers day. The wind can be a bit annoying when you have children (and adults) with ants in their pants and cabin fever. Thankfully Wellington boasts numerous sheltered walkways and tracks that even a suburban mama like myself can tackle.

The walkway I chose is one of my favourites. When we first stumbled across it I just felt like I was in the Lord of the Rings….it felt magical. (Yes, I had hobbits on my brain, it was around the time of the world premire in Wellington after all!)

We only attempted a short portion of it last time, this time the kids and I got so high we could look over Johnsonville. (If you look really closely to the picture below, you can see the red roof of “The Warehouse”.)

I was so proud of the kids! They all did so well! (How is it that they have more energy than me?)

Reasons I love the bush:

  1. It is contained. The kids can’t run out onto the road! I just have to get the older kids to slow down every now and then.
  2. It is sheltered. We could hardly feel the wind, and the canopies sheltered us from the harsh sun.
  3. The kids are in their element. They just love it so much.
  4. It gives my kids super powers. I am not kidding you, my kids don’t seem to notice how far we have walked or how steep the incline is when we are in the bush.
  5. It feels good. Being in the outdoors, being close to nature, breathing the fresh air, feeling your muscles working seems to give you a natural high.
  6. It is flexible. There is no real destination, no real deadline. You can stop and rest, you can even turn around whenever you want.
  7. It doesn’t cost any money! Gotta love that.

Fun Kids Activity: Christmas Bingo

Christmas Bingo is a simple game that can be pulled together relatively easily and cheaply. The great thing about bingo is that it is a game that can be enjoyed by little children, as well as big adults!

Our family was assigned to run a game at our friend’s Family Home Evening that we were invited to. After surfing the internet, I came across crayola’s site with this great bingo game!

http://www.crayola.com/free-coloring-pages/search.cfm?txt_search=christmas

If you want to be tricky and make a larger bingo playing card, follow these steps:

1. I printed all the 5 playing cards onto white paper.

2. Then I cut out the bingo portion of the page.

3. I worked out the right percentage to enlarge the bingo game to the width of the paper. (If you have a copy function on your multifunction printer, click on 100%, then I clicked on Zoom, then I increased the percentage to around 122% – I have a preview function on my Canon MP520, which was helpful to see how big the enlargement was going to be.)

4. Then I copied the enlarged version onto red and green cardboard paper. (Obviously you can use any coloured card. I copied each playing card more than once, as we had over 10 people playing the game.)

5. I also copied one more enlarged version of the bingo game onto some white card and cut it out to make the “calling cards”.

If you want to use this game again, I would recommend laminating it. For counters you can use cut up bits of cardboard. In our family we use a variety of “gems” as counters that we have collected over the years.

The winner received a mini candy cane :)

Fun Kids Activity: Sticker Tag

A lot of the weird and wonderful games that come to my head are unplanned and totally random! This is a game I made up at Playcentre today.

Sticker Tag

  • Everyone has stickers (I just used address labels and we ripped them up into smaller pieces)
  • The adult is the one who all the kids are trying to put stickers on. (I found it was easier for the 3-4 year olds to be able to handle focusing on the adult, rather than each other)
  • The adult also can put stickers on the kids. (I would ran after them and say “I’m going to give you a sticker disease!”)
  • You can take your stickers off yourself and put them on kids, or the kids can take theirs off and put them on the adult.

We have a wonderful outdoor area, so we were utilising our wonderful fort and long slide to make the chasing even more fun.

It was helpful to know the personalities of the children. I was aware of the ones who got quite flustered and upset at being “caught”, so I would approach them and would say, “shall I put a sticker on you?” or there would be others who would be unsure about all this chasing and catching business, so I would give them some stickers and stay still while they placed stickers on me (good for the younger ones). Then there were the ones who get all excited at being approached by the “bady” (me) and would want to react by throw something or be rough, so I would approach them slower and also took the opportunity to teach them about using gentle hands.

The kids and I had a great run around. They were so fast!

Using music to lift the mood

What do you do when you feel bogged down because your kids are in a scratchy mood? Put the radio on and turn the music up of course!

My two youngest were just not in a good mood this morning.  So, when all else fails, and you can’t “excuse yourself” (ie escape!) from the scene, just change things up!

I popped on the radio, and started…errr..ummm..weeelll…dancing of course! They looked up at me kind of funny…but they weren’t in a bad mood anymore. ;)  DS4 took charge of the volume because he knew we were about to play MUSICAL STATUES! yay!!! I love playing musical statues with the kids, they get a kick out of watching mummy freeze and all the funny faces I pull. Music is such a great way to lift the mood for both adults and children.

In the evening I needed to unwind. So while I answered some emails, I put my headphones on. I felt like some beaty music, so I decided on Ne-Yo and then a bit of Tamia….Once again, music came to my rescue today and made me feel so much better! (and yes, I still bopped around in my seat…audience or no audience…hehehe)

In the kitchen: Traffic light jelly

001 004 005 012 045 050

Traffic Light Jelly is a pretty simple treat that looks really cool!

Although this can be done in a bowl, I think putting them in individual glasses has much more of a “wow factor”.

The cups you use don’t have to be stemmed, as long as they are see-through.

The kids all choose a colour that they were going to be “in charge of”.

DD8 was first. She mixed the green jelly and poured it into the cups using a ladle.

TIP: It helps if you do the first one, and then the child uses it as a guide to fill the other cups to the same height. Also it makes the jelly set quicker if half the amount of water is boiling hot. Stir and dissolve. Then put the second half of the water in, but this time put in cold water. This way the water ends up being luke warm, so it cools down and hardens quicker. When you put the cups in the fridge to set, put them on a tray to make transporting them in and out of the fridge easier.

Once the jelly was semi set (you put your finger in and it is solid), DD6 came along to add her yellow jelly. (you can use orange)

DS4 added the final colour, red!

DD2 made a bowl of traffic light jelly with the left over jelly that didn’t make it into the cups. (This was an easier job for her, rather than spooning set amounts into individual cups)

We started making this late morning, and it was all done by after dinner for dessert! YUM!

Free activities to do with your children

  1. Check out if there are any free activities at your local library. Sometimes they have story time, or special events during the school holidays.
  2. Check out if there are any events happening at your local mall.
  3. Bake some easy recipes with the kids like pikelets, rainbow cupcakes, pita bread/toast pizza etc.
  4. Make traffic light jelly.
  5. Arrange a playdate at a friend’s place or arrange to meet at a park.
  6. Go park hopping to your favourite parks or go on an adventure to a park that you have never been to before. You can usually find lists of playgrounds on your local council websites or take a look in your map.
  7. Have the kids help you make a picnic and go to the local airport and watch the planes take off.
  8. Time to get messy! Make your own playdough, gloop or fingerpaint and have fun!
  9. Go to your local kid friendly museum that doesn’t charge for parking!
  10. Get the children to help you make a family newsletter to email out to family and friends. Have them summarise what they have been doing lately (if they are old enough they can type it themselves, or you could ask prompting questions to your younger children.)
  11. Pack some water, a warm top and a snack and go on a nature walk. You could even bring some paper and crayons to do some bark rubbings and collect materials for a nature collage.
  12. Go bike riding/scootering/roller blading at the local school.
  13. Fill a sink up with soapy water and let them go for it.
  14. Get a paintbrush and bucket and let the kids “paint” the fence with water.
  15. Potions making. Provide a bowl, spoon and a selection of items from your pantry (flour, herbs, cocoa, essences) and items collected from the outdoors (flowers, grass, bark). Pretend to be magicians and make up silly spells.

Last updated: Monday, 28 Sept 2009

I will keep adding to this as I think of things.

Please share what fun things you like to do with your child/ren!

In the kitchen: Cooked Playdough

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This is the playdough recipe that we use at Playcentre. This recipe is perfect for my 4 kids, so halve it if you have less than 4 kids, and double it if you have more than 4!! Once you start making your own playdough, you won’t need to buy it any more, and as long as you keep the ingredients topped up in your cupboard (especially the salt) you can make it on demand!

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  • 3 cups Flour
  • 1 1/2 cups Salt
  • 3 tablespoons Cooking Oil
  • 6 teaspoons Cream of Tartar
  • 3 cups Water

Put all the ingredients together in a large pot and stir it constantly over a medium heat.

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Add some food colouring if you wish, or you can wait until the end and split the dough and add different colours.

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Once the playdough starts to come away from the bottom and sides of the pot, take the pot off the heat, and plop the playdough on some flour.

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Kneed until you get a nice texture and it isn’t too sticky.

PLEASE NOTE: When you are finished with the pot, fill it with water immediately to make cleaning a lot easier.

Also this playdough is extremely hot when you start kneeding it so, please take care, and do not give it to the children until it has cooled.

Apparently this playdough will keep indefinitely if stored in a covered container