Winter Time Activities
The doldrums can soon set in when the weather is persistently
grey, cold and rainy. With just a little extra effort you can send
the blues packing.
Get grooving
With winter rain and gloom on the horizon it's too easy to sit
around inside doing nothing. As a result the children get bored and
restless with all that pent-up energy. The answer is a
mid-afternoon dance-a-thon. Roll back the rugs and line up a
soundtrack of high-energy, poppy tunes and set aside half an hour
to bop and hop with the young ones. For variety, practise some
well-known dance moves such as the Moonwalk, break-dancing and
Ring-a, Ring-a Rosy. You could even dust or pick up toys as you
dance.
Splash-happy
If you don't want to trek to the local swimming pool host a
no-holds-barred daytime water party in the bath. Cover the floor
with towels so the kids can splash to their hearts' content then
look for some extra special bath toys. The kitchen cupboard - with
its funnels, colanders and lemon squeezers - is a good place to
start. You could plan in advance and get some bath crayons to daub
the walls of the tub.
Indoor games
For less messy fun get everyone sitting at the table and use
plastic straws to blow a feather across it. Have a goalpost at one
end of the table and the first one to get the feather to touch the
goal post wins. You can also play this game with a small plastic
ball.
Another game is to get everyone butting a balloon with their
heads (no arms, hands or feet allowed) to try to keep the balloon
in the air for as long as possible. Get all the furniture out of
the way first to avoid injury.
Say no to winter
Don't let winter get you down - pretend it's the height of
summer and have a winter barbecue. Wrap the kids up warmly in hats,
scarves and mittens and get the sausages on. Decorate the outside
table with tea lights or garden lights and serve mulled wine for
the grown-ups and lemon and honey drinks for the littlies.
Word play
Word games can be done any time of the day or year and should at
least get everyone laughing and those feelgood hormones rushing in.
You could insist that "no means yes" for an hour a day to keep your
pre-schoolers confused and intrigued. If they're too young for
board games make up other games such as, "Don't walk, hop" - that
should take up another hour and use up some energy too.
Woodland wander
Pick a clear day and get the blood moving with a walk in the
bush. Plan ahead and take a picnic and changes of clothes. Exercise
and getting back to nature are well-known mood boosters and you
won't have any trouble getting the littlies off to sleep later.
Kitchen gardening
Some plants thrive on the windowsill even in winter if they're
in a sunny spot. Parsley, basil and rocket in little pots might be
a good start and get the kids to paint the pots first. You could do
the same with flowers - just ask for recommendations from your
local garden shop.
Embrace winter
Decorate the family room with winter-style flourishes. Think
pine cones, white paper snowflakes or cut-outs of snowmen for the
windows, sprigs of green with red papier-maché berries - these are
all things the children can help make and the transformation will
thrill them.
Paint a wall
Choose a wall - it can be in the kitchen, living room or
bathroom, and paint it a really bright colour. Everyone knows
bright colours are cheering so choose a red, lime green, orange or
vibrant blue. Again, the kids can help, if you use plenty of
masking tape around the edges.