Introducing the Engage With Nature Website
Month by Month Gardening Resources
July.
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Engaging with nature means interacting with and appreciating the natural world around us. This can range from simple acts like taking a walk in the park to more active participation in exploring any terrain and all it's treasures. It's about fostering a connection with nature, which can lead to numerous benefits for both individuals and the environment.
"Super fun outdoor sensory explorations for kids truly do have very special powers. How much any child enjoys any experience has a lot to do with the excitement of the sensory energy provided by the environment. Natural discovery delights children (and those of us that wish we were still children) in all terrains and habitats. Whether you are hunting nature's treasures to explore more at home or exploring what lives in certain wild or green spaces away from home, you are bound to find something that intrigues your family or tribe of nature lovers."
Unstructured and outdoor open ended play can offer many health and social benifits and are sure to transform kids health, boosts kids confidence and makes family life a whole heap happier!!!
And the most fun outdoor activities do NOT need lots of fancy prep.
So I have here a huge list of 100 simple prompts for fun outside for kids of all ages wherever you are. Enjoy!!
Discovering Fun For Kids In Woods & Forests
Discovering Fun For Kids In The Backyard
Discovering Fun For Kids In The Park
Discovering Fun For Kids In Urban Settings
Discovering Fun For Kids On The Beach
Discovering Fun For Kids By Wild Waters
Discovering Fun For Kids In The Countryside
I have always wanted to make being outside super fun for my kids, students and tribe. It's always nice to discover new places that my kids can run and explore in. And there are other places that we love to explore time and time again. We can see what is different and new in a different season or to just to enjoy the terrain and mingle with the wildlife or it's vegetation.
I hope to encourage you to explore and find new things in nature where ever you are or get creative in how you use nature's delights and treasures and just have a blast! It’s amazing to watch your child's creativity and intrigue! And I truly want to cultivate both of those things that even more.
Woodland has a magical impact on kids wellbeing offering hours of freedom for imaginations to run wild as they climb, chase, hunt and hide.
So hit any woodlands near you regularly with nothing morethan a picnic - and some spare string - to ...
Climb Trees
Walk The Plank
Make A Log Seesaw
Build A Tree Swing
Play Forty Forty
Build A Den
Make Stick Swords
Make Leaf Crowns
Make Bow & Arrows
Make Stick Flags
Gather Craft Supplies
Create A Trail
Make Forest Face Monsters
Climbing trees is not just fun for kids. It involves balancing and crossing the midline both of which boost mood and help kids worry less.
The simple fun of balancing on logs is also key for child development.
And even more fun if you balance the log over a ditch or stream and weave a tale of daring-dos around it.
If you find a decent sized fallen branch and log make your own see saw for DIY fun that lets kids explore the power of levers for themselves.
Throw a rope over a strong branch and make an impromptu swing with a wooden stick for hours of fun.
A classic kids game, Forty Forty is a super cool version of hide and seek that is the perfect outdoor activity for having fun in the woods.
Design your own den any which way you like with old branches then camouflage it with fallen supplies.
The very simplest of dens can be the start of hours of imaginative play.
Make stick swords with some quick square lashing. Avoid injury with below-your-butt only battle rules!
Simply thread string through leaves and tie around your head to create your own instant leaf crowns.
Capture the spirit of Robin Hood with stick and string bows. And don't worry about firing actual arrows - that's what imagination is for.
Tie a hankie, a scarf, a t-shirt - whatever you've got - to a good stick and you've a flag to march under!
Woods are full of free craft supplies from twigs to pine cones and seed heads that are perfect for nature inspired craft activities including Christmas decorations ...
Christmas Twig Crafts - Rainy Day Mum
Make sure you don't get lost by creating a trail with simple tracker tips e.g. twig arrows, little stone cairns, marks in the ground with a stick, piles of pine cones and more.
Use your forest finds to make super fun forest face monsters.
If you're a fellow Londoner check out this guide to the best woods in London. It covers 18 stunning woods in all parts of the city.
Kids need loads of energy burning, body building backyard fun but also simple, soothing backyard activities that help them calm down.
There's loads of fun backyard activities for kids that do both here.
For high energy backyard fun with little prep, help kids enjoy these:
Camp In The Garden
Crazy Obstacle Course
Make Box Tunnels
Paint Outdoors
Make Bean Bags
Tin Can Alley
Soda Bottle Skittles
Back Yard Train Track
Build A Teepee
Water Play
Giant Bubbles
Build A Stick Maze
Create A Mud Kitchen
Star Spotting
Kids of all ages have great fun camping out in the garden. Just up their independence as they grow.
On warm summer nights older kids can have fun rigging up a shelter with a picnic blanket or some such and sleep under the stars.
Design an instant crazy obstacle course with whatever you can grab from your garage or shed :
Hoops
Skipping ropes
Trikes
Space hoppers
Planks of wood to balance on
Lawn mower box to hurdle
Play tunnel to crawl through
Garden sacks for sack race
Ground sheet to crawl under
Tub lid stepping stones
Chalked hopscotch
Bucket for bean bag toss
Racket & ball for bouncy uppies and bouncy downies
Bean poles to weave around or crawl or limbo under!!
Put all those delivery boxes we all keep getting to good use making the biggest tunnel you can of boxes and gaffer tape all around the garden.
Who says painting need to be indoors?
There are all sorts of high energy creative ways to paint outdoors with kids from
feet painting to spray painting, balloon painting and even catapult painting!
Backyard Railroad - Adventures In A Box
You don't need a fancy play house! Just grab 5 or 6 bean poles, string and an old sheet to make a simple 5 minute backyard teepee.
This is a fun backyard activity for older kids to whip up for little ones.
Water play is always a winner when it's hot and does NOT need lots of equipment or preparation.
Kids truly will make their own fabulous fun outdoors with :
Buckets of water
Dish soap
Squeezy bottles
Sponges
Paint brushes
Colanders
Funnels
Spoons for stirring potions
Containers for pouring
Plastic sheeting for a water slide.
Have faith in their imagination!!!
Just lay down basic rules at the beginning and stick to them.
Make gorgeous rainbow giant bubbles with super quick DIY stick and string bubble wands ...
It truly doesn't need to be fancy.
Turn a couple of old boxes or crates into a pretend stove and hand over unused pots and pans cluttering the kitchen and let them play.
Any of these will add to the fun :
Small saucepans
Small frying pans
Wooden spoons
Colanders
Sieves
Mixing bowls
Ice cube trays
Plastic or metal beakers
Jugs
Ladles
Ice cube scoops
Rolling pins
Play dough cutters
Metal tea pots.
And yes, mud kitchens are messy but they offer hours of imaginative fun!!
Use all those sticks you brought back from the woods to create simple stick mazes all round the backyard.
You don't have to go crazy learning every star but little by little share the easy ones to spot e.g. the plough or big dipper, Orion, the little bear.
Sitting outdoors making very low prep nature inspired crafts is a great way to get outdoors and ease stress levels when everyone is tired ...
Paint With Petals
Flower Crafts
Nature Paint Brushes
Garden Weed Mandalas
Stick & Ribbon Wands
Flower Crowns
Paint Story Stones
Stick Maze
Stick Picture Frames
Find fallen petals or pull apart a few flowers you are happy to pick to create gorgeous petal paintings to explore flower structure & parts.
And don't stop there as there are all sorts of lovely simple flower crafts for kids you can make with real petals.
You can make your own nature paint brushes with seed heads, leaves, flowers, firs and ferns and also use them for creating pretty prints.
Swooshing paint with a fir tree brush is a wonderful sensory activity for exploring nature with kids.
Get your kids to do some weeding and be creative at the same time making garden weed mandalas.
They can add in snail shells, sticks, petals or whatever they can find.
Simple stick and ribbon wands are lovely to make on a slightly windy day so you can swirl around the garden with the ribbons flying out.
You can create beautiful rainbow ribbons easily with felt pens but any fabric scraps tied on will do.
Gently weaving flowers to make flower crowns is unbelievably calming and soothing on scorching hot days and a great prompt for imagination and story telling ...
Don't over complicate it. Let kids decorate any stones you have from woods, beach or garden with whatever paint or pens you can find.
For inspiration try these ideas ...
If you have nature finds from the woods, park or garden, create simple stick picture frames to display them.
Tying the sticks and threading finds onto them is super soothing when you're all whacked and need calm.
There are lots of ways for kids to get up close with bugs in the backyard which are strangely calming ...
Race & Raise Snails
Garden Pest Scavenger Hunt
Raise Butterflies
Raise Ladybirds
Build A Bug Hotel
Create A Wormery
I know snails are a pain when eating home grown vegetables but make brilliant little pets for kids and can be raised easily in a DIY snail home.
Get your kids to hunt down caterpillars, green fly, beetles and more in a garden pest scavenger hunt. It removes pests organically and teaches kids about the many micro habitats in their own garden.
If they haven't yet, get your kids to raise butterflies. They will be truly mesmerised by the transformation.
Alternatively raise ladybirds. They go through their own amazing lifecycle and helpfully eat lots of pests ...
This is actually a baby ladybird!!!
And you can encourage good bugs to your garden with a bug hotel.
And for kids who love bugs do make a wormery - it's incredibly simple but a brilliant way to explore soil.
There are loads of simple gardening activities kids can enjoy outdoors all year round. They can be wonderfully calming for kids who worry lots :
Growing Peas
Quick Growing Vegetables
Growing Veggies From Scraps
Growing Courgettes
Plant A Mini Pumpkin Patch
Grow A Tree
Pea seeds are super easy for little kids to plant and kids can have great fun providing sticks for the cool little pea seedlings to grow up ...
Kids aren't patient gardeners but these quick growing vegetables will give them a crop in weeks which is the best motivation to grow more.
You can also take scraps of vegetables including carrots, cabbage and turnip tops and regrow them in little jars of water.
It's free, takes no prep and is a cool plant life cycle activity for kids.
Courgettes or zucchini are fun plants for kids to grow as they are easy to handle and make delicious chocolate zucchini brownies!!
Pumpkins take longer to grow but the joy of growing your own pumpkin for Halloween is worth it!!
It's super powerful for kids to see a conker or acorn from the park start to grow into a whole new tree.
Or for even more magic pop a fallen pussy willow twig in a jar of water and watch it come back to life!
We don't need a plan to hit the park for the playground, football or hide & seek but local parks are also chock full of nature and lovely simple nature crafts for kids to enjoy :
Daisy & Buttercup Chains
Braid Grass
Collect Conkers
Collect Acorns
Bark Rubbings
Leaf Rubbings
Paint The Park Like Monet
Micro Habitat Collages
Daisy and buttercup chains are as old as the hills but threading stem into stem is still a lovely activity for little fingers on a sunny day.
In the lazy days of late summer when the grass has got long, grass braiding is another lovely calming activity to enjoy outside with kids.
In autumn collect beautiful horse chestnuts for good old fashioned games of conkers or use them to make all sorts of cute conker crafts.
It's not just conkers you can collect. Compete with squirrel for acorns to use in all sorts of acorn crafts.
Even as kids get older it's worth carrying a little tin of crayons and a notepad with you wherever you go for some impromptu bark rubbing.
It's a great way to get up close and really explore the tree and if you look out for silver birch trees you may even find bark you can write on ...
And there are all sorts of ways to do lovely leaf rubbings. You could take the leaves home or get crafty right then and there in the park ...
You could even hit the park with paints and make a big impression learning to paint like Monet ...
Parks are bursting with micro-habitats from squirrels in trees and bugs under logs to ducks on ponds.
Take the time to look up, look down and poke around to see who's building their nest where.
Then gather a few nesting supplies and create cute bird's nest nature collages when you get home ...
We played out on the street as a big gang of kids when I was little. That's been lost for this generation but these are fun ideas to tempt kids on the street back out ...
Paint Your Shadows
Play Hopscotch
Long Rope Skipping
Play Mother May I
Paint Your Box Tunnel
Have A Frumble Sale
Rainy Day Art Gallery
Sweep Leaves
Create some street art by painting your shadows and learn about light waves whilst you're at it ...
We played this for hours as kids. If you've forgotten how read these hopscotch rules and get chalking on the pavement or side walk.
This does need car-free space but with a long rope - an old washing line? - you can get kids playing these classic long rope games together.
Kids street games were passed down generation to generation. You can restart the connection with Mother May I an old school favourite for a gang of kids from two to 10!!
Combine your box stash with other families for a giant box tunnel and paint it. This is a gloriously messy fave at our street party every year.
If your home is full of kids clutter that needs free cycling help them set up a little Frumble sale and experience the joy of passing things on.
On a rainy day create a gallery of fabulous rainy day rainbow pictures for your front fence or wall.
Get all the kids out on the street to sweep the autumn leaves with big brooms and then have a big leaf fight ... before sweeping up again!!
Kids do NOT need tips to have fun at the beach but when the weather's not great these prompts are cool starters for family fun ...
Go Rock Pooling
Catch Crabs
Create Miniature Worlds
Dig A Sea Canal
Play Stuck In The Mud
Create Sand Pictures
Shell Mandalas
Sand Angels
Skip Stones On The Sea
Have A Camp Fire
Just poke around in the rock pools and see what you can find ...
Bait a net with bacon and catch crabs off the rocks or the harbour, then race them down the jetty.
Don't settle for sandcastles, build yourself whole new miniature worlds with beach combing finds ...
Get the whole family digging a massive sea canal to fill the moat of your sand castle full with water when the tide finally comes in.
Classic kids game stuck in the mud is a version of tag and great fun to play on the beach as it's so easy to crawl under people's legs to release them.
If you're on a beach with loads of shells and pebbles create lovely pictures of mermaids, fish, dinosaurs or whatever rocks your kids boat ...
Get creative designing lovely abstract shell mandalas ...
Or simply make sand angels with your own bodies ...
Burn off energy with french cricket, a family game everyone can play. You don't need a bat, any racket or even a stick PLUS a tennis ball will do.
Teach your kids how to make stones skip and bounce across the water .
At the end of a long day when most people have gone home, nothing beats a little camp fire on the beach!
Kids love water. So if you can't get to the beach easily find cool streams near you where kids can get in and splash around for hours on end ...
Cross A Stream
Bridge A Stream
Build A Swing
Dam A Creek
Fish For Tiddlers
Look Out For Frogspawn
Hunt For Tadpoles in a Pond
Make A Stick Raft for the Local Lake
Play Pooh Sticks
Sail Paper Boats Where Ever There is Water
Learn To Weave with Nature From The Shoreline Vegetation
Look out for any big stones you can find and ford the stream with your very own stepping stones for hours of mood boosting balancing fun.
If there are no stones, look out for logs and build a bridge of some sort - falling in is all part of the fun!!
If you can find a super sturdy branch over the stream create a swing ...
You could build a dam like a beaver with sticks and reeds and more.
You can fish for tiddlers in even a tiny stream with a little net or bucket but put them back after a bit.
In spring look out for frogspawn on the edge of streams and pools.
If you have a pond take a few frog spawn to raise tadpoles at home.
As long as you've got string in your pocket you can make cool little stick rafts to cross the stream.
Slow right down and simply play pooh sticks under a bridge.
Make paper boats to sail with any paper you have handy, newspaper is ideal. If you've forgotten how, here's how to make a paper boat.
Weave little mats with fallen reeds or long grass ... and you could even have a go to see if they will float.
Kids aren't always up for a long walk in the countryside but there are lots of simple activities that make walks and exploring the countryside much more fun for kids of all ages ...
Make Journey Sticks
Race Up A Hill
Roll Down The Hill
Pick Elderflowers
Pick Blackberries
Pick Strawberries
Pick Apples
Visit A Pumpkin Patch
Join The Harvest
Midnight Hike
Find a stick at the start of a walk plus long pieces of grass and attach finds to your journey stick as you go.
Race up a hill to conquer it with a quick stick and hanky or shirt flag.
On summers days, grassy hills are there to be rolled down. Obviously better in scruffy clothes but you can remove grass stains fast.
In the early summer pick elderflower blossom for elderflower cordial.
Go blackberry picking with friends and whip up favourite blackberry recipes when you get home.
Picking strawberries at the pick your own farm is a lovely way to spend a day outdoors as a family.
You can go apple picking all the way from August to October. It's a lovely fun outdoor activity for the whole family that gets everyone moving and connects kids with real food.
A trip to the pumpkin patch has become an Instagram cliche but it is a fun way to get outdoors with kids in October. At many farms kids can pick other vegetables as well.
See if there are other harvests around you to join as a volunteer, it could be anything from peaches to lavender and hops to hazelnuts!!
Being part of a community harvest is an incredibly powerful way to help kids connect with the seasons.
They need a bit of care but night hikes are a brilliant way for kids to experience all the night time nature they usually miss out on, from hedgehogs, bats and owls to badgers, foxes, moths and moles.
And there you go; loads of simple, cheap, no-prep or planning ways for kids to have fun outdoors
I hope these ideas help you enjoy more fun outdoors all year round.
For more simple parenting ideas do check out these other posts :
Climbing Hill, Pumpkins, Frogspawn, Pooh Sticks, Stream, Splashing Stream, Stepping Stones, Beach, Sand Angels, Crab, Skipping, Bug House, Water Play, Camping Out, Woods, Balancing Logs, Balancing Logs 2,Climbing Trees
OR NATURE WALKS BY SEASONS
Month by Month Gardening Resources
July.
Each season offers exciting nature exploration possibilities!
Whether your nature adventures take you into the woods or down the sidewalk-lined street, we’ve created several inspired nature walks to help you and your little ones investigate nature—wherever it’s found.
To learn more about each nature activity for kids check out these links below
More Free Printables can be for simple seasonal walks HERE
You really don’t need any expensive kit to get out and enjoy nature, but here are a few things that can make your walks more enjoyable and educational.
:: the right clothes. There’s a saying, in Norway I think, that goes; There’s no such thing as bad weather, only unsuitable clothing. I have definitely found that the right clothes make such a difference to our walks. If we’re (I’m!) warm in winter, we stay out longer more happily. Kids in walking boots or wellingtons mean my husband is less stressed about mud in the car! Our clothing kit looks like:
warm coats in winter, light waterproofs the rest of the year
sturdy walking boots topped up regularly with waterproof spray, and beach walking sandals in warmer months
sunhats and sunglasses, or wooly hats and gloves
a flask of hot chocolate is wonderful on winter walks, and bottles of water in the warmer months
:: a kit basket, kept in the boot of the car, with notebooks/nature journals; pens and watercolour paint tins; binoculars; ID books for birds, bugs and plants; a magnifying glass
:: a picnic blanket with a waterproof back is great if you plan to sit for a while: in a push a bin bag/refuse sack in each person’s pocket can be a handy ‘seat’
Take a look at these
Often we just head out, walk, and enjoy what we see, but sometimes we have a special theme to our nature walks, to focus in on a particular aspect of what we might find. I’ve suggested some themes which match each of our weekly topics, and you might also like to try these ideas over the course of the year:
:: Signs of the Seasons: looking for the first signs of a new season
:: Plant Hunt: looking for a particular plant that is in season such as snowdrops, daffodils, bluebells
:: Bird Watching: focussing in on the birds that you see, trying to identify them, watching their behaviour
:: Bug Hunt: take your magnifying glass with you and see what you can spot, on trees, plants, and on the ground
:: Colour Walk: see if you can find a leaf in each colour of the rainbow
:: Footprints Walk: look for tracks – great in the sand at the beach, or in the snow
:: Sense of Smell Walk
:: Sense of Hearing Walk
:: Sense of Touch Walk
:: Sense of Taste Walk: a wild foraging walk, or visit an orchard or fruit farm
:: Cloud Watching: take a picnic blanket to an open spot in a meadow or at the beach, lie back, and see what you can see in the clouds. Use a weather book to identify the types of clouds you see
:: Bat Walk: head out at dusk in the later summer and see if you can find any bats
:: Star Walk: take a nighttime walk and look up at the sky, see which constellations are visible
:: Moonlight Walk: head out and take a walk by moonlight. You can time this with a full moon, or take several walks through the month to observe the phases of the moon
:: Rainy Day Walk: go puddle jumping!
:: Dawn Walk: get up early and head out to see the sunrise. This is best for winter months as you won’t have to get up quite so early!
:: Sunset Walk: watch the sun go down. This one is wonderful on the Summer Solstice. We headed up onto cliffs, with the girls in PJs, to read bedtime stories as the sun set over the sea. We even saw a pod of dolphins in the bay, so truly a special midsummer!
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