ACTIVITY IDEAS
Here are some easy activities to try with children at your setting, whatever the weather throws at us this autumn
1. Observational art
Get some sketch pads and some coloured pencils and get outside. If you have an outdoor space with trees and hedgerows, give children time to look closely at the colours and patterns in nature. This ‘mindful’ activity encourages children to touch, smell and listen, using all of their senses to begin to make sense of what they are seeing. If you don’t have a outdoor space of your own, you can walk or scoot up to your nearest park.
2. Picture making
This activity only needs the equipment that nature provides, but a few old picture frames either from home or the charity shop will really encourage little artists to create their own masterpieces.
Lay out the picture frames on the ground or grass and then let them gather twigs, conkers, leaves, pinecones, berries with which to create their own pictures. Then you can use a camera to record and show the child the results – it should be a picture within a picture.
Get the children to hold up empty frames to frame the view in front of them — this is a great way to introduce the more complex ideas of perspective and distance as they come to realise that they can fit a whole tree into a frame by moving further away.
3. Create a bug hotel
Young minds will be intrigued by the idea of building a hotel for bugs to hibernate in over the winter. And half the fun of this activity is going to collect the wood, logs, bricks, tiles, twigs, sticks, leaves and other materials required to make the bug hotel.
Once you have gathered your materials, find a spot in the garden or park and stack the bigger materials such as the logs or tiles or bricks on top of one another, filling in the holes with twigs, soil and leaves.
4. Build a mini den for toys and dolls
Building a big den involves too much heavy lifting for under fives so an alternative is to collect smaller sticks and lean them against each other to make a mini den for dolls and toys. You can experiment with making different floors with leaves or grass and even make furniture out of stones, conkers, acorns or anything you can find. Great for fine motor skills and imaginative play.
5. Plant bulbs for spring
This is really two activities for the price of one – you get the fun of planting and getting messy in October plus the excitement and joy of seeing the bulbs poke through the soil and grow into colourful blooms in Spring. Bulbs are easy to grow too!
6. Outdoor kitchen
If families have any spare pots and pans consider, they can be used to make a quick outdoor kitchen where your children can use them to make potions, mud soup or spells. Charity shops are also a great place to find cheap, second hand kitchen items.
7. Fly a kite on a windy day
If it's blustery outside, seize the opportunity for some kite flying, fresh air and running around. If you don’t have a kite, try making your own with the children using paper and string.
8. Painting pine cones
This can potentially be two activities – first collect the pine cones then, on a different day, you can do the painting — preferably outside if you have an outdoor space. Make a paint mixture that is three parts paint to two parts water. Then dip your pines completely into the paint until they are covered. Shake off the excess and then leave overnight to dry.
9. Bark rubbing
Get some large pieces of paper and some pavement chalk or crayons with the paper wrapping taken off. Place the paper over the bark and rub over the paper with the crayons. You can go for a walk and take different bark rubbings from different kinds of tree and compare the patterns you get.
10. Leaf rummage treasure hunt
Make some gold coins out of cardboard. Get the children involved in collecting a big pile of leaves. Then hide the paper coins among the leaves. The children's challenge is to rummage through the leaves to find as many coins as they can. Then you could either give a treat or prize to the person with the most coins — or just give nothing and encourage the winner simply to enjoy the glory of their victory.