Staying engaged during long days at home does not have to mean planning elaborate activities or purchasing expensive toys. Galvanize kids’ attention by keeping a fun list of projects that can be done with scant money and planning. Many of these projects encourage upcycling household items or picking up or ordering a few inexpensive items.
Consider any projects that may interest your children and print out instructions you find online. Then pull all your projects into a folder, make a list of supplies, and gather or order them to have on hand. Once the first chorus of “I’m bored” begins, you’ll be ready to dive into plenty of fun hands-on ideas.
- Plant seeds for a vegetable garden that everyone will enjoy.
- Bake homemade granola for energizing yet economical breakfasts.
- Make a beanbag-toss ladder game for playing after dinner.
- Sign up for a far-away pen pal and write weekly letters.
- Grab binoculars, a guidebook, and a notepad, and take a bird-watching walk.
- Create an ultimate croquet game with obstacles impeding each wicket.
- Make sock puppets and construct a theater for performing with them.
- Blow bubbles with kitchen items and homemade bubble formula.
- Create bedroom window banners with craft supplies you have on hand.
- Mix up a batch of strawberry shortcake biscuits and serve with berries and homemade whipped cream.
- Plant sunflowers in cups on a windowsill and then transfer them outdoors once they have sprouted.
- Start a homemade instrument band.
- Paint colorful garden rocks and encircle the house with them.
- Gather items that signify your era and bury them in a time capsule.
- Set up a table, chairs, and teacups for a fancy tea party.
- Melt old crayons into rainbow crayons using muffin tins.
- Make a watch-me-grow-up slideshow and send it to far-away relatives
- Construct an indoor or outdoor fort.
- Have pets pose for photos you can use to paint watercolor portraits.
- Hold a paper airplane making and flying competition.
- Once it’s warm enough, camp out overnight in the backyard.
- Recycle whimsical items into a fairy garden in a shady spot.
- Spray a glow-in-the-dark maze onto the lawn for evening fun.
- Put on an outdoor play, original or adapted.
- Pack up juice boxes and snacks for a leisurely bike ride.
- Spend the day learning to juggle.
- Lay on blankets in the yard and read books or poetry out loud.
- Make muffins or coffee cake with blueberries and share some with an elderly neighbor.
- Make models from kits on a sunny porch or patio.
- Plan a hydrated hike destination you can reach from home, then rest, then go back.
- Paint words, names, or destinations on scraps of wood and make them into signposts around the yard.
- Make a role model collage with images and words and then share what you admire aloud.
- Gather up white clothing and shoes, then tie-dye them or decorate them with permanent markers.
- Come up with a fantastic family vacation then start a vision board you can add to over time.
- Research, practice, and put on a magic show complete with hats and capes.
- Create a family nature journal that includes pressed samples and photos you can add to all summer.
- Hang rolled paper against a flat wall and let each child make a colorful graffiti statement.
- Research another era and make retro paper dolls and outfits.
- Make found-object wind chimes to hang by front and back doors.
- Grab a couple ladders, pool noodles, and folding lawn chairs and construct an over-under obstacle course.
- Make up photo scavenger hunts for each other.
- Pick up a putter, sink some plastic cups in the lawn, and turn your yard into a mini golf course.
- Research group dances and have after-dinner practices.
- Search online by day and study the constellations you will watch for by night.
- Virtually visit a faraway place of each child’s choosing through the internet.
- Make a family patchwork quilt by giving each family member a certain number of squares to finish. Use fabric scraps from around the house.
- Make homemade pizzas from scratch.
- Make origami with waterproof paper and hang them from tree branches in the yard.
- Practice all day for a family talent night.
- Practice colorful cookie, cake, or cupcake decorating.
- Study fashion history and then pull together fashions out of recycled materials.
- Sit around the fire pit and share what you like about books you are reading.
- Set up an indoor or outdoor theater, pop popcorn, and stream a favorite movie.
- Arrange a stuffed animal parade.
- Drape together a napping or reading tent with sheer drapes hung from the ceiling.
- Create an oversized map for an outdoor treasure hunt.
- Construct a city out of recycled items.
- Craft a maze in the yard with masking tape or painter’s tape.
- Learn a new card game.
- Share what you appreciate about time together with your family over homemade pie or cake.