Sunday, July 6, 2025

139 Things for Kids to Do Without Electronics!

139 Things to Do With Kids Without Electronics
by Laura Lane
Photo by Markus Spiske on Unsplash


Are you running out of ideas to keep the kids busy and happy while they are home? I thought about some of the things we did when I was young long ago. I also included some of the things my four kids did with an abundance of time, no video games or tv, and limited videos. My daughters, Emily and Amy, then added their ideas as well. Some ideas are things to do with kids, and some they do without you. All in all, we came up with 131 things for kids to do without electronics!
Here we go!
  1. Blow bubbles 
  2. Catch fireflies 
  3. Make homemade ice cream 
  4. Read a book together
  5. Child reads alone
  6. Play in the sprinkler 
  7. Ride bikes  
  8. Play with balls
  9. Play dolls
  10. Kickball
  11. Play with cars and trucks
  12. Learn to play jacks or marbles 
  13. Have a pillow fight
  14. Water balloons
  15. Science experiments
  16. Picnic under the stars, under a shady tree or under the kitchen table with sheets over it
  17. Sidewalk chalk
  18. Whittle sticks
  19. Playing outside
  20. Dig in the dirt
  21. Play in a sandbox
  22. King of the hill or play set
  23. Jump roap
  24. Play in a creek
  25. Build a fort with sticks or blankets
  26. Find the thimble
  27. Skits
  28. Exploring
  29. Trampoline
  30. Roll down a hill
  31. Play catch
  32. Wiffle ball
  33. Badminton
  34. Volleyball
  35. Hopscotch
  36. Obstacle course
  37. Climb trees
  38. Garden
  39. Look for 4 leaf clovers
  40. Mow the lawn
  41. Cook together
  42. Blow leaves
  43. Pick wildflowers
  44. Make homemade jam together
  45. Pick blueberries or strawberries or apples
  46. Make slime 
  47. Bake cookies
  48. Go to a drive-in
  49. Make ice pops with water, juice, yogurt or pudding
  50. Sing
  51. Dance
  52. Teach your dog tricks
  53. Karaoke
  54. Dance party
  55. Write a letter to the grandparents by snail mail
  56. Play in a home pool big or small
  57. Fashion show
  58. Overnight hammocking challenge
  59. Make a play or skit
  60. Reenact a movie
  61. Wash the dog or pet
  62. Write and perform poetry
  63. Read a play together with parts
  64. Weirdness contest
  65. Staring contest
  66. Walk
  67. Run
  68. Puzzles
  69. Slap jack
  70. Race hotwheels
  71. Race bikes
  72. Sing lots of rhymes and kids' songs
  73. Egyptian Rat Slap card game
  74. Spoons game
  75. War card game
  76. Go Fish card game
  77. Board games like Monopoly, Battle Ship, Chutes and Ladders etc
  78. Paint a room
  79. Reading Marathon
  80. Manicures and pedicures
  81. Dress-up
  82. Makeover
  83. Private concert for the stuffies (stuffed animals)
  84. Bake cookies
  85. Blind taste tests
  86. Lemonade stand
  87. Gymnastics for fun— somersaults, cartwheels, etc.
  88. Trampoline
  89. String games
  90. Clapping games
  91. Magic tricks
  92. Scavenger hunt
  93. Ice cream run (in pajamas one night) 
  94. Flash mob with just your family 
  95. Volunteer
  96. Make daisy chains
  97. Play house (this includes plant soup)
  98. Climb a tree
  99. Identify birds, wildflowers or trees
  100. Get ahead on school
  101. Field trip
  102. Ride a bike
  103. Crafts ~ Shrinky Dink, Clay, Play Doh, make bracelets etc.
  104. Wash the car in the driveway
  105. Write stories
  106. Swing
  107. Adopt a kitten or puppy
  108. Take pictures
  109. Draw pictures
  110. Play the game "Twister"
  111. Play hide and go seek
  112. Eat popsicles (and try to get them open without scissors)
  113. Sleep all night on a trampoline
  114. Coloring
  115. Charades
  116. Blind man's bluff
  117. Simon Says
  118. Teach them to knit, crochet, or embroider
  119. Make a family and world timeline on a long sheet of paper hung on your hallway wall.
  120. Follow a paper map to a destination
  121. Hike a nature trail
  122. Play in a creek
  123. Catch polywogs aka tadpoles
  124. Watch the sun set 
  125. Coin collecting ~ or any other collections they think of
  126. Star gazing ~ Remember Starlight star bright first star I see tonight, I wish I may I wish I might, have the wish I wish tonight? Don't forget Twinkle Twinkle Little Star. 
  127. Talk about memories, yours and theirs.
  128. Make a scrapbook together
  129. Nerf gun battles
  130. Fly a kite
  131. Water gun fights
  132. Water balloons
  133. Play at the park
  134. Play make believe (anything they want)
  135. Sidewalk chalk
  136. Swim
  137. Lie on the grass and look for cloud pictures
  138. "Build" things with wood, nails, hammers, and saws (with supervision as needed)
  139. There are also lots of outdoor games that can be played by a group of kids outside. Traditionally, the older kids taught the younger kids, but you can always introduce a group of kids to a game.

My daughter, when she was 18, added the following:

"And above all, give your kids freedom in their play. A lot of amazing childhood memories are made by kids using their imaginations and parents being loving and being supportive! Have fun with your kids, but let them also go and act like pioneers together, or build a fort with random things they find. This builds so much character, forms those memories (and isn't that what we want to do for our kids? Help them create wonderful memories?), and teaches them lots of good lessons. To learn, and be healthy, kids need to do things by themselves (and this can be with help). In doing so, they learn, and also learn independence, knowledge, and ultimately maturity, and sometimes wisdom (even from learning a hard way at times)."

Enjoy this time with your children and teens. You may never have this much time together again. Make it count for good. 

I'm now a grandma to one little boy. Oh how he's brightened my world. This list is for grandparents, too. We need to share the joys of our simpler childhood with our littles and not so littles. In it, we'll relive our joys, and enjoy a new level of joy with them.

So, which of these things have you done? What have I forgotten or missed? I cannot wait to hear your thoughts. 

Hugs to you all! Thank you for joining me here at Harvest Lane Cottage.

Laura
Happy at Home

P.S. Please share ideas that I've missed and your prayer requests as well.

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3 comments:

  1. This is a great list! I've done many of these, both in my own childhood and with our children. Thank you for the time you took to put this list together.
    Blessings and hugs,
    Betsy

    ReplyDelete
  2. There are some fantastic ideas there, Laura. Unfortunately I don't have any little ones to share them with at the moment :(
    My Mum went to art college and was full of good ideas. She would buy cheap rolls of lining paper (the thick paper that is used behind wallpaper on rough walls) or just an odd roll of wallpaper and use the back of it as art paper. She would cut a potato in half and carve stars, moons etc onto it and then we would dip them in paint and print them onto it to make wrapping paper. Another favourite thing was to unroll the paper and get us to lie down on it while she drew our outlines. It was then up to us to add detail, colour in and stick things onto the outline to make a full-length portrait. We would then carefully cut around them and stick them onto our bedroom wall/door. All of that took a long time, so was a good thing to do on a rainy day.
    We also pressed flowers between sheets of paper slipped between the pages of books. When they were dry we used them to make pictures and greetings cards.
    Another thing I didn't do as a kid, but which my kids always enjoyed, was making home-made popcorn.

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This life only works with Jesus. The next life is a continuation of this one—make sure you spend it with Jesus. Jesus is the only way to God the Father!

Laura Lane