Color Fun For Everyone!

11 Mar

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Unfortunately, this is one of those things that you really need to see in person to appreciate! This one of our fave finds at the Toy Fair this year and I am pretty sure it will be on of yours too if you give it a try!

Can you guess what it does? You got it! It colors the water in your bath – or if you are an Outdoor Play Toy friend – your pool water can make amazing colors too! Have a child who hates bath time – we bet this will change their mind!

The color tablets can be combined to make multiple colors, are made in America, are completely safe and non-staining and best yet – eco-friendly! The fizzies will make them giggle and the color will make them laugh…..after all shouldn’t bath and pool time be fun?!?!

Check them out at Color My Bath.

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Because Not Every Day is Sunny + Giveaway!

2 Mar

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Congratulations to Leslie S. – the winner of the great Country Barn!

Thanks to everyone who entered!

As many of us on the East Coast know – not every day is sunny! This last winter has been a long one and I am sure many of us are battling daily with bored kids going “Mom, I am bored”! Some kids are even so bored that they are even tired of the video games and computers!

Well now there is an alternative!

The creative line of products from Imagination Box Co. are just what Mom needs to get the kids inspired and be creative!

Now at first glance – it may seem like just a piece of cardboard, but when you look deeper you will see a beautifully designed, eco-friendly and recyclable canvas for your child to color and create with!

Take this stunning Cottage adorned with floral accents and even a door and windows to enjoy! Even the interior features a great design accent so your children can “create” different rooms!

So here is the before……..and then the after! Can you say FUNNNNN!

And there are several styles available or you can get a plain house and create your own design.  And what we love most about this company – not only the fact they are Eco-Friendly, but that they work with a group called Panhandle Special Needs to help them assemble their products! Have to love a company that gives back in so many ways!

_____________________________________________

So, would you like to win one of the great products at Imagination Box Co.?

Well, now is your chance! OutdoorPlayToys.com is giving one lucky entrant the Country Barn shown to the left!

TO ENTER:

Visit Imagination Box Co. and let us know what item you love the best in a comment on this post!

 

FOR 3 ADDITIONAL ENTRIES

1)  Follow Imagination Box on Twitter

2) Like Imagination Box on Facebook

3) Fan Outdoor Play Toys on Facebook

Be sure to leave a comment for each additional entry. A random winner will be selected using Random.org.

Contest ends March 9, 2011, winner will be notified on March 10, 2011.

And the great people at Imagination Box Co. are offering every Outdoor Play Toys a 20% off discount using the code “outdoorplaytoys

 

 

 

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The Making of a Kid Entrepreneur

25 Feb

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Kids want to make money too – and there is no better past time than the Lemonade Stand for the little ones to start their own business.

An old fashioned past time with a modern twist – this Wooden Lemonade Stand from Quality Time Construction will have your little entrepreneur running a successful business in no time!Wooden Lemonade Stand

Every Portable Wood Lemonade Stand can be customized with the included chalk and stickers, or feel free to be really creative and use paints and stencils to create a stand that is as unique as your child.

Whether selling lemonade at the curb, cookies on the baseball field or whatever niche your child is interested, this portable stand will be a great asset to their business!

Quality Time Construction also will be releasing a Portable Wood Kids Workbench and Portable Wooden Activity Center in the coming months as well!

 

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Best Toys of 2011 Toy Industry Awards

15 Feb

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We had the thrill of attending the NY Toy Fair the last few days and found some amazing products! This list is actually a list of the the Award Winners from the Toy Industry – called the TOTYs (Toy of the Year).

1. Toy of the Year (GRAND PRIZE!) Sing-A-Ma-Jigs by Fisher Price.

These adorable plush dolls sing, chatter and even harmonize with each other. You can change modes by pressing their left arm and control tone by pressing tummies. These are just plain fun and are available in 12 different styles.  The Sing-A-Ma-Jigs also took home the Innovative Toy of the Year and Preschool Toy of the Year Awards – so yes, it is that good!

Sing-A-Ma-Jig Toy of the Year

2. Activity Toy of the Year: Crayola Color Wonder Sound Studio

Not only can the kids color in their story, but with a choice of over 60 different sounds, then can assign sounds, create stories and play them back! A full imagination station for your creative kid is what you get with the Crayola Color Wonder Sound Studio

Crayola Color Wonder Sound Studio

3. Boy Toy of The Year:  NERF N-Strike Stampede ECS Blaster

This is a fully automatic NERF Clip System Blaster. The Nerf N-Strike Stampede ECS features a new pop-out bipod that also serves as a handle. It also comes with a shield that can be removed to use for different attack modes. High capacity clips can hold up to 18 darts!

Nerf N-Strike Stampede EDC Blaster

Nerf N-Strike Stampede EDC Blaster - Photo: Hasbro

4. Girl Toy of the Year: Squinkies Cupcake Surprise! Bake Shop

Squinkies are adorable mini-dolls that come in plastic gumball bubbles. There are hundreds of different Squinkies to collect! The Squinkies Cupcake Surprise Bakeshop gives the Squinkies a fun place to play.

Squinkies Cupcake Surprise Bake Shop

Squinkies Cupcake Surprise Bake Shop - Photo: Blip Toys

5. Educational Toy of the Year: Leapster Explorer Learning Experience

Leapster has a long reign of award winning products, and this year is no different. The LeapFrog Leapster Explorer Learning Game System offers the greatest capacity for downloading applications for kids to enjoy and now features touch screen interactivity and the brightest screen they have made yet!

Leapfrog Leapster Explorer Learning Game System - Photo: Leapfrog

6. Electronic Game of the Year: Scrabble Flash

Take Scrabble add technology and you have a winner with this Scrabble Flash Cubes game!

Scrabble Flash

Scrabble Flash - Photo: Hasbro

7. Infant Toy of The Year: My Own Leaptop by Leapfrog

Six learning activity centers, music, email and more fill out this fun LeapFrog My Own Leaptop laptop for the littlest computer lover.

My Own Leaptop

My Own Leaptop - Photo: Leapfrog

8. Specialty Toy of The Year – HEXBUG Nano Habitat Set

The Specialty category accounts for the best toy distributed to specialty toy retailers. The Hexbug Nano Habitat Set
is designed to challenge a kids imagination! With the physics of vibration these Nanos explore the environment around them, entertaining children for hours.

Hexbug Nano Habitat Set

Hexbug Nano Habitat Set - Photo: Innovation First Labs

and last but not least the

9. Outdoor Toy of the Yearthe NERF Super Soaker Shot Blast

With a reach of 25 feet the Supersoaker Shotblast Water Blaster features a long capacity tank for continuous blasting and even includes a tactical rail to line up your shots to perfection!

NERF Super Soaker Shot Blast

NERF Super Soaker Shot Blast - Photo: Hasbro

The great thing about these awards for 2011 is that public online voting was taken into account for these winners. Meaning you know have input which makes the judging more relevant to everyday households! So these are all toy ideas that are sure to please!

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Hand Trux – Hydraulic Powered Toys

17 Jan

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Hydraulic Powered Toys by Hand TruxHandtrux Toys is a unique line of hydraulic powered toys that are meant toreally encourage a child’s imagination.

These are hand-operated toys that allow a child to do some precision digging and excavate sand, loose dirt and mud – and yes even snow making it a great year-round toy.

Inside the arm of the toy is the hidden hydraulic power grip which allows them to control the hand.

The toy was a huge success this year having sold out on their own website as well as in FAO Schwartz.

Handtrux toys are also Made In America – gotta’ love that – and to boot it is a great gift that is less than $20.

We are guessing that inventory should be replenished soon, so I would keep an eye out at Handtrux Toys to see when the items are back in stock.

We will be meeting the Handtrux team at the Toy Fair next month so once we see them in person we may carry them at Outdoor Play Toys – stay tuned!

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Help Us Find Oliver!

11 Jan

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Help Find Oliver! Help Find Oliver at Outdoor Play ToysOliver is one of our Outdoor Play Toys Mascots – and he loves to play in the great outdoors with his humans as often as he can, unfortunately, this sometimes gets him into trouble – since he gets lost quite often. So how can you help? Well you can start by visiting our Facebook Page and becoming a fan!

On our Facebook page we will post a couple of clues that will help you try to find Oliver on our website. We do not know if he is riding quads in the desert, skiing the Alps in Switzerland or maybe even pedaling his way through the woods in his own backyard – but wherever he is we know he needs your help to get back home!

Once you find Oliver just leave a comment here that you have found him and then enter your email and the URL of where you found him in the entry box below!

One random winner will be chosen at random from all correct entries to win the product that Oliver is having some fun with…. Contest ends on Monday – January 17, 2011 at 12pm EST. Winner will be notified the same day!

Contest Rules: 1 winner to be chosen at random from all correct entries submitted.  Prize to be awarded is not to include any option upgrades that may be available, only base models are offered as a prize. Options can be added at the request of the winner, but charges will apply for those options. Only (1) submission per household is allowed. Prize cannot be exchanged for cash or any other product. Eligible contestants must be 18 years or over.

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There Was A Crooked Mouse Who Liked A Crooked House…

30 Dec

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a Crooked Playhouse that is!

Crooked House PlayhouseWe are in love with these adorable Crooked Houses, by the Kids Crooked House company.  Whimsical with vibrant colors and unique designs, these fun playhouses will entertain for years!

Every Wooden Playhouse can be fully customized from the color to the design, you can choose it all! How about a Crooked Castle? A Crooked Garden Shop? Maybe even a Crooked Pirate Ship for your Matey? This group can make it happen!

They have also recently added a line of Crooked Swing Sets too! Prices range from about $1,500 to $5,000 depending on size and customizations, but we think it is worth every penny!

Visit Kids Crooked House for more details information and one fun gallery of inspiration!

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“Vintage” Outdoor Games The Kids Will Love!

15 Dec

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Vintage? Are you kidding me? Wow, suddenly we feel pretty old here are Outdoor Play Toys, but the truth is these are games that we loved as kids but you very rarely see kids playing anymore! Not sure if that makes them vintage or not – but it sure feels that way!

1) Hopscotch – remember this great game that helped to build skill and coordination? It was cheap and easy and would keep us entertained for hours. So grab a box of chalk and march those kids outside to let them create their own hopscotch board!

How is it played? The classic way is to outline eight blocks in the shape of a “T”. Then each block will contain a number, with the box at the base of the “T” being 1. Then each player will need to find a safe object that will be gently tossed (maybe a beanbag, stone or even a  button!).

The first person will throw their object into box 1. The objective is to keep your balance as you jump on one foot into block 2 (you CANNOT step on the block that contains your object!) – then continue hopping on one foot until you get to block 8 where you will then STILL hop on one foot – turn around and hop back, picking up your thrown object on the way. Remember ONE FOOT the whole time!

Now the next person will take their turn!

So when is someone out or lose a turn? When the marker is tossed into the wrong block for their turn (for example if they were supposed to throw into block 1 and the object lands in block 2, they lose their turn), stepping into the block your object is in or if someone used BOTH feet to hop! IF that happens the player will lose his turn and his object will stay in the box while the other players continue on.

This is really a fun game that allows the children to really work on their coordination and and even numerical skills!

2) Tag – A favorite past time for centuries, yet these days the only tagging our kids seem to be doing is on Facebook! Tag is a great game that is truly one that will increase the physical activity level making it a fun for of exercise. The 2 most popularly played types of tag are Traditional and Freeze.

Traditional tag is played by choosing one player to be “it”. This is the person that will run to try and catch the others. As soon as they do touch another person, that new person becomes “it” and they must begin chasing to try and touch someone else!

Freeze tag also starts with one person being “it” but the difference is they can touch as many people as they would like. Once you are touched by a person who is “it” you must stand still or “freeze” in the position you were in when they touched you! The frozen person can only be unfrozen when a free player crawls under their legs. This can go on for hours – but the object is for the “it” person to freeze all of the players!

If that happens make sure to take some pictures!

3) Duck Duck Goose – Another game that has been around for centuries! All the players sit in a big circle. The person who is chosen to be “it” will walk around the outside of the circle and gently tap each child on the head while saying “duck,duck,duck,duck, etc…” – when they get to the person they want to be it, they will tap them while saying the word “Goose!”.

The new “it” person now has to chase the person who tagged them and tag them before he/she is able to run around the circle and sit in the new “it” persons spot in the circle. If the person is tagged before he/she sits down then he will remain the “it person. If he makes it before being tagged, then the new person will repeat the above!

Yes – play sets, pedal cars, battery operated ride on toys and kids play teepees are all great things for children. But there is really nothing better than an old fashioned game that encourages physical activity and childhood bonding!

Do you have a game that you loved playing with your friends whenyou were a kid? How did you entertain yourselves? We would love to be able to share more ideas!

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Why Outdoor Play Is Important!

3 Dec

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Good outdoor playgrounds can invoke feelings of security and wonder in children! These outdoor play areas are a place where children can make a mess, run, jump and hide, where they can shout, whistle and explore the natural world without any inhibitions. There are a variety of things that determine the quality of a playground for young children including the design of the play area, safety measures, play equipment, accessibility, and of course adult supervision. Particular emphasis should be placed on how playgrounds must encourage all forms of play. There is a critical need to develop a disposition for outdoor physical activities in our young children. Outdoor play should not become too academic and too teacher controlled.

Why Outdoor Play Matters!

There are two main reasons why outdoor play is so important for young children. First, many of the developmental goals that children must reach—such as exploring, risk-taking, and motor skill development are done effectively with outdoor play. A sad thing in today’s is that outdoor play is being taken away from our children and is being replaced with TV and computers. This is a problem on so many levels, from childhood obesity to children not having the experience of just letting loose and burning off their energy.

Physical Exercise

Children need to develop large motor and small motor skills and cardiovascular endurance. Gallahue (1993) provides a comprehensive discussion of the motor development and movement skill acquisition of young children, which must be encouraged in outdoor playgrounds. Extensive physical activity is also needed to address a growing problem of obesity in American children.outdoor-sledding-fun

Enjoyment of the Outdoors

Outdoor play is one of the things that characterize childhood. And as Lord Nuffield once said, the best preparation for adulthood is to have a full and enjoyable childhood. Thus childhood must include outdoor play. Children need opportunities to explore, experiment, manipulate, reconfigure, expand, influence, change, marvel, discover, practice, dam up, push their limits, yell, sing, and create. Some of our favorite childhood memories are outdoor activities. This is no accident.

Learning about the World

Outdoor play enables young children to learn lots and lots and lots of things about the world. How does ice feel and sound? Can sticks stand up in sand? How do plants grow? How does mud feel? Why do we slide down instead of up? How do I make my tricycle go faster? How does the overhang of the building create cool shade from the sun? What does a tomato smell and taste like? What does a chrysalis change into? Do butterflies have to learn to fly? Much of what a child learns outside can be learned in a variety of other ways, but learning it outside is particularly effective—and certainly more fun! In the outside playground children can learn math, science, ecology, gardening, ornithology, construction, farming, vocabulary, the seasons, the various times of the day, and all about the local weather. Not only do children learn lots of basic and fundamental information about how the world works in a very effective manner, they are more likely to remember what they learned because it was concrete and personally meaningful (Ormrod, 1997).

Learning about Self and the Environment

To learn about their own physical and emotional capabilities, children must push their limits. How high can I swing? Do I dare go down the slide? How high can I climb? Can I go down the slide headfirst? To learn about the physical world, the child must experiment with the physical world. Can I slide on the sand? Can I roll on grass? What happens when I throw a piece of wood into the pond? Is cement hard or soft to fall on? An essential task of development is appreciating how we fit into the natural order of things—animals, plants, the weather, and so on. To what extent does nature care for us by providing water, shade, soft surfaces, and sweet-smelling flowers? And to what extent does it present problems, such as hard surfaces, the hot sun, and thorns on bushes? We can discover this relationship with the natural world only by experiencing it as we grow up, develop, and interact with the natural environment.

The Surplus-Energy Theory

The surplus-energy theory of play hypothesizes that play allows people to release pent-up energy that has collected over time. Many teachers and administrators believe that after intense (and often inactive) academic classroom pursuits, children need to “let off steam.” To some extent, educators also believe that outdoor play enables children to “recharge their batteries,” to reinvigorate themselves by engaging in a very different activity from their classroom experience. This recreation theory of play enables children to get ready to return to the important work of academic learning. These theories view outdoor play as an essential component to academic learning, not as an important activity in its own right.

Health

Everyone who works with young children in early childhood programs and schools knows how quickly bacteria and viruses spread in these environments. One way to reduce the spread of infection is through lots and lots of fresh air. Outdoor play enables the infectious agents to spread out and be dissipated; it also enables children to get fresh air and exercise and be less constrained than they are in the classroom (Aronson, 2002).

Outdoor play also enables children to enjoy the natural environment and learn to seek out exercise, fresh air, and activity. There is something fundamentally healthy about using the outdoors. Thus outdoor play develops disposition for the outdoors, for physical activity, and for care of the environment. Children who engage in lots of physical activities at school tend to engage in more energetic activities at home, while children who have childcare and school experiences that lack active physical activity, engage in more sedentary behaviors at home, such as watching TV and computer use (Dale, Corbin, & Dale, 2000). Children who learn to enjoy the outdoors have a much higher likelihood of becoming adults who enjoy hiking, gardening, jogging, bicycling, mountain climbing, or other outdoor endeavors. This is critical as obesity becomes an ever-greater national concern and as we must all learn to care for and protect the environment.

Allowing Children to Be Children

Using open space to fulfill basic childhood needs—jumping, running, climbing, swinging, racing, yelling, rolling, hiding, and making a big mess—is what childhood is all about! For a variety of obvious reasons many of these things cannot occur indoors. Yet children must have these important experiences. Today children’s lives are more and more contained and controlled by small apartments; high-stakes academic instruction; schedules; tense, tired, and overworked parents; and by fewer opportunities to be children. Outdoor environments fulfill children’s basic needs for freedom, adventure, experimentation, risk-taking, and just being children (Greenman, 1993).

Children need the opportunity to explore the unknown, the unpredictable, and the adventurous. They also need to be able to wonder at nature, from the worm gliding through the newly turned dirt in the garden to the monarch butterfly emerging out of the chrysalis and gracefully fluttering away in the summer breeze.

Encouraging Different Kinds of Play Physical Play

In general, physical play should be encouraged by climbing equipment and swings (also in the toddler area), tricycle paths, and large areas of grass and hills on which preschoolers can run and crawl and infants and toddlers can lie, crawl, and roll. Tricycle paths are used for Big Toys, tricycles, scooters, balls, jogging, and wagons. Climbing equipment for infants and toddlers should be very basic, including a crawling tunnel, small steps, and a slide. Because toddlers are very insecure on their feet, special attention should be paid to barriers—the railings and sides of raised equipment. A variety of sloped areas help children learn to adjust their balance on differing surfaces. Although it is important to encourage specific motor skills such as fine and gross motor development, it is more important to support the development of the brain and nerve functions and growth. Thus rolling, crawling, running and climbing, and swinging on swings are all absolutely critical activities for young children.

Constructive Play

Research continually shows that constructive play is the preschoolers’ favorite kind of play, probably because they can and do control it (Ihn, 1998). Constructive play is encouraged by using sand and water play, providing a place for art, woodwork and blocks, wheeled toys, and lots of loose objects throughout the playground. Constructive play occurs in sandboxes, in sand and water areas, on flat surfaces, even on grass (Wardle, 1994).

Social Play

Children need lots of opportunities outside to develop basic social skills and social competencies: pushing each other on the swing, pulling a wagon carrying another child, playing together in the sand, and so on. Clearly, physical play, constructive play, and sociodramatic play also involve social play, especially if the equipment encourages the engagement of more than one child. Projects such as gardening, observing the weather in a separate science area, and having a picnic can be—and should be—social activities.

Sociodramatic Play

A good playground must have playhouses, forts, and other structures that children can change, adapt, reconfigure, impose their own meaning on, and use to expand their imagination. These structures encourage rich sociodramatic play; further, they are an ideal place for the playground to reflect the cultures of the children who use it.

Dramatic play requires children to impose details, information, and meaning into their play. It is richer and more beneficial because they do so and dramatic play structures should be very simple and basic in design and construction. A basic structure of four walls, a roof, and a window can be the children’s home, a classroom, a doctor’s office, or a castle. On the other hand, a realistic replica of a 7-11 convenience store can only be a 7-11, and a rocket can only be a rocket (Wardle, 2003a).

Games with Rules

The well-known games of Drop the Hanky, Red Light—Green Light, Simon Says, and Follow the Leader, are all simple games with rules, the highest level of cognitive play (Piaget, 1962). Children need places outside to play these games, and to “all fall down” is much more pleasant on grass than on concrete.

Outdoor Play Advocacy

According to Sutterby and Frost (2002FD), too many educators, politicians, and parents believe outdoor play takes time away from academic activities. As a result recess and physical education in many schools is limited or totally eliminated. Further, programs that do advocate outdoor play often focus on learning cognitive and academic skills, rather than encouraging needed physical pursuits and social interactions. Major reasons for this problem is the adoption of academic standards by many state departments of education, the move to accountability, and the Bush administration’s No Child Left Behind initiative.

However, there is a growing number of people and organizations that are attempting to reverse this trend. They include IPA and IPA USA, People C.A.R.E., and countless individual teachers, professors, writers, and ordinary parents.

Summary

Providing for the outdoor play needs of young children is a complex and challenging task. A variety of factors must be considered, including the various play needs of young children, supervision, safety, and ADA access. However, because our children experience fewer and fewer opportunities to explore nature, run, roll, climb, and swing and because outdoor play is part of being a child, we must find a variety of ways to provide quality outdoor play experiences for children, infants through age eight years. This task is made even more important as our early childhood programs focus more and more on teaching basic skills and early academics.


From Johnson, Christie & Wardle; Play, Development and Early Education, published by Allyn and Bacon, Boston, MA. Copyright (c) 2005 by Pearson Education. Reprinted by permission of the publisher.

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