Saturday, April 5, 2014

where to take my kids on a Saturday?




Danielle


We live in Albuquerque, NM and we are bored. Its very windy outside My kids are too young to care about museums, the aquarium here isn't all the great, and I have run out of ideas. Does anyone have any ideas on what we can do? We have cabin fever!


Answer
Build a tent in the living room floor and "camp out," watch movies, have popcorn, make a fake campfire with flashlights and twigs from outside, make s'mores in the microwave...

Buy some Terra cotta pots (super cheap), some paints, put down newspaper and let your kids create some beautiful keepsakes for you! Then you can plant flowers in them. My kids spent at least an hour painting some small pots that came in a kit. They loved it - and they're 4 years old.

Do you have any kiddie gyms there in your town? We have some places locally that have inflatables where kids can just run and play and jump until they're worn out!

Which tent should I choose?




kjetit


I am looking for a 2-3 person 3 Season backpacking tent.
It should be high quality, water proof, noiseless, no condensate and sturdy against wind. I would also like it to be comfortable for 2 persons, functional to use and not too heavy.
I will use it mostly when hiking on mountains.

I have been looking on
-MSR Hubba Hubba HP Tent
-Sierra Designs ASP 2 Tent
-The North Face Roadrunner 33 Tent
-Sierra Designs Antares 3 Tent
-???other sugestiond??

I was thinking of investing +-$400 to get a long lasting tent.
Please help me. Which tent should i choose?
If you know a good place to buy it, it would be great also.

thanks.



Answer
The basic criteria for a good three season backpacking tent include: dual walls with full rain fly that reaches the ground OR single wall waterproof/breathable with vents, carbon fiber or aluminum DAC poles, a method of securing the poles to the rain fly (often Velcro), plenty of screens, and a bathtub floor. Other considerations are that a tent with only two poles is obviously lighter than three or more, and lighter materials make for a much better time backpacking.

Of those four tents, I'd dismiss the North Face tent immediately as I've been prejudiced against their products due to their popularity and its reputed effect on quality control. The MSR Hubba Hubba has won awards and is the lightest of the four, but I consider it overpriced in comparison to the Sierra Designs tents, which would be my choice, and is, because I sometimes carry a Sierra Designs Lightning tent which is similar to the Sierra Designs ASP 2 tent, although about a pound lighter, which is my answer to your question. The SD Antares weighs over 7 lbs and thus isn't suitable for backpacking in my opinion.

Comparing the Lightning 2 and the ASP 2:
http://sierradesigns.com/tents.display.php?id=716
http://sierradesigns.com/tents.display.php?id=47

The ASP 2 is larger than the Lightning 2, both the interior and the vestibule, but for me 4 lbs is the absolute maximum weight for couples UL backpacking, and when my kids are older I plan to switch permanently to use my silnylon tarp or sew a Ray Jardine tarp with mosquito netting. Still, I carry the tent, fly, guy lines, and stakes myself and my wife carries only the poles included her 11 lbs FSO (from skin out) BP weight.
http://www.campmor.com/outdoor/gear/Product___20069
http://www.rayjardine.com/ray-way/Tarp-Kit/index.htm

Other options include various UL tents such as those made by Henry Shires: http://www.tarptent.com/ or some kind of pyramid tent such as those made by Titanium Goat: http://www.titaniumgoat.com/vertex5.html or a pair of hammocks from Hennesy: http://hennessyhammock.com/

REI carries the Lightning 2 and ASP 2 tents, both of which are are sale right now, which is my answer to the last part of your question as well: http://www.rei.com/product/763152
http://www.rei.com/product/763148




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Friday, April 4, 2014

Do you have any tips for camping with young children?




yahooey


We have done it before...but it has been almost 2 years. We will be tent camping with a 2 1/2 and 5 year old. We got a site with both electrical and water hookup. Any tips would be great, thanks!
we'll be at the beach.



Answer
bring their bike :) we went camping on the weekend and it was a very kid friendly park where they had activities every hour planned for the kids and it was so much fun but all the kids had bikes and my son was the only one without one.

glow sticks and sparklers are great for night time. We bought some chalk at the dollar store and my son was playing with it and like 5 kids flocked over to play with him, it was a great friend maker :)

get a laundry basket and fill it with your cooking items, that way everything is together so you can whip up a quick meal.

taking kids camping..?




AC


Me and my hubby love to camp but we never took the younger kids camping and this time he camping near water can anymore give me some tips to help us we have a 10 year old and 6 years they both have been before also have 3 and 1 years old and i am pregnant


Answer
The first thing I do is establish "boundaries" with my kids: we walk the perimeter of the space around our campsite with which I'm comfortable exploring. Make it as large as you feel comfortable so they can have some exploring time without you hovering - that's part of the joy of the outdoors. I taught my two and four year old that if they hear an adult calling their names, they are to immediately freeze and shout, "Here I am." It allows us to keep tabs on them during that moment of panic when they're on the other side of the big rock or the kneeling to look at ants under a tree stump and you don't immediately see them. With the older two, I recommend walkie talkies, which work great for exploring after they've become familiar with their surroundings.

I'd definitely recommend a baby carrier/backpack that your husband can carry the one year old in so that you can hike as a family. REI has some wonderful free scavenger hunt/outdoor journals for kids. My family also loves geocaching: looking for "treasure chests" helps break up a longer hike into manageable chunks and keeps the kids going. Unless your 3 year old regularly hikes, I wouldn't plan anything longer than a 2.5 miler, unless you want to carry him back (my rule is one mile for every year they are old, but you have to plan for a little less than that because no kid hikes in a straight line). Enjoy the journey - not the destination.

Ditto on the glow sticks (they're nightlights in the tent), but cheap glow necklaces also work great for locating your kids at twilight and making them feel more secure too. For sleeping, we still bring a pack and play for my two year old. A matress pad/blanket under the sleeping bag will add to the warmth factor and we have our kids sleep in double pajama layers (long john types with socks inside of footie sleepers) and knit hats when they sleep. We always keep a little porta-potty inside the tent at night: my potty-training daughter uses her little potty seat regulary, but her older brother has been known to "borrow" it while camping when it's too cold and dark to make it to the outhouse.




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Thursday, April 3, 2014

tinkerbell birthday party for 3 year old....5 boys and 4 girls...Ideas?




sam


I want to base it on the 2008 tinkerbell movie, not peter pan/lost boys/pirates.
Any ideas so its not so girly? I dont want to put wings on the boys..lol. eventhough there are boy fairies in the movie.



Answer
I'd have the theme as "Tinkerbell and her friends" - and then design an invite yourself with Tinkerbell shown as the central character on the invitation - with pictures of the lost boys, Peter Pan and Captain Hook and the aligator in the background. Keep it to 1-2 hours maximum for this age.

PARTY IDEAS
You don't mention the time of year that you're having the party but here's what I might do:

****Party Organisation****
Get a big box and have all the party children put their things in the box such as shoes, hats etc so that they can easily be found at the end of the party.

Get a pen and paper ready and ask all parents who aren't staying (most of them will stay) to leave a contact number.

Check that the children you have invited are not allergic to anything (such as chocolate etc - and if it's OK to do face painting etc...ideally ask before the party!).

Give each child a hand decorated name tag (more so you'll know their name!! - which they'll love).

Tell all children before the party starts where the toilet is and any rules. I tend to put a barrier at the bottom of the stairs so that no children can go upstairs without me knowing about it...just in case they fall.

Set aside an area for everyone to place their party gifts. Don't open them at the party - do it afterwards so you can make a proper note of who bought what so you can send thank you cards afterwards.

****Tinkerbells Cave****
if your daughter has one of those over the bed canopy's or if you have a large tent/marquee you could use this to make a "den". The kids will love it - and it could be decorated to be like a cave with pictures of fairies etc. Even better if it has a few special lighting effects like the globe which crackles with light when you hand touches it or the fibre optic lights etc..

****Singing Balloon****
I'd buy a singing balloon which starts playing music when it's tapped gently by the child. Let each child have a go throughout the party and when everyone hears it they have to quickly join up like a conga with that child leading the dance. Those that get in the lineup in time then get a lolly to put in their party bag.

****Face Painter****
Have a face painter at the party and get them to do various things within the theme of the party such as fairy wings on the girls faces, pirate bandana on the boys or treasure islands etc. They don't have to be professional - just one of the mums or a friend - the kids aren't too fussy at this age!!

****Crocodile****
You could always find a blow up crocodile or two for the kids to sit on which will be fun.

****Dancing****
Get the kids up and dancing to one of the songs on the Tinkerbell film - if you have a disco ball so much the better!

****Fairy Dust Cakes****
You could always get a load of plain cakes from Asda - and pre-made icing in a tube (chocolate or vanilla flavour) - get the kids to put a dob of the icing on a cake and then have them decorate the cake how they want - and then also include Fairy Dust for the final shimmer dust. A cake store will actually do lots of different "shimmer dusts" which are edible.

****Special Cake****
Buy a pre-made cake but then add your own embellishments such as a photo of tinkerbell or even better, a proper tinkerbell toy - you can even get special firework candles which are great fun - but obviously children need to be at least 1 metre away. I used it at my daughters 6th birthday and the kids were amazed and couldn't keep their eyes off it. Great fun/spectacular!

****Food and Chocolate****
Most kids love berries - raspberries, strawberries, blackberries. They also love chocolate. If you could get a chocolate fountain (c£10-£15) they would love you for ever. Plain rich tea fingers also work well with chocolate and the kids will have sooo much fun - and you'll have to stop the adults wading in. Most of all it looks healthy-ish.
Then other than this just make a few sandwiches (plain cheese, plain ham, jam, chocolate), biscuits, crisps, pizza - this should be more than enough as they won't be that interested in food!!

To encourage kids to eat, put on the tinkerbell movie so that they sit to eat and watch the movie - this keeps all the mess in one place and means they'll actually eat something rather than wandering everywhere with the food.

****General Play*****
Kids mostly just like to play - so if you have a slide, swings or other things they can play on (especially if they can go outside if the weather is good) then this would be a good way for them to let of steam. Alternatively you can hire a mini bouncy castle but ensure that parents keep a watchful eye on the kids and keep it to perhaps 3 kids at a time - although this is expensive so it depends upon your budget.

****Drinks****
Get a large jug of squash etc and just change the colour to blue or something using food colourings and decorate with lovely ice shapes in other different colours/with edible glitter perhaps!!

****Party Games****
1. You could have pin the hook onto Captain Hook - or pin the crown on the Queen of the fairies.
2. Buy a pinata filled with toys/sweets - but because of their age use the pinata which is a pull string one. The other ones will be too hard for 3 year olds to "break through" as they're built quite robustly.
3. Musical statues
4. Using the cave you've made on one side of a room - and perhaps a paradise island on the other side of a room, play music and when the music stops get the children to choose a side of the room to run to. They have to choose between pretending to fly like a fairy at the cave - or pretending to swim at paradise island. Tell them that the Cave represents Heads on a coin and Paradise Island represents tails. When the music stops wait for the children to choose a side. Flip a coin. If your coin lands on Heads then all those children in the cave "win" a sweet and then have to sit out until the other children "win". Gradually you will come down to 1 child who then wins a "main prize". Go to the £1 shop and buy a fairy item or a pirate item to give to the winner together with their sweet.
5. Pass the Parcel (or a variation on the same theme). You could include a sweet with each layer or a small bag of some "real fairy dust" - so that each child gets to take something home. Inside could be a bigger prize.

****Party Bags****
For the girls put a fairy wand inside - and for the boys a pirate thing! Buy pretty coloured celophane bags from Ebay for c£2.00 and then buy bags of sweets from Asda at £1 for 3. Tip the sweets into the celophane bag, pop the fairy wand or pirate thing inside, add a few bits like hair bands for girls - I like the pencils at Toys R Us which have leads which are multicoloured, or a little box of crayons with a pre-printed tinkerbell/peter pan picture to colour in. Then just tie the party bag up with pretty curling ribon (also from Ebay which costs around £5 for a massive roll which will last you for years!)




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activities for kids...?




Chrissy


Hi Ya'll,
I babysit 3 girls ages 1, 3 and 5. Mainly it's the 3 & 5 year old for an 8 hour period and then the 1 yr old for 4 hours. They are really active (always going going going!) and I was trying to think of some activites for them to do while inside? Being outside is fine but there parents don't want them out for an excessive amount of time due to heat/sun so when they are inside I need something amusing to do for at least an hour or two at a time. Anyways, they usually don't sit still for movies very long but I did just buy playdoh, a coloring book, chalk (sidewalk), and a playdoh activity kit which I hope will keep them amused. Any other ideas...?

Thanks!!
~Sarah

PS The girls do have there own toys to play with, but they usually get bored within 10 min. (just aren't "cool" anymore) so please dont suggest that. It never works! haha. :o)



Answer
I love children.. I highly sujest getting a babysitting bag together. Most children are not interested in their toys because no one has really sat down with them and show them how to play with the toys.. Get your self on a schedule play time with them. Since you are the one person that is around them the most a schedule is the best. And they really respond to order..
Children at this age Love Love 3 and 5
Story Time (make different voices to fit characters)
Puppet Time
Dress Up
Make a tent out of the kitchen table or in living room..Or in the bedroom..
The five year old should really be into playing mommy and the three year old is just starting in this area. So playing house. Which leads to play time in the world of imagination..
Pretend Cooking, Baby care, cleaning, Rest rant, This activity will and can go on for hours and they like to play it almost daily.
Playdoh is a great activity I agree make sure to cover the floor if it is on carpet..Be ready to have the colors mixed. The three year old will love to mix the colors and the older one will want them kept separate. So maybe their very own play doe for play doe time. Stinging big beads on a shoe lace../Ball time play..each needs own ball and also together time. rolling it on the ground.learning to catch.. the five year old should like tossing the ball up in the air..
Five Year Olds:
Teach sack-walking and "twist-em," "statue," or "freeze" games to provide an outlet for their drive for physical activity.
Play games that can teach right and left directions, like "Hokey-Pokey," "Looby-Loo," and "Simon Says."
Ask 5-year-olds to tell you a story. Write it down and post it on the wall or refrigerator
Three Year Old
Play musical games such as "London Bridge," "Ring-around-the-Rosie," and "Farmer in the Dell.Also they love to jump and hop.. show them "how to hop like a rabbit, tiptoe like a bird, waddle like a duck, slither like a snake, and run like a deer.Box play and anything they can hide in.. Making silly faces..
One year old..
will love play doe too.. All will love bubbles..ball play too..called "Roll it to me"
http://www.babycentre.co.uk/toddler/development/stimulating/games/

Have Fun.. Hope this helps. ^^

Did you make Forts or Cars or Spaceships....?




Ron B.


out of cardboard boxes when you were a kid?


Answer
Forts....... and I also used to just take blankets and make a tent out of my whole bedroom!




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Tuesday, April 1, 2014

What can you recommend for camping equipment?




knightro19


My husband recently went on a camping trip and came back raving about how great it was. Ever since that trip, he's been begging me to go with him. The problem is, neither of us really knows much about camping (he, of course, knows more than I do, but neither of us are what you would call "outdoorsy"). I have read many, many reviews on camping tents, and think I have finally found one that seems worth the price for our modest budget (Mountain Trails Grand Pass Family Dome Tent). I'm hoping to invest in some decent equipment so that it can last and accommodate a growing family, but without spending more than necessary. Although I'm feeling decent about the tent I've found, I would love advice about what other equipment is necessary, as well as brand recommendations if possible. Do most people cook on an open fire when camping, or are portable stoves/burners essential? My husband went with several other guys and they cooked on the fire, but I'd like to have more cooking options than hot dogs or sausages. Also, how necessary is seam sealer and waterproofing spray? I have seen them for sale, but am unsure about whether these should be used as preventative measures or are meant as repair tools when needed. Thoughts on air mattresses vs. sleeping bags would also be appreciated - I see many people say they use air mattresses, but I'm wondering how bad sleeping bags really are. Trying to limit costs to just the necessities for now. We'd like to be comfortable and have everything we NEED, but aren't in a position to buy lots of "extras" right now. Any advice would be greatly appreciated, especially since I am hoping to buy most of the necessities for Christmas presents.


Answer
Hello, Happy to hear that your husband has caught the camping bug. Its always a fantastic adventure to explore the great outdoors. I take it that you'll be car camping. If you're going to a camp ground you won't need to bring any water purification methods.
You did say that you already have a tent so to go along with that you should have a ground sheet. You can use a tarp that is a little bigger than the footprint of the tent or make one from heavy plastic. This is a moisture barrier that will keep your tent dry should it rain as well as adding a little layer of warmth. Since you are buying a new tent I don't feel you will need to invest in seam sealer and waterproofing spray at this time. Over time you may notice when it rains that your tent has a tendency to leak on the seams or other areas. But with a new tent that shouldn't be an issue. Where I do use waterproofing spray is on my hiking and snow boots, as well as rain/windproof jacket & pants and gaiters.
As for cooking its a matter of personal preferences. If you cook over a fire it takes longer before you're ready to eat as you will have to let the fire burn down and get some good coals going for your grill. You can literally cook anything over a fire. Just like you use a barbeque grill at home. You can also put pots on the grill and cook just like you would your stove at home. So if you're wanting to save some money in the beginning, you really don't have to invest in a stove and stove equipment at this time.
You'll be much warmer and drier in a sleeping bag with a sleeping pad underneath you than blankets on an air mattress. If you want extra cush or your snow camping use two sleeping pads underneath you. Besides your tent, your sleeping bag is the most important piece of camping equipment. If you spend a sleepless night shivering away, your trip is going to be miserable. Check out 3-season-sleeping-bags.com for information on all different types of sleeping bags. Click on any of the pictures to learn more about that particular sleeping bag.
You probably already have a lot of stuff that you can use for camping in your house.

Here's a short list of camping equipment:

Shelter - Tent, poles, stakes, ground sheet
Sleeping - Sleeping bag, sleeping pad
Essentials - Water bottles, waterproof matches/lighter, map & compass, basic first aid kit, whistle and/or signal mirror, nylon cord-50', pocket knife, emergency blanket, extra food, extra clothing, sunglasses, sunscreen, water purification, headlamp or flashlight and extra batteries. Keep these items in your day pack when you go hiking and exploring.
Cooking - Cook set, spoon/knife/fork set, biodegradable soap, scrub pad, food
Base camp accessories - Cooler/ice chest, water bag or large jug, dish pan, paper towels, lantern, storage containers for food, Ziploc bags, large spoon, knife, spatula, can opener, small whisk, small grater, hot pad holders, plate/bowl, cup, cutting board, aluminum foil, spice kit.
Miscellaneous - bandana, camera, binoculars, repair/sewing kit, fishing gear, journal/pen or pencil, reading material, nature guides, trail games, trowel, toilet paper, personal toiletries, lip balm, bug repellant, towel, day pack.

Make sure you take clothing appropriate for the climate you expect to encounter.
Inner Layer - wicking layer: long underwear top & bottom, liner socks, outer socks, t-shirt, shorts
Insulation Layer - Wool, synthetic or fleece shirt/sweater down/fiberfill jacket, wool or fleece pants, gloves, wool or fleece hat.
Protective layer - Rain/windproof jacket & pants, gaiters, hiking boots waterproofed, camp shoes, sun hat.
Happy Trails to you!

Is Marineland Canadas's King Waldorf's tent & trailer park camp ground a nice place?




kicksprodu


Marineland Canada in Niagara Falls in Ontario has a camp ground, im looking for reviews of the place and some photos please. How is the place? Is it like a forest? Shady? Wide open? Busy ETC. Thanks.


Answer
I have never stayed there myself however I have heard they offer a lot of features for the price. A children's playground, large tent site, electric and water hookups, full laundry facilities, washrooms with showers and tubs and free parking to name a few. Sorry, I don't have any photos myself but I was able to find one online below.

Campers receive $4 off the price of admission to the park, and you will be within minutes from all the attractions.

Hope you have a great time!




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Rosie O'Donnell can solve all the world's problems??




Mickey D.


Does anyone have any ideas as to something actually useful Rosie can be used for? (Not really looking for anything terribly political. I was thinking along the lines of "use her skin to make tents for the homeless" or "use her for fuel to generate electricity.")
+Vote Early, Vote Often Guys*
Many cool answers.
Voters will choose best answer



Answer
She can solve our population problems. Just put her in the Pacific and you have an instant continent bigger than Australia.

I don't think that eating her is a good idea. Shouldn't those poor kids at least have a chance at life?! Eating her can only lead to something like tomain poisoning.

Design and make ideas for teaching primary science!?




Missy


I am studying to become a primary school teacher in NSW Australia i need some ideas for a design and make lesson.


Answer
I just suggested this in answer to another question. I've done this with a year 6 class. All you need is lots and lots of newspaper and sticky tape. I rolled up sheets of newspaper to make long thin tubes (the tighter you roll the stronger they are) then i joined up the tubes (like when you put a drinking straw into the end of another straw to make a long tube). I then challenged the kids to make something in groups that could stand up by itself and was as tall as the tallest teacher in the school. Everyone had heaps of fun making things. We got a newspaper person, a house and best of all a huge pyramid that the kids then made into a tent and played with for weeks. The group that made the pyramid were the winners and each got a chocolate and a newspaper crown.




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Monday, March 31, 2014

Fun games for the kids?




Kassidy


I'm 13, and the oldest of 7 kids (9, 6, 4, 3, and 3 month old twins). Every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday I babysit all of them except the twins while my mom is at work.

I need a game I can get them all to play by themselves while I'm around the house doing things here and there. We have tons of toys and games, but they just get bored with everything and end up coming to find me. Something that can work for all ages. Any ideas?

For example, something like school. Jasmin (9) is the teacher and then the other kids are the students. They all love it. Then I'm the principal and pop in and out every so often a I'm cleaning. What are your suggestions?



Answer
When my niece keeps my kids she plays what they call "house games". They do a scavenger hunt inside the house , they also play 'mini match' she has them find matching objects in the house, and even throws in a wild card object (don't have to have a match). The nine yr old could decide on the things for the scavenger hunt and man that (make a list for the six year old, maybe a list of 2 items for the 4 yr old and send the 3 yr old for 1 or 2 items at the time). 'Mini match' is something they can do with no planning. The old standbys: grocery store, library, restaurant (prepare and serve snacks to each other), get them to build a multi room tent together (sheets, chairs) where they each have there own little space but can go to each others space without really leaving the tent. I wish I could think of some more right now. Good luck girlfriend!

Instruction on how to put together a kids 4 piece elxplorer dome princess tent?




Mary Frazi


I Just bought this Disney 4-Piece Kids Explorer Kit - Princess tent set from walmart and it didn't come with instructions so i have no idea how to put it together please help.
Here is some info about it:

The Disney 4-Piece Kids Explorer Kit comes with a tent, backpack with multiple compartments, flashlight and compass.

* 5' x 3' tent
* Backpack with multiple compartments for storing items
* Coordinating flashlight
* Carabiner compass
* Requires two C batteries, not included
* Model D-EXP4PRN(A)

not much lol okay it came with 2 long poles with string in them and a little top piece.
We have tried 100 times but i am tired of fooling with it this is the 3rd tent we have bought ugggg
please help us:)
Thank you but that didn't work there was no maual or instruction thank you anyways :)



Answer
Locate the tag/information label as to what company manufactured it for Disney. Google that name to get to the web site. Once there, look for instruction manual. If it is listed, you can download it and print it out yourself. If not listed, there is usually a section to ask the company questions.
I had gotten a used 1999 Ford F-150 pickup truck that had no owner's manual. I did as I wrote above and was able to print out a complete owner's manual for it.




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Advise on buying a tent?




AriesAlway


I know theres not too much of Summer left, We're in Northeast Ohio. We did out first family camping trip the other week, and cant wait for more. We used my sisters tent and supplies basicly. Should we continue useing hers, which isnt a problem. Tent could be bigger but we manage. Our should we buy on now, or next year. I like the tents with a screen patio and found on in the Kmart flyer. What do you all think?
http://kmart.shoplocal.com/kmart/Default.aspx?action=browsepagedetail&storeid=2422215&rapid=430829&listingid=-2092975161&pretailerid=-99572
Is that a good tent, brand?
We have two kids so the large tent that can have a wall like this is perfect I thought.
Thanxs!



Answer
I checked out this tent through your link. I would purchase this tent at that price. Looks to be a good starter tent. Even if you decide you don't like it you have not invested to much. Also note that for summer camping you can piece together a great set in relatively short time buying a cooler, propane or kerosene style lanterns, stove, chairs and sleeping bags say every other payday. I would not trust this tent to sleep more than 4 though. After years of camping through 3 seasons I have found that an air mattresses gives me much better sleep at nights and it uses more space as well. You can pay a fortune for a great tent, but to get started this looks fine. Have fun with it.

Carnival Birthdays Party, how do I make a big top tent?




HOPEFUL


For my kids carnival b-day, how do I make the easy up look like a circus tent?


Answer
urm get a large pole and stick a sheet over it or get a gazebo and decorate it in some colourful fabric :-)




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Sunday, March 30, 2014

What is the best tent when camping with kids?!?




AngelMom


My husband and I are going camping in August and we trying to find a good tent. We want a dome tent for 6-8 people. It is actually going to be just my hubby, my 9 month old and myself, but I want the extra room (which our old 4 person tent doesn't have). Does anyone have any suggestions? We're wanting to spend between $100-$200. Thanks!


Answer
short, but simple answer. you can EASILY find Copeman (or Coleman i think rather) brand tents for ridiculously cheap and they're HUGE. take a look over there first. you'll be surprised. and most of them are under $100 too!

WHERE TO GET A KIDS SIZE CAMPING TENT?(pic)?




Madison B


Can i get those cute little kids camping sets a like wal mart? Or where else?
ones like these:
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51mZEsbU36L._SL500_.jpg
or
http://www.bossgoo.com/photo/product4/775319/product-Kids-Camping-3pcs-Set.jpg
and also: it doesnt have to be all cutsey, just like a smaller sizze.
thanks in advance
also, are they like SUPER small? cause its for my 13 year old, she said she wanted a tiny, cozy and content one like that. (x
ALSO: cause i am pretty sure i have seen them in the wal mart stores but they are not online so i was a little worried.
thanks guys.



Answer
I bought a $30 tent from Wal-Mart that says it is good for 4 people. They must have meant 4 kids because it is nowhere near big enough for 4 adults. Nonetheless, it is a great tent for $30 that the kids would definitely enjoy.




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Fun and creative things to do with kids?




Taylor!


I babysit a four year old quite a bit.

What activities can we do that are actually fun and creative instead of playing Wii all day long?
10 Points for most fun and creative activities ;)



Answer
Coloring and drawing
Collages
Play dough
Hand printing
Potato stamps
Ideas and printouts you can find here: http://www.toddler-net.com/Games_art_crafts.html

Read books
Building blocks (Lego)
Use chairs and blanket to build a tent or "plane" or "bus"
Bubbles and water guns
Go to a playground and just let him/her run around.
Make a paper airplane

365 Drawings for kids.?




caitlin k


I am trying to make a drawing book for my sister. She loves to draw but I am not sure how I want to have the pages. I want to write what to draw but I don't want it to be like draw a dog,cat,stop sign etc.


Answer
Build on previous drawings. One day, draw (for example) a grassy lawn, a tree, and some clouds. The next day, a flower growing in the lawn. The next day, a bee heading towards the flower. The day after that, a bird bath. Then a bird in the bird bath and a nest in the tree.

That way, after 5 days, she's drawn 5 things and made a full scene.

If you can come up with 7 things per scene, she'll then have a different scene for each week. You can do a table setting with cookies and a teapot and a napkin and silverware and a cup and saucer and a birthday cake.

You can have a circus tent with a clown and balloons and a juggler and a trapeze and a lion and a ringmaster.

52 scenes will be a challenge, but it will make an awesome book!
Best of success to you!

~Moz




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