Showing posts with label Summer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Summer. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Genius Snack Hack Ideas!

Thanks to our friends at Kids Activities, we discovered this holy grail of Snack Hacks! These fun, simple and creative ideas will guarantee a smile at snack time! 

Get Organized

Have a bin of snacks ready and waiting in the fridge.  This is great for portion control and encourages diversity.  Kids have to eat the whole bin before it’s replenished.  via – Iheartorganizing
Don’t search for your kids cups.  Glue magnets to the sides of their cups and your kids can stick cups onto the fridge.  When they want a drink they can use the fridge dispenser and put the cup back on the fridge. via – Dayna Made It.
Have your fridge organized so you don’t spend time looking for food or forgetting about a veggie or snack. via – Glamorous Housewife.
Cut up apples ahead of time and then wrap a rubber band around the slices.  This will keep them from turning brown. via -  A helicopter mom
Enjoy drip-free popsicles.  Fill the popsicle molds with jello.  Tastes great and are less messy!

Play Date Tips

Give your kids cups of dip along with their veggies.  This is a great make-ahead tip that works well for playdates and parties.  No double dipping!  via – Floor 24
Cut slivers of oranges in a jiffy – no more peeling and picking off the white of the orange!
Layer a cake evenly with the help of dental floss.  You can also use this tip to cut blocks of cheese or rolls of dough.  via – wiki how
Create double decker snack cups with the help of a cupcake liner.  These were a huge hit at a recent slumber party!  via- I can teach my child
Freeze sponges to create a safe, drip-free icepack alternative in a lunchbox.  The kids can even use the sponge to clean up their table before and after they are finished eating.
Transform a regular water bottle into a sippy cup by punching a hole through the lid and inserting a straw. Perfect for a picnic.  Best part, you can dispose of it when you are done.
Portion control snacks with the help of a set of old Easter eggs.  You can even use an egg carton to transport the food.  “Egg” lunches are my kids favorite park treat.  via – Kailo Chic

Quick and Easy Treat Tips

Use a cupcake liner to contain drips when your kids are eating popscicles.   Your kids won’t be as sticky!
Create ice-cream sandwiches quick and easily with mini-icecream containers.  Heat your knife to make cutting them easier.  Then peel the carton away before eating.
Make a single serving of cake in a mere 3 minuets with only 3 ingredients.  This recipe tastes just like a mug of hot chocolate.
Happy snacking!! 

Friday, August 29, 2014

Lathering Up With Sunscreen After Watching This...

We all know the importance of sunscreen. "The sun is bad for you", "You are going to get skin cancer", "Did you put on your sunscreen?" These are all things I have heard time after time and to be honest, I never really understood how true they are...UNTIL NOW!

HOLY MOLY! If this video doesn't make you dive into a bath tub filled with SPF 100 I don't know what will. Living in San Diego, sunscreen is crucial! The sun is stronger, summer is longer and we are able to spend more time outdoors than other places because of our climate, making it IMPERATIVE that we lather up!

I encourage everyone to watch this and realize that sunscreen really does make a difference and should be used on not only your children but you as well! Let's save our skin and realize that we only get one so we need to protect it! 



Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Soft, Stretchy Play Dough With Only 2 Ingredients!

Some of my favorite crafts as a child were painting, baking and PLAY DOUGH! Holy moly this stuff never gets old. I stumbled upon this recipe earlier this week thanks to Laughing Kids Learn and I am about to go run to the grocery store to try it out! This looks like the easiest, simplest (and yummy smelling) play dough recipe I have ever seen! I would recommend this for ages 2 and up and always with an adult watchful eye. I love crafts that can be done simply by using ingredients we already have in the house! Talk about convenience! 
All you need is:
  • 1 cup cheap-0 conditioner (any brand works!) 
  • 2  cups cornflour/cornstarch
  • Make it colorful with food coloring or glitter! (optional)
Just grab a big mixing bowl and add the cornstarch to the conditioner. You may need to tweak the recipe depending on the brands used, but just keep adding until you get the desired consistency. 
And voila!! You have just created the silkiest, softest and stretchiest play dough ever! Congrats :) 






Thursday, July 31, 2014

What One Dad Has To Say About Playdates Is HILARIOUS!


This post literally had me 'LOLing' yesterday so I just had to share! Everything this stay at home Dad is saying is sad, but TRUE! The concept of a "playdate" and everything that goes along with it has become ridiculous
I remember simply showing up at my friend's house down the street, knocking and asking "CAN JESSICA COME OUT AND PLAY?" with no fear of speaking with her parents or getting turned down. Nowadays however, one parents has to call the other parent and then over a series of back-and-fourths, they come to an agreeable date and time for the children to "play". Where's the fun in that?! The idea that the spontaneity of "playing" with friends is completely out the window is a phenomena I just cannot not understand. 
If you agree, laugh along as you read this hilarious post by DadNCharge:

When I was a kid and I wanted to play with my friends, I would call them up on the rotary phone. If I was lucky enough to get the push button phone, if my older brothers weren't on it, I would call them in succession running down a list of my go-to guys.
"Brian, this is Chris, can you play?" He'd check with his mom or dad and come back on the phone or I'd hear the entire thing as if I was there "MOOOOOMMMM! CAN CHRIS COME OVER?" After confirmation, I'd jump on my bike and head to his house and I knew that I had to be home before dinner.
That was it. There was no pre-scheduling get togethers at each other's homes. Playdates didn't exist.
This playdate garbage is ruining our kids. I shudder every time someone asks me if our kids can have a playdate together. That word is almost as bad as Mr. Mom. Almost.
This idea that two kids playing together has to be an event is altering the spontaneity of our children. It has become too formal with set dates and times and has rendered my son incapable of calling his friends because he feels awkward asking, especially when a grown up answers.
Adding the word date to this phenomena of play has ruined the whole experience for me. It makes me feel like I should be preparing a cheese plate and some activity that as a "host" our guest kid will be taking home a fabulous parting gift.
Can't I just play on my phone while they play in their room instead of planning some elaborate craft where they end up making a stained glass window just for fun?
It's time that parents stop overdoing things when it comes to our kids. The emails and the special venues are starting to wear me down. My special venue is my backyard, where I may or may not be pulling weeds while your kid plays on our swing set with my kids. Hell, I may even turn on the sprinkler for them if they want to get crazy.
Also, the whole production between you and me is unnecessary. The back and forth emails about your plans and my plans are exhausting. Let me get out my calendar and let's discuss. Can she come over? No? Okay then, let's move on.
The word playdate also gives off this connotation that I should be opening doors for you as you drop off your kid. They are only playing and there is no need for us to hang out unless you are one of those moms that feel uncomfortable leaving your kid with me. You probably don't want to be THAT mom though because when I drop my kids off at your house I'm not loitering because I trust you.
I am OK with you dropping her off and dashing to the grocery store sans child, just as long as I also get to dump my kid off on you another time when a Marvel superhero matinee is about to drop.
Kids are slowly being desensitized to the spontaneity of play. Before cell phones and social media, we found out where our friends were by the multitude of bikes parked on the front lawn. I spent most of my time as a kid riding my bike to the park and playing pickup games of basketball and baseball. We played Star Wars for hours and acted out scenarios from our heads. We climbed trees!
When there was no one to play with, I didn't pester my mom to contact all her friends to set something up. Sometimes she would just point and other times she just told me to go outside and I threw a ball against the garage, for hours.
I made up championship basketball scenarios, threw pop flys to myself, and made up games with whatever I could find in the garage. One game involved a skateboard, a tennis ball, and a storm sewer grate. Skateball never took off probably due to the fact that the rules fluctuated on a day to day basis because we could never remember them each time we played.
My father, who grew up in NYC, played stickball with a pinky ball and a bat that he sawed the handle off my grandmother's new broom. From one ball, they invented a dozen games like "stoop ball" which clearly was created from just being outside and working with the environment and what they had. Play wasn't about what you could do, but what you could make of it.
Many of our kids are totally incapable of this activity and they are losing their ability to think outside the box because play is handed to them on a silver platter. My six year old daughter tells me often that she is bored if she is not being constantly entertained and all too often instead of forcing her to figure it out, I defer to the iPad.
Kids are at their best when their imaginations are in play. We are dumbing down their ability to be independent thinkers with scheduled activity and feeling like we are to blame when they have "nothing to do" Isn't it ridiculous that I feel like I am a cruise director in charge of keeping everyone occupied?
When will kids learn to use their imaginations again and not rely on an app to keep them entertained? It's our responsibility as parents to make it stop. Let's start by banishing the word playdate and focus on just making our kids play in imaginative ways. Let's lose the structure and the formality and remove the dates so they can just focus on playing. 

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

A Little Reminder About Leaving Kids & Pets In Cars


DO NOT DO IT! 
There is no reason to leave a child or pet in your car for ANY period of time! On a day that is just 72 degrees Fahrenheit, the temperature [inside a car] can increase by 30 to 40 degrees in an hour, and 70% of this increase occurs the first 30 minutes.  In an hour, car temperatures can reach up to 140 degrees on a 95 degree day!! 
More than 600 U.S. children have died that way since 1990, according to the nonprofit safety group Kids and Cars.  Even with the windows cracked, there is no safe amount of time to leave your child in a hot car.
The same goes for pets.  You may think you are just going to run into the grocery store and grab a few items...what happens when you see your old friend from college and start chatting?  Before you know it, 25 minutes have gone by and poor little Sparky is experiencing the beginning stages of heat stroke. 
If you see a child alone in a vehicle call 911 immediately!!  The same goes for a pet.  And always make arrangements if you have to go somewhere that the kids/pets cannot come with you. 
Stay cool this summer!! :) 

Monday, May 12, 2014

Snow in Summer?!

Here in San Diego, it is getting HOT HOT HOT!  It is supposed to reach over 100 degrees by Wednesday! WHEW!

Discovering fun and easy ways to keep the little ones entertained as well as cool is a challenge all on its own.  So we are here to help!
Thanks to "Growing a Jeweled Rose", we can make it snow in the middle of summer!

http://www.bathactivitiesforkids.com/2013/02/snow-day.html


This bath snow is super simple to make and 100% tub safe!  All you need is baking soda and water.  That's it!  To make the bath snow slowly add water to the desired amount of baking soda until it is mold-able and damp but not too wet.  If you accidentally add too much water just add more baking soda.  Then pop the snow in the freezer for half an hour or longer before it's time to play.  This makes the snow cold and crunchy JUST LIKE REAL SNOW!


Baking soda quickly dissolves in water meaning it won't clog your drains and will actually clean them!  Baking soda is also great for skin and gives kids bath water a therapeutic attribute.
Not only does this activity provide exciting entertainment, but creating sensory play can be educational as well!

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

AMAZING Video: "Look Up"

In this day and age, technology is virtually everywhere we turn.  I had lunch at Red Robbin the other day and there was an iPad on the table where guests are expected to submit their order, pay and tip!  Pretty soon there is going to be no need for waiters and waitresses!  Horrible!  

I came across this video yesterday and just had to share.  The message is simple...what are you missing when you are looking down at your phone, iPad, computer etc.??  The answer, however, is not so simple...we might just be missing out on more than we can imagine. 




Thursday, May 1, 2014

COOL Summer Project!

HOW COOL IS THIS?!  What an awesome summer activity to do with the kiddos!  Thanks to "Shared & Remembered".  And it's so easy...
Just add water to ice cube trays and mix in some fun food coloring colors.  Freeze overnight and VOILA!
Take those goodies outside with some butcher paper, or even better, fabric, and you have created a cheap, easy, cool and engaging activity for your kids!





Let us know any ideas you have to keep the kids cool for summer! 




Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Healthy Summer Snacking!



School is almost out and Summer is right around the corner!!  With the little kiddos at home, having healthy snacks around the house is KEY!  Here are some helpful hints to keep the kids engaged, healthy and happy!
  1. Get the kids involved. Take them to the store and let them help you shop or let them help you prepare the snacks.
  2. Make snacking fun. Try snacks made into fun shapes or use a variety of colors. Have them all ready in baggies for on-the-go.
  3. Give your kids a choice. Offering two healthy choices and letting kids pick makes them feel independent.
  4. Be a good role model. If your kiddos see you eating and making healthy snacks, they will follow.
  5. Don't give up! Consistency always wins in the end.

SHARE THIS

Bookmark and Share