Family Fun Filled Activities to Enjoy this Summer

List of summer activities to enjoy with your family

Whether you work from home, are a stay-at-home parent, or going to an office, you need meaningful recommendations to entertain your children, especially during the summer. Otherwise, they can end up spending too much time in front of the screen, which is bad for their physical and mental health.

The Best Summer Activities to Enjoy with Your Kids

Please take a look at this list of activities you can do with your children to keep them entertained this summer. Most of these activities are enjoyable for the whole family to participate in, so don’t let the kids have all the fun. So, take an active part!

You will create wonderful memories whether you use this list as your summer bucket list or pick a few of your favorites. The secret is to take it easy and savor the summer with your loved ones. If you’re looking for a more organized list, have a look at this collection of summer activities for kids each week.

Explore the Nature

Take advantage of the sunny days by discovering nature. Do not forget to put on some sunscreen and bring a bottle of water.

Explore the Nature

  • Watch birds. Take pictures and record your sightings. To identify feathered buddies, consult a guidebook or an app.
  • In pots, grow fresh herbs. Use any household items you have, such as used coffee containers, milk bottles, mason jars, disposable cups, or anything else. On a patio or windowsill, keep your herb garden.
  • Take a look at the clouds for shapes. In the grass, spread out a blanket and look up at the sky. Discuss the cloud patterns you notice in turn.
  • Building a bird feeder Add to your record of bird sightings as you observe birds visiting your yard.
  • Build fairy homes. Build a home suitable for Thumbelina out of moss, bark, and leaves.
  • You choose the plants. Pick blueberries, strawberries, raspberries, vegetables, or flowers from a farm if you can.
  • Create a hummingbird or butterfly garden. Make a habitat for wildlife in your yard.

Enjoy the Benefits of Rainy Days

There are still lots of things to do indoors even when the weather gets cloudy!

Enjoy The benefits of Rainy Days

  • Use Netflix or pull out your movie library. Have a popcorn-filled movie marathon.
  • Create a fort. Boxes of cardboard might be placed in the yard or cushions in the living room.
  • Construct a Lego palace. Clear a table and use it for this family project. Do it all summer long.
  • Lay some tents inside. Have a family sleepover by setting the sleeping bags down on the floor.
  • Try out different hairstyles. Allow the kids to experiment with braids, non-permanent colors, and spiky, gelled hairstyles.
  • Collect colorful paper and an origami book. Make amusing shapes and animals. Give these as gifts to friends and family.
  • Eat your breakfast in bed. Take turns serving and being served.
  • Play a marble race. A used pool noodle can be used as the track. Divide it in half to get two tracks that are the same length. Then, compete to have the fastest marble by racing them down the racetrack.
  • Create a time capsule. Each member of the family should place a special object in the time capsule along with a list of things for which they are grateful. Then put it aside until a specific time. It can be used as soon as Thanksgiving or as far in the future as high school graduation.
  • Create paper aircraft. Whoever’s jet travels the furthest wins.
  • Play a game of cards. Pick from poker, go fish, crazy eights, spoons, and more. You may choose. Or invest in a board game the whole family can play.
  • Perform charades. Make a game out of all the summertime turmoil.
  • Move the furniture around. Give the children graph paper and ask them first to sketch out a plan.
  • Establish a goal and finish a household project. Find methods to involve the kids in the project, whether it be cleaning the basement, organizing the attic, or painting the spare bedroom.

Visit Local Sites

The summer is the perfect time to enjoy a few staycations. Invite visiting friends or relatives to come to see what’s interesting in your community.

Visit Local Sites

  • Have a snack at a diner’s counter. Let the kids indulge in milkshakes and fried food.
  • Find a local free concert. Relax while listening to music with your family.
  • Observe a demolition derby. There may be some significant crashes.
  • Visit a garage sale or flea market. Check to see if the kids can negotiate better than you.
  • Visit the neighborhood carnival or local fair. Eat some particularly sweet food at least once this summer, such as cotton candy or elephant ears.
  • Set up a picnic. You can eat it in just about any place, including at a playground, a free concert, or a state park.
  • Together, watch a spectacular performance. Enjoy viewing it as a family, whether it’s a puppet performance in the park or a traveling Broadway production.
  • Attend a matinée. Find a cheap theater and spend the afternoon watching movies.
  • Bring a garden gnome along. Each place you go, take a photo of the gnome. Finish the summer by compiling his pictures into a scrapbook.
  • Travel by car to a nearby city. If you can, stay the night or merely visit the sights in one day.
  • Watch a baseball game in the minors. The parks are great for families, and there are frequently entertaining giveaways or chances to win prizes.
  • Visit an old farm or home. Find out how things have evolved and what people in earlier eras lacked.
  • Visit a farmers’ market in your area. Enjoy some delicacies that were prepared locally and indulge yourself in the seasonal fruits and vegetables.

Exercise Your Minds

Learning doesn’t end in school if your youngsters are engaged in thinking and learning games and activities during the summer.

Exercise Your Minds

  • Purchase a booklet of riddles. Try to confound one another before coming up with your riddles.
  • Finish your summer schoolwork. Not exactly enjoyable, but you’ll be glad to have it over with.
  • Have a puzzle race. See who can complete 100-piece puzzles first.
  • Speak with an elderly relative. Outline the genealogy of your family.
  • Join a library’s summer reading program. Alternately, make your own by compiling a list of all the books you’ve read this summer. Parents are welcome to join in. Just be aware that your children are probably far better readers than you are, so don’t expect a prize!
  • Learn a new skill collectively. Take up juggling, harp playing, or sewing.
  • Aloud read a chapter book. Plan to read one or more chapters every night. Even better, you can read an entire series together.
  • Kids should see that science is enjoyable. Try out these activities.
  • Create a comic book and add illustrations. Make a team effort, or let each person handle their own.
  • Keep a journal every day. If older teens want to keep a bullet journal, allow them. Share some of your favorite summertime memories towards the end of the season.

Show Your Artful Sides

Try one of these creative hobbies, or get out those craft supplies you’ve been storing.

Show Your Artful Sides

  • Collect and paint rocks. Make them into gifts for family members, garden ornaments, or pet rocks.
  • Make a summertime mural. Create a family mural by stretching a long piece of white construction paper across a wall in the garage or basement. Include photographs of your summertime activities that you’ve drawn, painted, or colored. Work on it all summer long, gradually adding to it. After the summer, have an “unveiling” gathering for family members.
  • Use chalk to decorate your paths. Make your sidewalk chalk with cornstarch, water, and food coloring, or use standard sidewalk chalk.
  • Keep a summer drawing journal. When the summer is through, take turns showcasing your sketches.
  • Arrange a photo shoot. Plan various looks and postures, then shoot photos outside or around the neighborhood. The pictures can then be edited on a computer by older kids and teenagers.
  • Play music. Play classic instruments or make your own. If you’d like, you can record your musical works.
  • Create things out of playdough. Create your play dough to mold in imaginative ways. Then destroy them and repeat the process.
  • Enjoy some clay. After that, bake your creations to preserve them.
  • Press the blossoms of summer. Use waxed paper to create a picture of crushed flowers.
  • Put on a spectacular show of your own. Create costumes, write a story, or just practice improv.
  • Beads are strung. Beading crafts can be as straightforward or intricate as you choose.

Enjoy Some Time Outside and Get Moving

For these kid activities that get them moving, all you require is a little room and some sunshine.

Enjoy Some Time Outside and Get Moving

  • Build a slip-and-slide or a water blob. Make huge water-filled plastic pillows (or blobs) with plastic tarps and duct tape. Allow children or teenagers to hop from one blob to another by setting up the blobs in the yard. Or make your slip-and-slide with a plastic tarp and a garden hose.
  • Construct a challenge course in the backyard. Play America Ninja Warriors inspired games and time how long it takes you both to complete the course.
  • Climb trees with a friend. Of course, only attempt this if you and the kids are courageous enough.
  • Fly a kite. Create a kite yourself or purchase one from the dollar store. Fly it for a couple of hours in a wide open space.
  • Catch fish. Kids can slip a line in without a license in many states.
  • Have a bubble-blowing competition. Compare whose bubble can be blown the furthest without popping.
  • Play a game of water balloon baseball. You only need a plastic bat, a pail of water balloons, and some used towels for bases.
  • Race using water guns. Make a hole on the bottom of a couple or more plastic cups, and then pass yarn or string through each one. Connect the yarn’s ends to the beginning and ending points. Spray water into the cups with full squirt cannons to make them race up the string. The cup that crosses the finish line first wins.
  • Run a hula hoop competition. See who can hula the longest in the family.
  • Jump rope together. Recite some rhymes while doing the jump rope.
  • Use the parks in the area. Visit the website for the park nearest you. The activity schedule can be printed and hung on your refrigerator.
  • Canoe around. Find a nearby park that rents out canoes and spend some time on the water there.
  • Play tennis with balloons. You only need a balloon, painting sticks, and paper plates to get started. The balloon serves as the ball, and the sticks are attached to the paper plates to create the paddles. This is an excellent indoor or outdoor game.
  • Croquet on the grass. Attempt bocce ball as well.
  • Play a difficult game of HORSE in your basketball hoop or one in the park. Install a miniature basketball court next to the real one for children.
  • Practice your mini-golf. Visit a nearby course or set up your own on the driveway.
  • Play in the rain outside. Make mud pies, splash in puddles, and take in the rain’s aroma on the pavement.
  • In the yard, jog. Play games outside like tag, kickball, and frisbee. Even better if you could organize your summer Olympics.
  • Install a badminton net. Hold a family badminton match or use a volleyball net to play beach volleyball.
  • Go for a hike. Pick a route close to your home or travel to a park that is farther away.
  • Ride a bike for recreation. Drive to riding trails or depart from your home.
  • Instruct the kids in stone-skipping. Make it into a contest.

Make Time to Spend with Family and Friends

Bring together relatives, neighbors, or schoolmates who your children don’t often get to see.

Make Time to Spend with Family and Friends

  • Bake some cookies for an older neighbor. Deliver the cookies along with a touching remark or image.
  • Organize a treasure hunt. Do it on your property or in the neighborhood. Change things up a bit by turning it into a photo scavenger hunt in which the kids must capture pictures of various items on the list using either their phones or disposable cameras. Take a photo of a flower, for instance. Photograph something red.
  • Spend the day backward with your pals. Put your clothing on backward. Eat dessert for breakfast and dinner for breakfast.
  • Organize a barbecue in the backyard. Create a burger bar where children can select their toppings or create a station where they can create their sundaes. Play some music and perhaps have a bubble machine in the yard.
  • Play some board games. Have both a children’s and an adult game table.
  • Invite your child’s buddies over for a sleepover. Allow them to remain up late, watch movies, engage in video games, and consume snacks.
  • Visit pals at the pool or playground. Make it a habit to deepen the connections between them.
  • Organize a garage sale in your neighborhood. Allow the youngsters to sell their old items and earn some extra money.
  • Join your grandparents or other family members on Skype or Zoom. Discuss your summertime plans and excursions.
  • Pay a visit to a retirement or nursing home. Have lunch, play games, or sing songs with the residents.

Let Your Kids Help You in The Kitchen

Allow kids to participate in some cooking tasks during the slower school year.

Let Your Kids Help You in The Kitchen

  • Have some pizzas that you make and bake yourself. Picking their favorite toppings will be fun for kids. They can assist with preparation by grating cheese, cleaning mushrooms, slicing vegetables, etc.
  • Let the kids prepare the meal. Please encourage them to do food planning and grocery shopping. After that, let them prepare dinner for the family. Let the teens do it alone, but watch over younger children.
  • Make some sun tea or fresh lemonade. Sell it at a lemonade stand or enjoy it on the front porch, including some handmade cookies.
  • Indulge with some ice cream. You can eat it by itself or make ice cream sandwiches with it.
  • Teach your kids how to create the dessert you loved as a child. Allow them to modify or put their spin on the recipe.

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