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Thursday
Apr112013

Pirate Week: Part 4 - Viewing Party!

My kids love parties or anything you make into a party. Set up a little snack table and a banner and they are in the party mood! We decided to set up a Pirates viewing party with a fun snack table featuring banana boats for dessert!

I printed on paper bags for popcorn (will share how to and the printable tomorrow)

All the little flags, banner, table scatter is from Minted. I LOVE how their party supplies come ready to go - the toothpick flags came on sticker paper so all you have to do is peel and stick.

Stay tuned for your chance to win $100 to Minted!

To make the banana boat desserts you just need bananas and your choice of toppings. We did Smore's style today but you could add peanut butter, fudge, cookies, sprinkles, etc.

Cut the banana lengthwise without going all the way through. I like to slice it at this point to make it easier to eat.

Load it up with toppings

And wrap up with foil

You can throw it in a campfire or place on the BBQ (obviously kids only with supervision)

Give it enough time for all your toppings to melt and your banana to get nice and warm about 5-7 minutes or so

That's it! A fun snack table to finish off Pirate week. Have you ever had a movie viewing party?

(Disclosure: Party supplies were provided by Minted. All photos, ideas, and opinions are 100% my own!)

Wednesday
Apr102013

Pirate Week: Part 3

Since I'm only one person and can only do so much in a week I thought I'd load you up with lots of pirate inspiration from others today!

Make a treasure map from a paper bag from B.Nute Productions

Egg Carton treasure box (and treasure) from Nurture Store

Jello boat snack from The Remodeled Life

Build a pirate ship from Kate's Creative Place

Walk the plank from Chick a Bug

Between a Dog and a Hard Place has a GREAT pirate week up on her blog (good for younger kids too!)

A Pirate play date from The Busy Budgeting Mama

A sand jewel hunt from The Fickle Pickle (you could do this in the park)

and pirate sensory play from Momma's Fun World

from Crayon Freckles

And Navigating the Preschool Years

Tuesday
Apr092013

PIRATE WEEK: PART 2 - WATER PLAY

This is another one of those make it your own activities. Depending on the age of your kids or their attention span there are so many different ways to play with boats and floating objects.

ALWAYS watch your kids around water.

We planned to do this project in our pool but we got some crazy winds and the pool is a disaster so we moved it indoors to the tub. You could do this in a plastic bin, kiddie pool, sink etc.

First we made a paper boat. You can use the instructions we posted on our hat/boat/life jacket post using a regular piece of paper instead of a newspaper

The paper boats DO float - make sure you pull open the bottom a bit to stabilize.

Then we turned it into a "let's see what floats" experiment

Of course minifigs got involved.

I try to leave activities like this open ended even now as they are older so it can go where they want it to.

For the building portion leave plenty of supplies at their disposal to create and experiment with. We went the quick and easy route with some styrofoam packaging. It makes a perfect boat.

I love that activities like this lead to natural questions and experimentation (the best way to learn). Build off of these activities and see how much each floatation device can hold before sinking.

Have fun!

Monday
Apr082013

Pirate Week!

Welcome to Pirate Week! This week we'll share some fun activities and inspiration for all your little Pirates including a fun giveaway! But first your pirate must be outfitted in proper attire which includes a hook.

You may have seen this DIY hook before - it's super easy. Just cut a hole or slit in a plastic cup, form a hook from some tin foil and slip in the hole. I was informed that pirates did NOT have blue hook bases so we covered our cup with black duct tape.

However, everyone knows that a good pirate doesn't just have a hook.

A pirate can't eat sushi without chop sticks ;)

And a pirate can't draw a treasure map with a fork

And apparently a cookie needs to be eaten with a spoon

This is a fun way to incorporate activities for a party or an at home pirate day. Give them different inserts to complete different tasks. You could even use this for doing chores - cleaning the countertops is so much more fun with a sponge hand than without.

Friday
Apr052013

Fort Friday!

Happy Fort Friday!

You can share your forts by emailing me, Facebook, or Instagram and tag #allfortheboys and #fortfriday (by contacting me you are giving me permition to share your photo on the blog. Let me know if you want it linked up anywhere) - some are tagging me properly and I'm not able to pull it up again later :( So if you don't see yours here, email it to me!

Love Chickadeez Photography and Maddie from @thiswildidea on Instagram!

An under the stairs imagination wonderland from Joy 2 Journey

A play tent from Not Just a Housewife

A simple treehouse at Apartment Therapy

Have a great weekend!

Friday
Apr052013

Spy Week Roundup

To finish off Spy Week I thought I'd link up to some Spy/Detective/Secret Agent party ideas!

Lots of great activities for older kids at Birthday Blueprint

 A fun small detective party at Forget Laundry

A detective party with a mystery to solve from The Princess and The Frog

Love the big scavenger hunt at this party from The Friday Five

An inspiring Hardy Boys party from Joya Baby

If you aren't the DIY type you can find a full set of spy party printables from SIMONEmadeit on Etsy

Thursday
Apr042013

Spy Week: Part 3 - Fingerprint Matching

Now this might be more detective than spy - but I don't mind if you don't! This is a fun game/activity that can be switched up for just your own kids or a whole party of kids. Start by taking everyone's finger prints. For your own family you can do all the fingers but if you have a whole party of kids you may just want to stick with the thumbs.

There are 2 easy ways to do finger prints. A less messy way is with a regular pencil and Scotch tape. Scribble a square of pencil on a paper and place your thumb into the square.

Then press your thumb onto a small piece of Scotch tape

Peel off the tape and place on a sheet of paper and you have a perfect little finger imprint.

If you want to go the more traditional route  you can use stamp ink

For this game you'll need 2 sets of each finger prints. One is the record to go off of and the other will be for the crime scenes.

For a party you could hide all the presents at some point and place one of the fingerprints in the area. If you're just doing this at home you could place them around the house. Once they find a fingerprint they can try and figure out whose it is using their magnifying glass and their record of prints.

I love how this game can be changed up to meet your needs. For little ones it might be fun just to examine their fingerprints and then hid them around the hosue for them to find (with their magnifying glass of course!)

See more from SPY WEEK

Wednesday
Apr032013

Spy Week: Part 2 - Printable Decoder

Every spy needs a way to send messages to his partner. The circle decoder is the perfect tool!

You can have your kids make their own or print out this one

Cut out the circles

Arrange from smallest to biggest and use a brad in the center to attach them together

Now you're ready to create a message and decode!

You'll need to decide which code you're going to use. You line up the "A" on the smaller circle with the letter on the larger circle that you've chosen. Some do the first letter of the day of the week so today would be W for Wednesday. We wanted to be cryptic so I chose "V" for this one. When writing your message use the outer circle for plain english and the inner circle for the decoded message.

Once the message is written out - mess up the decoder so not just anyone can figure it out. The person decoding will need to match up the "A" with the secret letter (in this case "V") 

You use the outer circle for the plain english message and the inner circle for the decoded message. So in this case he found the "O" on the inner circle and change it to "I" to decode.

Now you have a way to send special messages. To make it harder you can run all the decoded letters together!

See more from SPY WEEK