Posts Tagged ‘backyard fun’

Put Safety First to Guarantee Backyard Fun

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

The grass is freshly mowed, the air has cooled down a little, and the backyard beckons. It won’t be long before the lawn maintenance schedule relaxes a little, and you can relax with it! Autumn is a favorite time of year for outdoor activities in the southeastern United States.  Maybe it’s time to invest in some lawn game equipment geared more toward grown-ups!

Lawn bowling in its various forms can be enjoyed, even if the surface is not regulation turf or clay. Bocce, Pétanque and Bowls all follow the same general pattern – tossing or rolling a ball toward a target and scoring according to proximity.

Bocce is played with eight large balls and one smaller ball (called the pallino).  The game can be played with 2, 4, or 8 players.

Pétanque is a form of boules where the goal is, while standing inside a starting circle with both feet on the ground, to throw metal balls as close as possible to a small wooden ball called a cochonnet (literally “piglet”) or jack.

Bowls is a sport in which the objective is to roll slightly asymmetric balls, called bowls, so that they stop close to a smaller—normally white—bowl called the “jack” or “kitty”.

Hope you’ve had some fun with this “Backyard Fun” series! But whatever you choose to do for fun in your backyard, keep safety in mind. There are the obvious cautions relating to pools, grills and fences, but not every backyard has those. Do keep an eye out for these hazards though:

Broken or improperly trimmed shrubs with protruding branches, especially those at eye level.

Depressions or holes caused by burrowing animals which could lead to foot and ankle injuries.

Ground-dwelling wasps.

Vining plants or grass runners that could trip.

Poison ivy, poison oak or poison sumac. If you have children or outdoor animals, check for and remove any plants that poison by ingestion, such as dieffenbachia.

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Badminton the Perfect Backyard Game for Family

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

Like many other backyard games, badminton has morphed into an Olympic sport. Yet the easy lobs and lightweight equipment make it a perfect family game for backyard fun, especially if you’re willing to forgo regulation court sizes and cumbersome rules. To keep fit, make the game fit – if your children are small, lower the net!

The game was created by British military officers stationed in British India in the mid-18th century. It was based on the ancient game of battledore and shuttlecock where two players used small racquets made of parchment or rows of gut stretched across wooden frames to keep aloft a shuttlecock, made of some light material like cork, with trimmed feathers fixed around the top.

The retired English officers added a net and some rules when they returned to Britain, and the game was officially introduced at Badminton House, the principal residence of the Dukes of Beaufort. Referred to as “The Game of Badminton”, the name stuck.

The official width of the badminton court is 20 feet and the length is 44 feet, perhaps a little large for the average backyard. Akin to tennis and ping pong, there are service areas and fault lines, forehand and backhand strokes and other similarities. But for backyard fun, just keep the little “birdie” in the air!

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From the Kitchen to the Backyard

Thursday, September 16th, 2010

The backyard beckons but you’ve run out of ways to entice your kids to play outdoors? Try bubbles! Who can resist mysterious orbs drifting on the breeze, shimmering with color?

All you need are a little dish soap and a little water. You can add glycerine (purchased at drug stores) and/or white Karo syrup to the mixture to vary the results. Refer to the formulas below.

Bubble tools can be anything. Try a wire coat hanger, a tin can with both ends removed or just use your hands.

Here are some recommendations from www.bubbles.org for the best conditions for making bubbles, especially giant bubbles:

  • Work in shady areas.
  • Try bubble making right after the sun sets.
  • Make bubbles when the air is still or only slightly breezy.
  • Play with bubbles after a rainstorm.  When the air is full of moisture, bubbles will seemingly last forever.
  • Stay in open areas where your bubbles won’t run into dry objects.
  • Keep your bubble tools really wet with bubble solution.

Bubble Formula #1

1 part Dawn Ultra or Joy Ultra

15 parts water (distilled is best)

.25 parts Glycerin or White Karo Syrup (optional)

Bubble Formula #2

1 part Regular Dawn or Joy

10 parts water (distilled is best)

.25 parts Glycerin or White Karo Syrup (optional)

Bubble Formula #3

2 parts Regular Dawn or Joy

4 parts Glycerin

1 part White Karo Syrup

Photo: Record bubble blower David Stein

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Do Your Frisbee Kooky Dance

Thursday, September 9th, 2010

It began with a few college students fooling around with pie tins from the Frisbie Baking Company of Bridgeport, Connecticut. In another casual-to-competitive transition, the humble Frisbee has taken off into orbit with Ultimate Frisbee, Frisbee Golf, Frisbee Freestyle, and a host of other Frisbee sports.

According to www.frisbeedisc.com, an official game of Ultimate Frisbee requires “fourteen players, some kind of field and, of course, a flying disc. Ultimate mixes the skills and strategies of soccer, basketball and football, but you don’t need to play any of those to shred. Speed, smarts and a good pair of lungs are the key. Get open, catch the disc, pass it to a teammate in the end zone, do your kooky dance.”

In Frisbee Golf, “the vibe is casual. You get to walk around with a bag of clubs (well, discs), tee off, approach, putt and chill at the clubhouse, wherever you deem that to be. Then there are all the polished shots and wicked spins you learn as you get better…”

With Freestyle, players are encouraged to “Think Harlem Globetrotters but with a Frisbee.”

Don’t consider yourself an “extreme” sportsman? Not to worry, as plenty of casual games are still enjoyed. Then there is always the ultimate backyard game – just grab a Frisbee and your kids and your dog and spend a summer afternoon flying it back and forth. And don’t forget to do your kooky dance!

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The “Magic” of Fireflies

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

There may not be 10,000,000 of them, but thousands of fireflies light up the skies in synchronized flashing light shows at several places around the earth. In the United States the phenomenon can be viewed in the Great Smokey Mountains National Park in Elkmont, Tennessee for approximately two weeks in early June. So popular is the buggy light show that GSMNP officials close the Elkmont entrance road and the City of Gatlinburg operates a trolley so visitors can experience the sight. Congaree National Park in South Carolina is also a host to this amazing show.

The rest of the world will have to content itself with the intermittent flashes of a summer night that fascinate children and adults alike. What child hasn’t captured the blinking bugs in a jar?

There are about 2,000 firefly species. They live in a variety of warm environments, as well as in more temperate regions. Fireflies love moisture and often live in humid regions of Asia and the Americas. In drier areas, they are found around wet or damp areas that retain moisture.

Fireflies have dedicated light organs that are located under their abdomens. The insects take in oxygen and, inside special cells, combine it with a substance called luciferin to produce light with almost no heat. The chemical reaction is known as bioluminescence. This “cold light”, which has no infrared or ultraviolet frequencies, may be yellow, green, or pale red.

Fireflies are familiar, but few realize that these insects are actually beetles, nocturnal members of the family Lampyridae. Most fireflies are winged, which distinguishes them from other luminescent insects of the same family, commonly known as glowworms.

Science aside, there is a certain magical quality to summer evenings lit by fireflies.

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