Saturday, May 4, 2013

Backyard Woodland Play Area

woodland|backyard play|fairy garden|outdoor tic tac toe}|outdoor checkers|mud kitchen|outside chalkboard|balance beam|spare parts|creativity|creative play ideas|imagination|value of play|value of outside playWe recently cleared most of our back yard. It was heavily wooded with 80-90 foot pine trees. The ground was covered with a thick growth of English Ivy.

In the South heavy ground cover is an open invitation to snakes. And, in the South we have several species of poisonous snakes. Needless to say we never walked back there. We had the ivy cleared last year and I loved having access to more of our yard.

The trees were top heavy and so close to the house that they represented a potential threat. Over the winter three of the massive trees in the front yard fell. Kevin gamely got our his chain saw, cut them into sections and cleared them away. However if any of the trees in the back fell they were almost guaranteed to hit the house - and one of the girls' bedrooms. I decided that they all had to go.

We had the town arborist come out and evaluate the trees. With the exception of a few very old trees and one or two specimen trees he agreed that they could all come down.


We left one corner of the yard wooded. It had several large trees to accommodate Danielle's hammock and zip line.



I wanted to make this area her woodland wonderland. But, how could I draw her across the dry creek bed to play in that area? The giant remaining logs became a natural bridge.


Since it was a shady corner I wanted to add some color. I spent $10 on metal flowers from Dollar Tree to create a whimsical year round flower garden. The kids can move them around as they see fit.

I painted a piece of left over plywood with chalk board paint and leaned it against the back fence. I hung a bright plastic colander of chalk next to it.
 

We spent a week playing back there, creating our fairy gardens.
 
 
As we played other things moved into the area. Soon her balance beam was back there, as were some child-sized lawn chairs and an outdoor coffee table that had been on the deck. Perfect for picnics or woodland tea parties!

And if you are going to have tea parties, then you clearly need a kitchen. So we assembled a mud kitchen - or mud lab, depending on its purpose on any given day. Again, we made this from recycled materials, including a piece of scrap lumber and some cinder blocks. We moved forgotten play kitchen toys, thrift store items and the sand box next to it.

We had an art area. I wanted some musical instruments as well. We have several sets of wind chimes around the yard. I pulled one set apart and hung them from the fence for a xylophone. Danielle has a set of bongos she loves, but I don't want them left outside.  We made a taiko drum from an old tire and $3 worth of duct tape. The tire had been a swing but my neighbor was having fits about mosquitoes breeding in it even though I had drilled holes in the bottom to prevent water from accumulating in it.
Taiko Drum made from an old tire & duct tape

I used some inexpensive (10 cent) tiles to create a tic tac toe board set into the ground. We used rocks for the markers.  I painted the Xs and Os with nail polish.


Studies show that what children most want in their natural play spaces are: water, vegetation, animals, insects, and sand. We had trees, birds, squirrels and insects already. I moved the sandbox over (empty) and filled it with clean sand. All I needed was water.  I really wanted a rain barrel with a faucet so they could have "running" water to play with. It was a little expensive so instead  I made a small water garden with a few goldfish. I bought a plastic "whiskey barrel" for $15 from Big Lots and a $18 solar pump from  Harbor Freight Tools. Add gravel few water plants and fish (to keep the mosquitoes down) - viola!
water gardening in the rain...

Children need things to sit on, in and under. They want places that provide privacy, shade and shelter.
We had the various trees, but as a landscape it was fairly barren. Danielle really wanted a tree house, but that is beyond my construction abilities. I used a Dollar Tree hula hoop and a thrift shop sheet to create a princess-like pavilion that we hung from a tree branch. I can put up our tent out there on sunny days.

They also want different levels, nooks, crannies and places to hide. Unfortunately in the South nooks and crannies are often home to snakes, black widows, brown recluse spiders and scorpions. Not the type of animals and insects I want kids playing with!

Finally, kids crave things that can be changed. They want loose parts that they use to build and create their own inventions. Think of how many kids love Legos, for instance. The desire to create is hard-wired in most of us. That's why I added some open ended items like the metal flowers, baskets, buckets, lengths of rope, etc. I'd like a pallet or two as well. The kids can move things around depending on their mood and the day. There are a few stumps for balancing stones, seats and general construction, but most were just too heavy to carry across the dry creek bed.

I had wanted to create a path from logs, but sawing logs to the correct thickness was harder than I thought it would be. Instead I bought some stepping stones ($3 each) and painted them bright colors for a path. Since these are plastic the kids can move them and incorporate them into their games.

Most of the things in the new play space were moved from other parts of our house or yard. A fair number (like the tire drum) were created from recycled objects. All together I spent less than $75 on materials for this newly developed play area.

 
The zip line is up and we still have one large tree without a purpose. It's just crying out for a swing. I know I have some a 2x4 and some rope somewhere...

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