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DIY Summer Camp - Make Your Own Water Slide

girl sliding down slide into pool

By Debra McDuffee

When I was a kid, many of my friends had slides going right into their pools. Cool. Not quite as cool as a water park, but it did the trick. Can you replicate the water park experience at home?

Homemade water slides are great fun... big fun... huge fun... if they're done right. I should probably write a Don't-it-yourself post on the contraption I have rigged in my backyard right now: a Little Tikes climber with the slide going right into my son's kiddie pool. Yes, it is wobbly and completely unsafe. Don't try this one at home, folks.

Instead, try making this water slide (reminds me of the old Slip 'N Slide from my childhood) from a piece of 4-ply plastic and a sprinkler. Stake it down every 4-5 feet so the plastic is stable, and send the kids whooshing. Rather than just hitting a patch of lawn at the bottom, you could always set up a trap to make a small "watering hole."

How to make a water slide

girl sliding down slide into pool

When I was a kid, many of my friends had slides going right into their pools. Cool. Not quite as cool as a water park, but it did the trick. Can you replicate the water park experience at home?

Homemade water slides are great fun... big fun... huge fun... if they're done right. I should probably write a Don't-it-yourself post on the contraption I have rigged in my backyard right now: a Little Tikes climber with the slide going right into my son's kiddie pool. Yes, it is wobbly and completely unsafe. Don't try this one at home, folks.

Instead, try making this water slide (reminds me of the old Slip 'N Slide from my childhood) from a piece of 4-ply plastic and a sprinkler. Stake it down every 4-5 feet so the plastic is stable, and send the kids whooshing. Rather than just hitting a patch of lawn at the bottom, you could always set up a trap to make a small "watering hole."

Don't it Yourself: Creative mini-rocket launching

man launching a bottle rocket

Reminisce with me for a moment, if you will, back to your childhood, to when you and your siblings built and launched your own bottle rocket. How'd it go for you?

If you did everything correctly, your rocket probably took off with ease, and the display was celebrated with lots of hoots and hollers.

However, if you tried to elaborate on the directions, and came up with a creative way to watch your rocket fly a little longer, it may have ended badly, like it did for the two young men who won a Darwin Award honorable mention.

Continue reading Don't it Yourself: Creative mini-rocket launching

Kiddie Crafts: Alien eyes

little boy wearing an alien headband
Looking for a kid's craft that's out of this world?

OK, that was bad -- clearly I spend too much time with my own little Kiddie Crafters, and I've completely lost my mind! Bad humor aside, the alien eyes headband is a quick and simple craft project. It's perfect for bringing along on camping trips, especially if you want a fun prop to lighten up a scary campfire story.

Check out the gallery to see how our crazy alien eyes turned out, then follow me through the break for full instructions for making your own.

Gallery: Making your alien eyes headband

materialsStep 1Step 2Step 4Step 5

Continue reading Kiddie Crafts: Alien eyes

Make a story CD for your child

classic children's books

My three-year-old loves to listen to stories. As a conscientious mom and former reading teacher, this thrills me beyond words. We read books together often throughout the day, and though I love to spin a good yarn, we really like to listen to audiobooks while traveling in the car.

We own some good ones, and we frequent the library to check out lots of recorded books every three weeks. But Owen's favorite stories we can't find on CD, so we've just had to be creative about it. Here's what we've discovered:
  • Robert Munsch is an author and storyteller with the sense of humor of a six-year-old boy. This works out for us, and since he's got scads of downloadable stories, it is a great resource.
  • If you and your child like the classics, Kiddie Records Weekly has all the old recordings you listened to as a child, scratchy LP quality included! Some of these are really priceless; my son loves this version of Goldilocks and the Three Bears.

Continue reading Make a story CD for your child

Make a backyard catapult

home-made catapult

Is your ten-year-old son interested in the Middle Ages? Or are you a ten-year-old boy at heart? Whether you're a history buff, or you just like firing stuff, you'll love these make-your-own catapults.

Storm the Castle, a medieval-theme website, provides instructions for making catapults in various sizes: the backyard two-foot Ogre, the tabletop ten-inch Troll, and the Teeny-tiny, made of popsicle sticks.

If you're interested, Storm the Castle provides tutorials and/or sells kits, so that anyone who can read can put one together. All three catapults can shoot with considerable force, so you're reminded to take appropriate safety precautions:
  • don't fire anything sharp or too heavy
  • don't fire in an enclosed space
  • always wear safety goggles.
If you're letting a child build this, you might consider only letting them play with it under adult supervision, depending on his/her age and general level of common sense (or lack thereof)!

Make a jump rope out of weaving loops

weaving loops by bethany72 on FlickrAfter a morning browsing garage sales a few weeks ago, my mom and one of my daughters returned home with three of those square metal looms and hundreds upon hundreds of weaving loops.

After saving one loom and a bag of loops, I had no idea what to do with the excess, until my mom pointed out this fun craft -- finger weaving a jump rope.

Not only will this craft use up all the spare loops you have after your kids get bored making pot holders, lanyards, and whatnot, finger weaving is also a fun and relaxing hobby for people of all ages.

All you need to complete the project are about 250 weaving loops and a spare hand. Place the first loop on your pinky and give it a half twist, then loop it around your ring finger and twist again. Continue until you've reached your ring finger. Repeat with the next loop, then stretch the first loop over the second loop one finger at a time to "weave."

Check out the gallery below for more specific instructions and to see what the beginning of this jump rope might look like.

Gallery: Finger weave a jump rope

Choose your loopsStep 1Step 2Step 3Step 4

LEGO digital designer

The LEGO digital designer
Sometimes it seems that we never grow up. Or, to put it more correctly, some toys -- er, motor skills and cognitive ability development tools -- are destined to be played with -- er, used -- by all ages! Case in point: LEGOs!

Don't you just hate it when you're building your current masterpiece and lacking one crucial piece? You've got to buy a whole new set, just for one stinkin' pièce de résistance. But no more! The new LEGO digital designer lets you create a virtual sculpture and submit it on-line. Then you can order exactly the pieces that you need, based on your submission.

The program can be downloaded for both Windows and Mac. Besides the usual requirements, it only needs a decent graphics card (for obvious reasons).

Finally, a way to build whatever you want without accumulating all those extraneous pieces... like that goofy little hat that no self-respecting firetruck-driving LEGO troll would be caught dead in!

[via Lifehacker.]

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