I decided to have a fun pirate week as I said goodbye to my Colorado students before moving to Lake Tahoe. The kids loved all of the pirate games and the egg hunts were a huge hit.
In the spring you can find silly face eggs in any grocery store. I also found them online here. I debated getting solid eggs and gluing an eye patch to each one, but in the end it was cheaper to purchase eggs with faces and piratize them myself with a permanent marker. It has started to rub off but they've held up pretty well. I also wrote pirate phrases on the back of each egg to keep us in the mood. I didn't use "son of a biscuit eater" but I really wish I had! I like to use the same games in multiple venues, so we've played a few variations of this game:
Playground Lunch Hunt:
While the kids were laying on their backs telling each other "cloud stories" I hid their lunches in treasure boxes. I had a series of 8 clues hidden in the eggs that directed them to common playground features. Since we had a 4 yr old and an 8 yr old half of the clues were [cryptic] pictures and half were written so that they had to work as a team. The 8th egg had a picture of a treasure chest and a tree to direct them to their lunch hanging in a tree.
Climbing Communication:
We reviewed hold types (terms for different shapes of climbing grips), wall angles and communication by having each child hide a gem, coin, or egg (some holds were too small to fit an egg) in a hold. The hider would give me a description of their hiding place to write down for the finder. For example, the gem might be hidden in "the finishing jug of the blue problem on the yellow overhanging wall". After each climber hid 3 pieces I handed over the clues and they went in search of treasure! For younger climbers, I placed several eggs on the floor at the foot of each wall. When I called out "slab" everyone scrambled to retrieve an egg from the slab wall to find the treasure.
Treasure Guessing:
For a pool game, I placed a small gem or coin in each egg with one egg holding a large gem. We placed all of the eggs on one side of the pool and a treasure chest on the other end. Each child had to swim to the eggs and guess which held the large treasure.
Several students also started sorting the gems by placing them on top of colored coins.
I used bright pink and robin's egg blue "diamond scatter" from the bridal section of Party City, but I also found assorted colorful diamonds here.
Active Movement:
I filled each egg with a stick figure yoga pose and scattered them in a large circle in a soccer field. I placed a motion card between each egg to get the kids moving. For example, we might "crawl like a snake" to an egg, mimic the pose inside and then "walk like a bear" to the next egg. I sometimes use animal flash cards so that kids can interpret that animals movement themselves.
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AuthorsRebecca & Sarah have been working with children for over a decade. You can find a compilation of ideas for the classroom, home, and athletic fields here. Archives
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