We'll have a mix of boys and girls, mostly 8-12 years old. Probably
about 8-12 kids total. Any suggestions?
Thanks in advance!!
--Robyn
Some pottery painting places let you buy to unglazed pieces
and borrow the paint so you can paint at home. Then the
pieces and extra paint are brought back, the pieces glazed,
then you have to track down the guests and bring them their
finished pottery.
I've seen tropical parties with limbo contests and smoothie
making in that age group, but it was all girls. I'm not sure
boys are into limbo.
"Robyn Kozierok" <rob...@nautilus.shore.net> wrote in message
news:Gqs6b.32618$LZ3....@nntp-post.primus.ca...
We have had wonderful success at our children's birthday parties when we
would make our own pizzas. We have a local pizza place that we buy the dough
and sauce from. DH then makes individual sized pizzas and I place out many
toppings and have the kids make their own pizza. It is a big hit around
here. What are some things that your son is into? What "character, movie or
sports does he like? You could go from there with a theme and work other
games into it. If your not opposed to having the party out of your house,
you could take a couple of his friend's to a baseball game or have a bowling
party. If it is still nice where you are, you could have a park party, so
they can run at the park and not at your house ;o) Good luck.
--
Sue
mom to three girls
Robyn Kozierok <rob...@nautilus.shore.net> wrote in message
news:Gqs6b.32618$LZ3....@nntp-post.primus.ca...
>
I'll weigh in to say that I had a local pizza parlor do a make-your-own party
for my son's 10 y/o birthday party, and it was a big hit even with boys a couple
of years older.
Banty
: We're having Ryan's 10th brithday in 2 weeks. He wants to have a party
: at home. That's all we have figured out so far. We desperately need
: some ideas.
Scavenger Hunts are fun for kids this age. You can set the Scavenger
Hunt around a particular theme, say, Lord of the Rings, Austin Powers,
Harry Potter, etc.
If you want simple but expensive, inflatable slides will keep them happy
for hours. Astro Jump at http://www.astrojump.com/ and Awesome Bounce
at http://www.awesomebounce.com/ are two such venders to choose from.
Noreen
His 8th was "come dressed as your favorite character from a book." They had a
lot of fun with that too. 10 might be too old for a dress-up party though.
That's all I can think of -- good luck!
-Dawn
Mom to Henry, 10
"Banty" <Banty_...@newsguy.com> wrote in message
news:bjfd1...@drn.newsguy.com...
If it is still warm in the Frozen North, you might want to have a
SuperSoaker party. My son went to one when he was 9 that he STILL
talks about. It was evidentally very fun. The host gave everyone one
of those huge SuperSoakers that hold like a litre of water, and they
had a course set out all over their yard, which had a lot of both lawn
and trees. You had to fight your way from one 'island' to another, and
there were treasures along the way to pick up. He came home with about
1/2 the oriental trading company catalog of 'treasure' including 3
pairs of those inflatable clown shoes, which they STILL play with all
the time.
It's similar to paintball or lasertag, and a lot easier to clean up
after! And IIRC, supersoakers are on sale after labor day.
Marjorie
Karen G
I haven't read the other posts yes, but one thing my kids and I have always
enjoyed were scavenger and treasure hunts. if you get enough well hidden
clues/items it will take a fair amount of time. It can also be customized
for whatever theme you might do.
--
Edith
oht nak
That is a cool idea! It's not reliably warm enough here in late
September to plan an outdoor water-based party like that (and what
if it rains?) and we have a little issue of a sibling in 2 casts
at the moment, but that's one to keep on the back burner for
another time.
Thanks,
--Robyn
He's already rejected "make your own pizza and sundaes" -- too "boring".
>What are some things that your son is into? What "character, movie or
>sports does he like?
Harry Potter, but we've done it to death! :)
>You could go from there with a theme and work other
I think we've decided not to have a theme, and just do some fun activities.
(Now we just have to think of them!)
--Robyn
Ah yes, the perennial complaint of a 10-year-old ;)
DD's 10-y b-day was at the pool, one small advantage of a
July birthday. Her favorite birthday thing to do is a
sleepover. That's a lotta work for a parent though --
and a little shrill, at least for girls. There's usually
take-out pizza and VHS/DVD movie & popcorn involved.
I'm afraid I've no clue what's in for 10-yo boys, however.
Ask me in 3 years ;)
Scott DD 10 and DS 7
>Her favorite birthday thing to do is a
>sleepover. That's a lotta work for a parent though --
>and a little shrill, at least for girls. There's usually
>take-out pizza and VHS/DVD movie & popcorn involved.
With a mixed-sex, mixed-age group, I'm not up for a
sleepover. :) Besides, he's still at a stage where
he wants to invite lots of kids rather than a smaller
number of "best friends" which I would insist upon
for a sleepover.
He's coming up with a few ideas of activities he'd like to do,
so we're just going to do whatever mishmash of activities he
manages to come up with :)
Anyone have a suggestion for an egg-drop like activity that
doesn't actually involve breaking a bunch of eggs? We did
an egg drop at a prior year's "science" party, and he would like
to do one again, but I hate wasting food, and we never did find
a use for all those cracked eggs before we had to just throw
them out.
--Robyn
Our boys have loved treasure hunts of various kinds. Takes a little
work by the parents, though. We usually hide clues around the yard
and house where each clue is a riddle leading to the next spot. The
key is to get them going from front to back, in and out, so it takes a
while to finish. At the end we have had a buried treasure, a puzzle
to solve (each clue along the way had a letter that then had to be
unscrambled to make a phrase), etc. The end result is a bag of candy,
pinata, or a favorite last year, cans of silly string. We tried
capture the flag one year and that worked pretty well, too. Some here
have suggested peanut trails leading to treasure, that could work.
Our parties are usually pretty unstructured, a few games, the big
hunt, cake and ice cream, presents, and then just playing. We've done
the going to miniature golf and bowling with success, too.
Have fun,
Chris
> Our boys have loved treasure hunts of various kinds. Takes a little
> work by the parents, though. We usually hide clues around the yard
One variation of a treasure hunt is to hide lots of letters: kids have to
find them all, and work out what they spell. (At our last party, for 7yos,
the letters spelt 'party'.) You can print them onto card, from a computer.
--
Penny Gaines
UK mum to three
Our school participates in the Science Olympiad and has a big 6th
grade learning fair each year where everyone does some of the
activities. One favorite is "mystery architecture" where you give
groups of 2-3 kids a bag with straws, string, tape, some index cards,
and they have to make the tallest tower that will hold a tennis ball
at the top. Another is a balloon race, I've forgotten the exact
rules, but you have helium balloons and you tie weight to the strings,
the goal is to have your balloon reach the ceiling in the slowest
time. You could do an "egg lift" instead of an "egg drop"--make
something for the balloons to carry the eggs aloft.
Chris
> I'll weigh in to say that I had a local pizza parlor do a make-your-own
> party for my son's 10 y/o birthday party, and it was a big hit even with
> boys a couple of years older.
This is what we are doing for my DD 7th birthday party next month. At first
she wanted a Chuck E Cheese party, but when I found out that a local pizza
place has a make-your-own deal for kids birthdays, she decided that the
pizza would be lots more fun. And I like it too (quieter, plus the pizza
place only charges $3. per child vs. $11.99 a CEC).
Thanks, those are cool ideas! Just what I was looking for.
--Robyn
Hey, that's neat! I coach that activity for a homeschool support group
in town. Unfortunately, both of those two events (Mystery Arch and
Balloon Race) are gone this year. I really liked both of them.
--
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