Camping Play Activities for Kids

Thinking about camping with your kids this summer? When my kids are gearing up to experience something new, I turn to play, books and sensory activities to help prepare them. We are going to try some outdoor “camping” at our cottage this summer. If that goes well, we may try the real thing next year. Here are 5 activities to help get your kids ready to venture into the great outdoors.

1. Camping Small World Invitation to Play

I packed the Drewart camper van with some of our Maileg characters and camping accessories and set it out near a small world camping play mat.

stewart camper van packed for camping trip

As much as I was dying to set up my own adorable small world camping scene, I intentionally left the set-up to my 3 yr old (his sister was busy teaching herself tennis šŸ˜‚). I think so much of the fun of small world play is setting up the world in a way that lends itself to the stories in your head. So, Iā€™m trying to remember to back-up sometimes and let my kids lead. 

For this play invitation, my son informed me I did not invite enough characters or pack enough food, so he remedied the situation. He invited his Frozen Anna and Elsa dolls to come along and brought some food over from our play kitchen. I love to see him using his imagination and the resources available to him to create the stories that interest him.

Materials

  • Drewart Camper Van – Nest
  • Maileg mice and camping accessories – most available at Simply Green Baby
  • Walk in the Woods play mat – Simons

2. Camping Book & Sensory Play

Next, we dove into a sensory book play activity. The kids love the book, A Camping Spree for Mr. Magee, so I turned the book into a sensory play tray (the best I could). The book is about Mr. Magee and his dog going on a camping trip and running into some trouble when a bear accidentally unhitches their camper and they end up in a stream, teetering over a waterfall.

camping sensory book play

I used some boxes to build up a hill with a camping site on top and made a waterfall beside it, using some of our Brio mountain pieces, the Bathymetric Pond from Aurora & Holly Childrens’ Accessories and Play, and a play silk.

We had lots of fun acting out the scenes of the book in the play tray… and felt inspired to read the book a few more times.

Materials

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3. Camp Cookout Sensory Play

What’s more quintessential camping than a campfire cookout? We had some campfire fun making yummy treats with play dough and sensory mix. I used our Blueberry Pancakes Play Kit and some hot dog and hamburger play food from our play kitchen. To make the s’mores I put out packing peanuts for the marshmallows, brown play dough for the chocolate and some cardboard squares for the graham crackers.

The kids recently had real sā€™mores on a campfire – so they thought this play recreation was so fun. They especially loved spearing the marshmallows on the skewers and pretending to roast them.

I also used our pancake batter dispenser with the blueberry pancakes sensory mix to add an extra fun element to the play. The little flame nightlight was the perfect finishing touch to this pretend and sensory play.

tuff tray camp cookout sensory setup

Materials

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4. Camping Pretend Play

We finished off our camping week with a camping dramatic/ pretend play setup and an exciting night sleeping in the tent in the living room (see number 5). For the Dramatic Play Camping I set up our Ikea play tent, our Nugget as a tent and our play foam Slippery Wedges as a mountain. I had 2 log bean bag chairs I’ve been saving for a few years and a play campfire set, complete with s’mores. I added the flame nightlight to the campfire to give it a more realistic feel.

dramatic play camping

The details are the fun part for me, and I’m already thinking about what I can add the next time we do this. This time I added

  • Bug Spray (a spray bottle with water)
  • Bugs – Folkmanis Dragonfly Puppet and Lovevery velcro bugs stuck to the mountain
  • Flashlight
  • Thermos
  • Lantern with Electric Cable
  • Sleeping bag
  • Cooler
  • Stuffed Wolf

5. Camping in the Living Room

Finally, it was the big event. We set up a tent in the living room, put the play couch cushions inside with some blankets and pillows. The kids also wanted to use the rain cover to extend the camping village into essential a huge fort. There was lots of excitement – the kids really loved this.

Although I had planned for all 4 of us to sleep in the tent, only 2 of us ended up doing it in the end. My son and I had a great camp-out night in the living room, while my husband and daughter decided their beds were more comfortable. The simulation was a success and I think we are ready to try this outside now… but, maybe just in the backyard.

Monarch Butterfly Learn & Play Activity

ā€œI gotta go! I gotta go! I gotta go to Mexico!ā€

flisat table monarch butterfly sensory activity

The kids have been loving the book, Gotta Go! Gotta Go! by Sam Swope about the monarch butterfly life cycle and migration. 

I thought it might be fun to show the kids a map of how far the monarchs travel, so they could get a better sense of their amazing journey. I put the map over our Lite Brite trofast insert and used the lights to plot the migration path from central Canada to Mexico. Along with the map, I included the Safari Ltd. monarch life cycle figures, a Folkmanis Monarch Butterfly finger puppet and a bin of sensory filler for the caterpillars and butterflies to play in. I also decided to make an easy monarch themed jar for scooping rice into. I used some paper butterflies from Dollarama and secured them to the jar with Mod Podge.

monarch migration activity for kids

The kids loved this activity and have enjoyed acting out the life cycle and journey of the monarch butterfly. And of course, we have read the book many, many times. They now know very well that monarch butterflies migrate to Mexico!

Materials

  • Gotta Go, Gotta Go by Sam Swope – Amazon
  • Felt monarch butterfly, Safari Ltd. Life Cycle of a Monarch Butterfly, Folkmanis Monarch finger puppet – Sewing Seeds Play (code HOUSEOFPLAY10)
  • Yellow Door Education Natural Flower Tray – Scholar’s Choice
  • Monarch Meadow sensory filler – The Creative Mix Shop
  • Wood Light Brite Insert – Eye Spy Club
  • DIY butterfly jar (paper butterflies from Dollarama and Mod Podge)

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boy playing with monarch butterfly activity

Open-Ended Small World Play

Last week, I attended a Scholar’s Choice free webinar hosted by Teresa Hadley (Instagram handle @joys.of.learning) called ā€œSmall Worlds, Big Stories: Inspiring Storytelling and Writing Playā€. Teresa showed many inspiring small world play ideas, but the one I was drawn to the most was a open-ended type of small world play where the young learners could choose what kind of stories they want to tell.

If you know me, then you know I love an epic setup – and I think there is a place for it. Both my kids and I enjoy it and it probably provides some good modelling for them. However, sometimes I worry Iā€™m doing too much of the creative thinking up front and complicating the activity more than I need to. 

open-ended small world play invitation

So, when I saw Teresa’s simple, pared down approach to a small world play invitation – I wanted to try it and see what my kids did with it. 

What is Small World Play?

Small World Play is using imagination and small props to create miniature or scaled-down scenes where stories can take place. A common example would be using blocks and figures to create stories about a family living in a house. Kids will often start by acting out stories they are familiar with (e.g., eating dinner, taking a bath and brushing their teeth) and then will expand into more imaginative and fantastical stories as they get older.

Our Experience with this Open-Ended Small World Play Activity

My kids do a lot of small world play; however, this type of small world play invitation was a bit new for them. Of course, they are used to using toys and other loose parts to create their own small worlds in an “open-ended” manner, but they haven’t been presented with that type of play in an activity tray. They were a bit hesitant at first.

The progression of play was

1. They coloured the wood peg people as representations of themselves (of course they did, my kids love to colour natural wood! lol)

2. They started experimenting with the materials and threaded some branches through bead holes. 

3. Then the play kind of stalled, and they left the activity. 

4.  The next morning I tried modelling what they might do with the materials – I drew a road and put out a basic foundation for a houseā€¦ and then the play exploded. 

5. They drew more roads, they each built their own house across the street from each other and put a sidewalk in between.  They veered into some STEM building with their houses, which was great! They made gardens, deserts where lizards could live, and stacked cups on top of each other for a ā€œhideoutā€ at each house. 

So, in the end, this turned out super fun and I loved watching their creativity. We will be trying more of this type of invitation, now that the kids have a taste for it. I think it adds some wonderful variety into the type of activities we do and encourages the kids to use their imagination and creativity in new ways.

Materials

  • Tuff Tray – Scholar’s Choice
  • Within & Co. Mat and Wooden Loose Parts Large Surprise Bag – Sewing Seeds Play (save with code: HOUSEOFPLAY10)
  • Peg People, planting cups, tongue depressors, small stumps, river rocks – Dollarama
  • Loose parts from nature (sticks, branches, evergreens, pinecones)