The game of tag is a classic childhood favourite game and chances are you’ve played a TON of tag variations. This one is called Shadow Tag.
To play Shadow Tag you need two or more players (lots is good!) and enough sun outside to cast a shadow.
If you have enough players you can play “Can’t tag your butcher.”*
How to play Shadow Tag? Well, first you have to decide who is going to be it. I’ve got a page of great games to help you decide who should go first. (You might want to visit it.) Once you have decided who is “it” they run around and try to tag (touch) other players. (You might want to create an in-bounds and out-of-bounds playing area before you start although the kids tend to do that naturally.) Once someone has been tagged, they become “it” and have to try and tag other players.
Now the tricky part about Shadow Tag is that you can’t feel it if you’ve been tagged as the person who is “it” is tagging your shadow! So while you might think you are safe… your shadow might be about to be tagged by their foot. (Usually you get tagged by a foot, but you can be tagged by any part of the it person touching your shadow!)
Tip: Try and keep your body between the it player and your shadow!
This is a fun challenge and twist on the traditional game of Tag and it is a great warm up game for kids to play in gym class, during organized sports, and of course, whenever the kids want to play–like at birthday parties!
If you want more tag game variations check out this page!
Enjoy!
What’s your favourite Tag variation?
* “Can’t tag your butcher” means you can’t tag the person who just tagged you. They are “safe” while you are it as they are the one who tagged you.
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Are you looking for outdoor activities to do with the kids? Maybe get a little vitamin N (for nature) as Tim Gill (of Rethinking Childhood) says? Wondering where to start?
I’ve got a question for you!: Have you gone looking for butterflies lately?
Butterflies like flowers. (They like Milkweed!) They prefer less wind and generally, lower plants. They love a nice warm sunny area that is full of nature. This could be a ditch out in the country where wildflowers grow or in an urban butterfly garden. (Some zoos have butterfly gardens along with information guides.)
You can use a butterfly identifying website (which includes caterpillars!), a butterfly identification guide (The Lone Pine Press books are fantastic up here in Canada), as well as asking a local butterfly fanatic.
The dusting on butterfly wings is vital to their health as is the main vein on their wings. If handled roughly you can fatally injure a butterfly or moth. So be gentle. You can use a lightweight butterfly net or gently cup your hands around a butterfly. If you want to observe them in a jar for awhile, be sure to punch air holes in the lid.
As a kid we were always catching Northern White Skippers (I think that’s what they were). There would be tons in the alfalfa and clover that grew in the ditch at the end of our driveway and along the grain elevator’s access road. There would be hundreds there every year. We’d gently cup them in our hands and sometimes add them to a jar we had decked out with a stick, grass, and a few flowers. One year I went out the backdoor to release the butterfly I had been watching in the jar. As I released it, it flew up and out, paused, came back and landed on my nose for a few seconds as if saying, “Thank you.” And then off it flit, back to its friends.
How about you? Are you a butterfly nut? How about your kids?
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