Many children love to play with water bombs. Today we have some ideas that might provide incentives for more play and exercise with water bombs. All you need for this are water bombs, scissors and wool.
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Fill the water bombs with water.
The water bombs can easily be filled with a thin effusion on a faucet. Most faucets in the garden have a thin effusion.
The water bombs can be filled quietly with different amounts of water.
Then cut off a piece of wool (about 40 cm) and tie to a water bomb.
Each child gets a water bomb tied on both feet.
Then the children try to burst the water bombs of the others by climbing on the water bombs. At the same time, their own water bombs should not burst. The winner is who has a whole water bomb at the foot.
This game is particularly suitable if the children are not to get wet all over the body (e.g. because it is not so warm or if one of the children has broken an arm).
Tie a piece of wool thread to the water bombs (about 50-80 cm long, depending on the size of the children) and tie a loop at the top.
You can try to make the water bombs fly back and forth, touch each other and burst if necessary.
But you can also get the water bomb really high to fly.
That's why you're in circles.
Always try to take a water bomb in each hand and get two to fly.
You can stand close to each other and try not to hit each other with the water bombs.
The children learn how to bypass the material of a water bomb (this wobbly and fragile balloon) and how to use the water bomb as a missile.
This is above all a lot of fun!
Then don't forget to pick up the remains of the broken balloons again. The microplastic harms nature!
Materials
Directions
Fill the water bombs with water.
The water bombs can easily be filled with a thin effusion on a faucet. Most faucets in the garden have a thin effusion.
The water bombs can be filled quietly with different amounts of water.
Then cut off a piece of wool (about 40 cm) and tie to a water bomb.
Each child gets a water bomb tied on both feet.
Then the children try to burst the water bombs of the others by climbing on the water bombs. At the same time, their own water bombs should not burst. The winner is who has a whole water bomb at the foot.
This game is particularly suitable if the children are not to get wet all over the body (e.g. because it is not so warm or if one of the children has broken an arm).
Tie a piece of wool thread to the water bombs (about 50-80 cm long, depending on the size of the children) and tie a loop at the top.
You can try to make the water bombs fly back and forth, touch each other and burst if necessary.
But you can also get the water bomb really high to fly.
That's why you're in circles.
Always try to take a water bomb in each hand and get two to fly.
You can stand close to each other and try not to hit each other with the water bombs.
The children learn how to bypass the material of a water bomb (this wobbly and fragile balloon) and how to use the water bomb as a missile.
This is above all a lot of fun!
Then don't forget to pick up the remains of the broken balloons again. The microplastic harms nature!
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