Posts

Showing posts from July, 2018

Autumn Outdoor Yard Games for Harvest Festivals

Image
Celebrating Oktoberfest, wandering through corn mazes, and picking out the biggest pumpkin are a few of the ways to spend autumn weekends. From small towns to metropolis cities, harvest festivals are one of the best ways to experience the best of fall. If you’re planning a backyard gathering or community event with an autumnal theme, why not include fun games that everyone can play? Here are a few yard game favorites that are great for crisp fall weather. They’re also terrific because almost every age and ability can play, without learning complicated rules or exerting high-impact activity.  Cornhole Not only perfect for summer barbecues and campsites, cornhole is a fun game for tailgating and harvest festivals, too. Use an ACA regulation size cornhole set with heavy-duty pine wood boards and weather-resistant bean bags. Set up the boards about 27 feet apart on a flat surface. A field, park, or parking lot works great.  Each team stands behind the cor...

Classic Backyard Games for Sunny Days at the Beach

Image
Summer is the season of outdoor adventures and family vacations, fun in the sun and relaxing on the beach. From mountain lakes to coastal oceans, bonding over a friendly competitive game and a couple of s’mores over a bonfire are great ways to make memories at the beach. Here are a few outdoor yard games that easily travel to the beach for hours of fun.  Cornhole With easy rules and simple strategy, cornhole is a great game to bring along for a sunny day at the beach. Originally created in Germany in the fourteenth century, this timeless game can be played by kids and adults of various abilities and strengths. Arrange a cornhole set with the two boards facing each other with about 25 feet between them. Depending on the players’ ages and abilities, the distance can be adjusted closer or farther away. Play with two or four players and have the opposing teams stand beside both boards. Each team throws into the board opposite, and in a simple game, the team wit...

Badminton 101: History & Easy Rules for Beginners

Image
Only recently recognized as an Olympic sport, badminton has been played amongst highbrow societies for the past few centuries. Like other garden games, it was a popular pastime for the Victorian upper class in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. But why is this game so popular, and how was it only recently inducted into the Olympics as an official sport? Badminton had a simple start and was originally just two players hitting a shuttlecock between two racquets as many times as they could before it hit the ground. Eventually, this game had a more sophisticated evolution when it was brought back from British India to the English countryside in the 19th century. The Indian name, Poona, was transformed to Badminton, after the home of the duke who brought the game to England.  Traditionally, a badminton set includes two to four racquets, a regulation-size net, and a couple of shuttlecocks. Standard racquets are smaller and more lightweight than tennis racquet...