Relay games for kids parties




















What You Need: green pipe cleaners white pipe cleaners hot glue gun spatula. Prepare green eggs. Make the egg white: Twist a white pipe cleaner into a swirly circle. You know like swirly lollipop. You might want to twist a few of them together to make a bigger circle. Make the green egg yolk: Twist a green pipe cleaner into a swirly circle. Make it smaller than the white one.

Glue the green egg yolk on the egg white. How to Play: Form teams. What You Need: 5 or any amount you choose plastic egg halves for each participant unicorn horns: traffic cones or bowling pins.

How To Play: Mark a starting point. The kids put a half of an egg on top of their heads. They add another egg half on top of the other and go around the horn again. Continue until they have gone around the unicorn horn with all the eggs. The one who finishes first is the winner. What You Need: tiny foam hearts bowl spoons. How To Play: Place the bowl of hearts at one end of the room. The players scoop up a heart or two. They race them to the finish line and put them in the bowl. Then they run back for more hearts.

Sprinkles Race Sprinkles! Put sprinkles in bowls for each team. Place the empty bowls at the other end of the room. The first player of each team scoops up a spoonful of sprinkles. Then they run to the bowls to dump the sprinkles. After that they run back and hand the spoon to the next team member. The team that gets their sprinkles first in the other bowl wins. Crab Walk Race Pretend you are crabs and do a crab walk relay race. How To Play: One player at a time from each team crab walks to the other end of the room and back.

Then the next person of the team goes. The team that finishes first wins. What You Need: balloons paper bags or a blanket for a nest. How To Play:. Each player must race to the turning point and back, stepping only on his newspapers.

He steps on one, lays the other in front of him steps on it, moves the first forward, and steps on it and so on. Players run to turning point, stop, lie down on their backs, fold hands across chest and get up without moving their arms, and run back to finish line.

Divide players into 2 teams…with each team laying in a circle. Be sure there is a wide space between each player and heads are towards the center of the circle. Assign each team member a number. If there are 6 players on each team, each team player will be number 1 through 6 1 on each team, gets up and runs over the bodies in the group—until they get back to their own spot.

Have kids get into pretzel positions by standing on their left leg. Lift the right leg and cross it in front of the left knee. Cross arms in front of the body. All members in the team stand astride.

Runners must first crawl under the legs of all players in the team—run forward to the turn around point —and return to tag the next person of the team who does the same thing as the first player. Play continues…. Children stand in partners in a double circle.

The partners skip around the circle. On signal, the inside person stops, folds their arms and puts their legs apart. Lay a broom across two chairs for each team. Form teams and direct them to run from the starting line to the broom, crawl under the broom without knocking it off, and then run back to the starting line where they tag the next guest in line.

Continue until each guest has had a turn. The team to finish first wins. Team formation, Players 1 stand facing the goal.

Player 2 stands beside him, with his back to the goal. The two players link elbows and on the signal, the pair run to the goal and back. One person runs backward each time. The rest of the players repeat the same action until every person has a turn. Partners assume the Wheel barrow and pusher position. On the signal, advance to the turning point where they change positions and return to the starting line.

Need several balls and a bat, broom, or yardstick for each team. Put teams in separate lines rows. First child takes the ball and pushes or bats whatever you decide the ball from one end of the room to the other. They then pick up the ball with one hand and drag the broom or stick with the other… and run back to starting line.

It can be varied by the kids going backwards while pushing or batting the ball to their teams or the players hopping while going back and forth. Some ideas for Banana Relays: 1. Place the banana between the knees and hop down the course and back. Two teammates tossing the banana back and forth down the course and back. The banana under your armpit and hopping on one leg down and back. Teammates line up in leapfrog formation and first player hops over players while holding banana and then tosses banana to next player in line to do the same.

You may have to write them on a large white board so that all players will know what relay is next. Once a team has completed all these relays someone or the whole team on the team must eat the banana and the team that is done first is the winner. Use your own ideas, add to the list or use only a few ideas. You can adjust this game to all types of players including the disabled.

Need three or four balls and cones… 2. Partners are placed in file formation. Place cones at the end of the play area. The first two partners have a soccer ball. They return passing the ball the same way.. Relay play continues in same manner. Need about five hoops 1. Line up File line… 2.

The first player runs up and picks up a hoop. The other team members run up and go through the hoop. When all are through, the leader with the hoop rushes back with the hoop.

The leader hands the hoop to the second person who runs up and everyone runs through again. Give everyone the chance to be the leader. Have the children bring two shoe boxes with them. Tape the lids onto the boxes, then cut a one-inch-wide and four-inch long slit in each top.

Have the contestants slip their feet into the slits in the boxes and race… The race can be individual—with all youth racing together in a horizontal line—or done as a relay. Create groups of four or five players in file formation. The teams stand behind a line. On signal, the first person in each team runs up and crawls UNDER the first obstacle; This person obstacle does a push up holding the position.

The player then jumps OVER the second obstacle and then touches the given line. This player then runs back to tag the next team member to do the same.

Need: Two long ropes Divide the children into two teams, on at each end of the play area. On your signal, the two teams run and try to jump the ropes. Keep on widening the ropes each time. If the students land in the creek, they must dry their feet lie on their back and shake their legs They then get up and continue the jumps! Put a handful of cotton balls in one of the bowls. Put the bowl at one end of a rug or mat that is on the floor Or just play on floor Put the other empty bowl on the opposite end of the mat.

The object of the game is to get as many cotton balls as possible on their nose without using their hands. After cotton balls are stuck to their nose—they crawl over to the empty bowl — and take them off their nose with their hands— kids then put them in the bowl.

Wipe the Vaseline off with a tissue or napkin. Players must race, relay-style, to scoop the snow out of the large bucket and dump it into the smaller buckets. To prepare for this game, you will need several shoe boxes, each one wrapped in white paper. These are the ice blocks. Separate kids into two teams and give each team an equal number of boxes. Each team must stack their ice blocks to build an igloo-style wall.

Have the players gather behind their igloo walls. Give each team a basket full of snowballs ideas for snowballs: rolled up pieces of white paper, plush white balls, or rolled up white socks. Set a timer or play a snow-themed song. Have teams bombard each other with the snowballs, trying to knock down as many of their opponent's ice blocks as they can. While the snowballs are flying, some team members may choose to rebuild the ice blocks that have fallen or collect more snowballs for ammunition.

Whatever strategy they use, once the song is over or the timer buzzes, play stops and the team with the most ice blocks still standing wins. To play this game, kids can either take turns to compete against each other or you can divide the group into two teams.

Give each player a box that has a hole cut in the top. The boxes are the player's houses and the hole is the chimney. Set a timer and have kids throw rolled up balls of white paper at each other as they try to land their snowballs in the chimneys of their opponent. When time is up, empty the boxes and count the snowballs.

Gather at least one pair per player and a few extras for fun. Before guests arrive, you must separate the pairs and hide the individual mittens all around the house. When the kids arrive, send them on a hunt to find themselves a matching pair. The first player back with a matching pair gets to pick first from the prize pile.

The hunt continues until everyone has redeemed a prize with a matching pair of mittens. It is a game that will require a little bit of room since players will be racing, side-by-side. To make the snow boulders stuff white pillowcases, mold them into a round shape, and then seal them closed.

To start the game, have two racers stand behind the finish line. Give them each a shovel. Drop a snow boulder in front of each player.

The first snow boulder to cross the finish line wins. Make two complete sets of the items and pile each set at one end of the play space. Have two teams line up behind a starting line on the opposite end of the play space.



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