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14 contributions to Connected Through Play
On Saturday, We Bake
Due to the heat and the holiday in the US, I opted not to make Croissants from scratch, instead, I’m revisiting a family favorite the croissant loaf. Recipe courtesy of Chef Henry at Crust & Crumb Academy. Do you have any culinary traditions or rituals in your family? https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/croissant-bread-yeasted
On Saturday, We Bake
Baking gingerbread cookies at Christmas, now changed to Christmas in July!
🌡️ It’s Too Hot to Go Outside. Let’s Play Anyway.
If you’ve got kids climbing the walls this week because it’s just too hot, this one’s for you and for my friends down under, where it’s a wee bit cold, join the fun starting with Day 2 I’m dropping a brand new 5-day activity series called Heatwave Hideout one indoor play idea per day, no screens, no oven, no backyard required. I’ll return to build lab next week. Each activity uses stuff you already have at home (cardboard, ice cubes, paper, tape that’s basically it), and every single one comes with variations so it works whether you’ve got a 4-year-old, a 10-year-old, a teenager, or all three at the same time. Here’s what’s coming: 🧊 Day 1: The Melting Mission — Science-y, hands-on, and surprisingly competitive 📦 Day 2: The Box City Build — One box. Infinite worlds. 🗺️ Day 3: The Indoor Treasure Map — No words allowed 🎭 Day 4: The Freeze Frame Story — Slow motion improv for the whole family 🏆 Day 5: The Heatwave Hideout Challenge — The kids run this one I’ll post one each day. Save this post so you can find them easily, or follow along in the Random Ideas classroom. Drop a 🌡️ in the comments if you’re in and let me know how old your kids are so I can cheer you on with the right variations!
🌡️ It’s Too Hot to Go Outside. Let’s Play Anyway.
Too hot there and too cold here. Interesting activities.
@Mary Nunaley An Ice Cube is a challenging one to substitute for, no doubt.
The Week Ahead
How’s the scavenger hunt progressing? Any epic failures you’d like to share or glorious creations? No time this weekend? No worries. The hunt thread remains open year round. Now a sneak peek into the week ahead. I’ll be at a homeschool expo most of the week and may not be on during my normal hours but I am getting ready to open the Story Lab. The first week of the lab will be focused on building those storytelling muscles. It’s meant to be fun and spark some creative juices. Along with stories is the importance of reading. This video was shared in another community and I thought you might find it interesting, too. How do you prefer to read?
Poll
4 members have voted
I love print and audio books. One for when there is plenty of time to unwind and learn and the other for the busy times when optimiIng time and knowledge is necessary.
@Mary Nunaley real life adventures and anything I can learn real skills from.
The Floor Is Lava’s Weird Cousin
Nobody knows how it started, but today the house has been invaded by invisible patches of peanut butter. The only problem? They keep appearing in the worst possible places. Gather Your Gear - 10-20 small objects (socks, paper scraps, sticky notes, plastic cups, toy blocks, etc.) - A timer (optional) - A basket or bowl Steps 1. Scatter the objects around a room or throughout the house. These are the “peanut butter patches.” 2. Everyone starts at a home base. 3. The goal is to collect as many peanut butter patches as possible and bring them back to the basket. 4. There’s a catch: every round has a different movement rule. 5. Round 1: Move like a crab. 6. Round 2: Move like you’re balancing a giant book on your head. 7. Round 3: Move in slow motion. 8. Round 4: Move like a robot that needs charging. 9. Keep inventing ridiculous ways to travel until all the patches have been collected. Twist At any moment, someone can yell, “Extra Sticky!” Everyone must freeze and invent a completely new way to move before continuing. Variations by Age Ages 3-6 Keep the play area smaller and focus on silly movement. Invite children to choose the next way everyone travels. The more ridiculous the suggestion, the better. Ages 7-12 Let players earn the right to create new movement rules after collecting a certain number of patches. Challenge them to invent movements that are funny but still possible for everyone to do. Ages 13-17 Add a mission layer. Some patches are “super sticky” and require two people to work together to transport them. Encourage dramatic movement styles, character voices, and increasingly absurd travel methods. If you try this, let us know what worked or what you’d change. Happy crawling!
The Floor Is Lava’s Weird Cousin
Hahaha! This is fun! My daughter used to love playing the floor is lava everywhere she was. She would use marks on the floor to define the lava lol. I can see this game helping with toy pick up at the end of the day. No need to gather any small objects, just a timer and a basket :). Why didn't I think about that before?!
@Mary Nunaley I will try, but I think that work best with the little ones.
This or That
I’m in the AI Storytelling community and working on ideas for our about page. Which video do you prefer:
Poll
6 members have voted
This or That
2 likes • May 31
I prefer the Lego style but mostly because of the audio in it.
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Andrea Quintal Portas
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29points to level up
@andrea-quintal-portas-2947
Helping you relief chronic pain and illness when nothing else worked. Biomedical Professional, accredited EFT practitioner and Plasmatic Therapist.

Active 3h ago
Joined Mar 14, 2026
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