Imaginative play for kids: encouraging unstructured fairy play in the backyard.
In today’s world, we’re all so busy. Busy, busy, busy! Our family is no exception. I try really hard to provide the kids with ample free time for real unstructured play, but somehow the busy-ness still creeps in. There are play dates (socialisation!), piano lessons (music!), swimming classes (potentially life saving!).
New research, commissioned by Omo as part of their Dirt is Good campaign, shows that “Australian children are growing up in a world where real play time (involving activities such as climbing a tree, playing imaginary games and making a mud pie) is in decline”. Omo believes that Dirt is Good: that children need plenty of exploratory, hands-on play – the kind where they can go out and get dirty – because it is essential for their learning and healthy development.
I know, deep in my heart, that my kids need time to just be. They need time to unwind. Time to ponder. Time to digest everything else that’s going on around them. They need the freedom to get messy. The freedom to make mistakes. The freedom to do or explore something, just because. And so, ironic as it is, I’ve started to schedule several big ‘free play’ time slots into their weekly agenda. And because it’s scheduled in, it makes it more official. It forces me to prioritise their free play, just as much as I would prioritise any other activity.
Sometimes we do jigsaw puzzles. Sometimes the kids jump on the trampoline. Sometimes we get engrossed in a project. Sometimes they climb trees. Sometimes they dress up, make up stories and put on a show. Sometimes they play with their blocks and magnetic tiles, creating houses for their fairies.
Encouraging imaginative fairy play outside
Just recently, during a dry break between the autumn showers, I thought I would see if I could tempt some unstructured fairy play outdoors. I grabbed a bunch of random things from inside (blocks, fairy and horse figurines, fake flowers, pebbles), and set them up next to a large patch of dirt. The girls noticed, and asked what I was doing. “Oh, just setting out some things to make a fairy garden. What else do you think we might need?”, I asked. “We’ll need feathers,” they replied, “lots of feathers.”
They pottered in their fairy garden for most of the afternoon, making up a narrative as they went along. There was a fairy school going on in one section. A fairy wedding in another. The settings shifted along with the story.
While all this was going on, I was nearby, hanging clothes on the line, eavesdropping on their play. (It’s so lovely listening to kids immersed in imaginative play – they say the darnedest things! And sometimes it gives you a hint about what might be troubling them in the real world…)
“Peggy” by Omo
And you might be wondering exactly how I knew that the showers would hold off for the rest of that afternoon? I’ll let you in on a little secret. I’m actually test running a new prototype backyard weather device from Omo called “Peggy”. Peggy’s not on the market yet, but essentially it’s a little weather station in your backyard. It sits on your washing line, and calculates the amount of sun (or shade), the temperature, the humidity, and the forecast from nearby official weather stations, to work out how long it will take for your clothes to dry. Peggy then sends all this information to an app on your phone, which notifies you when the clothes should be taken in, either because they are now dry, or because the forecast has changed and rain is threatening.
How cool is that! A weather station that sits on your own clothes line, giving you a forecast based on the specific conditions in your own backyard! The geek in me thinks this idea is awesome. 🙂
The whole idea behind Peggy, is that Omo is trying to make laundry easier for parents, so they can spend more quality time with their kids. (We all know how frustrating it is to do the washing, hang it out to dry, only for it to be rained on a few hours later…) Omo believes that dirt is good, and that dirt should not be a dirty word. After all, when your kids are grown, you’re (hopefully) not going to remember the laundry. You’re going to remember the together-time. You’re going to remember the play.
Now, before I get you too excited, Peggy is only a prototype at this stage. There’s still lots of ironing out that needs to be done before would be ready to launch, pending consumer reviews. So I don’t have an exact time-frame yet for when Peggy might be rolled out to market just yet. But if you’re keen, you can pre-register your interest at this web address: https://www.omo.com.au/peggy/.
xx Danya
Brought to you by OMO, via Nuffnang.
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How good is "Peggy'. I've got to buy one! It's a must have.
Ps What beautiful, fun loving children – your doing a good job there Mum.
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Peggy is pretty cool! It’s still a prototype right now, but I have a feeling they’ll be rolling it out to the market fairly soon. Oh, and thanks for your ps! Makes me feel all warm and fuzzy. xx
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How clever is that?! I would definitely use one of these! Honestly with three kids, I tend to use the dryer if I need to do laundry on a rainy day and I hate it… this would help predict the weather so I could be more prepared. Awesome!
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Cool, huh! And yeah, we use the dryer when the weather is horrible too, but I hate it – it leaves everything so crumpled!
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OMG I want want of those… but I need to also hang out the washing for me, not just tell me to do it! LOL
My kids love making little fairy lands and houses for animals etc in our back yard… it keeps them happy for ages!
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Oh wouldn’t that be awesome! And take it in once it’s dry as well, of course. Oh, and fold and put away. 🙂
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I love that you are making sure you are giving your kids free time to play! It is just so important and I think it has almost been forgotten about in the busyness of our lives. My daughter is fairy mad at the moment and loves making little fairy gardens too 🙂 And Peggy! Wow, hightech line washing there 🙂
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Mine are fairy mad too – I love the fantasy of it all!
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This looks like it would be so handy. I don’t have a dryer and with two boys who love to play outside, I tend to do a lot of washing.
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Sounds very cool!! How much fun to try out Peggy first… I dry my clothes inside (the play room doubles as the drying room!) but maybe if I had a Peggy I could be more confident outside.. Melbourne weather ?
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You know, I was actually thinking that Peggy could be awesome for indoor drying too – it would be able to tell you the weather conditions inside your own house (humidity, temperature), so you could work out which room has the best drying conditions, and how long the clothes will take to dry!
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Can I come over and play fairies? I might steal Peggy though!
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How awesome would a fairy play date be! I’m sure the kids would like it too, lol.
And no, you can’t steal Peggy, but if you’re nice, I might let you touch it. 🙂
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LOVE your fairy play, what a gorgeous idea for inspiring play! And Peggy looks like such a handy tool…I’ll still probably leave the washing to the last possible moment though!
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Thank you, my kids had so much fun with it. They get lost in an imaginative world… And yes for the last minute – for us it’s usually when we’ve run out of socks, lol.