Anyone know any outdoor fun games for 12 year olds for my 12th birthday party anyone who will answer thank you very much?

Anyone know any outdoor fun games for 12 year olds for my 12th birthday party anyone who will answer thank you very much Asked by chantalbabes 28 months ago Similar questions: outdoor fun games 12 year olds 12th birthday party answer Sports & Recreation.

Similar questions: outdoor fun games 12 year olds 12th birthday party answer.

Too many options to list. There are a lot of possibilities. 12-year-olds are pretty independent, so you can do a lot.

Are you near an ocean or lake? Take them to the beach. Set up a volleyball net & a BBQ & they'll entertain themselves.

If you have access to a boat, even better. Near mountains? Go for a hike, picnic or take them fishing.

Bike paths? Do a group ride ending at a park or restaurant for a picnic or meal. Rock climbing?

Do the party at a climbing gym, or hire a guide service to take them to an actual crag. If you want more of a competition, you could set up a race or relay in the park. Lots of parks have little fitness courses or jungle gyms you could incorporate.

Or get a handful of compasses & set up an orienteering course. Learn more at the link below. Good luck!

Sources: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orienteering .

1 Here's two that I use with managers (who usually make more of a mess of it than kids do) but I'm copying out the instructions from my Management Exercise Manual, hence the format:ROPE SQUARE EXERCISEThis is to be given by verbal instruction by the administrator. Equipment required:A long piece of rope - a standard clothesline is about right, but at least thirty feet. Blindfolds for all the participants.

A large room or open space. Instructions:Ask the participants to put on the blindfolds. Hand the rope, coiled, to one participant.

Tell them that the objective is to form the rope into a perfect square, with everyone in the group holding on to the rope. There is no stated time limit. REEF KNOT EXERCISE:This exercise is given by verbal instructions from the administrator.

Equipment required: one long rope, a standard clothesline is about right. An open space or clear room. Tell all the participants to take hold of the rope with both hands, without trying to arrange themselves in any order or interval.

Say: 'Now you are glued to the rope with superglue and you cannot take your hands off it. The task is to form the rope into a reef knot. ' Don't state a time limit, but call a halt if people are obviously lost and frustrated with no idea what to do next.

And don't tell them what a reef knot is – there is always someone who knows. (Left over right, right over left). The correct solution to the Rope Square exercise is in fact very simple.It involves all but two people letting go the rope, and the two people pacing backwards from each other so that they define two corners on the diagonal; then, while they hold onto their corners, two other people pull out the other two corners.

It is unusual for a group to light on this solution immediately; what usually happens is a great deal of shouting, lots of people grabbing the rope and trying to pace it out, people getting abandoned on the far reaches of the group, five corners .... you wouldn't believe the mess people can get into. The Reef Knot exercise usually looks like a mess of tangled bodies; sometimes with pathetic cries emanating from the middle enquiring politely whether anybody knows what a reef knot looks like anyway.It's rare for it to be done properly first time, so there's usually a good deal of unwinding and rewinding called for, but it *can* be done - and it involves a certain amount of close but polite physical contact. Another one - but it doesn't take too much time and it's not so difficult, it's just for if they feel like carrying on - is to get everybody to cram themselves together as tight as they can with their arms held high, then each hand has to grasp another hand: only rules being you can't grasp your own hands and each person must be connected to two others.

Then tell them that the task is to unwind themselves into a circle, but they mustn't let go of any hands.(Very rarely, you get two circles). Hope those help. My recollection of 12-year-olds at parties is that they either want to be over-sophisticated or they'll welcome the opportunity to play mud pies.

This is definitely mud pies, but good fun and safe..

Here's two that I use with managers (who usually make more of a mess of it than kids do) but I'm copying out the instructions from my Management Exercise Manual, hence the format:ROPE SQUARE EXERCISEThis is to be given by verbal instruction by the administrator. Equipment required:A long piece of rope - a standard clothesline is about right, but at least thirty feet. Blindfolds for all the participants.

A large room or open space. Instructions:Ask the participants to put on the blindfolds. Hand the rope, coiled, to one participant.

Tell them that the objective is to form the rope into a perfect square, with everyone in the group holding on to the rope. There is no stated time limit. REEF KNOT EXERCISE:This exercise is given by verbal instructions from the administrator.

Equipment required: one long rope, a standard clothesline is about right. An open space or clear room. Tell all the participants to take hold of the rope with both hands, without trying to arrange themselves in any order or interval.

Say: 'Now you are glued to the rope with superglue and you cannot take your hands off it. The task is to form the rope into a reef knot. ' Don't state a time limit, but call a halt if people are obviously lost and frustrated with no idea what to do next.

And don't tell them what a reef knot is – there is always someone who knows. (Left over right, right over left). The correct solution to the Rope Square exercise is in fact very simple.It involves all but two people letting go the rope, and the two people pacing backwards from each other so that they define two corners on the diagonal; then, while they hold onto their corners, two other people pull out the other two corners.

It is unusual for a group to light on this solution immediately; what usually happens is a great deal of shouting, lots of people grabbing the rope and trying to pace it out, people getting abandoned on the far reaches of the group, five corners .... you wouldn't believe the mess people can get into. The Reef Knot exercise usually looks like a mess of tangled bodies; sometimes with pathetic cries emanating from the middle enquiring politely whether anybody knows what a reef knot looks like anyway.It's rare for it to be done properly first time, so there's usually a good deal of unwinding and rewinding called for, but it *can* be done - and it involves a certain amount of close but polite physical contact. Another one - but it doesn't take too much time and it's not so difficult, it's just for if they feel like carrying on - is to get everybody to cram themselves together as tight as they can with their arms held high, then each hand has to grasp another hand: only rules being you can't grasp your own hands and each person must be connected to two others.

Then tell them that the task is to unwind themselves into a circle, but they mustn't let go of any hands.(Very rarely, you get two circles). Hope those help. My recollection of 12-year-olds at parties is that they either want to be over-sophisticated or they'll welcome the opportunity to play mud pies.

This is definitely mud pies, but good fun and safe.

3 Anything that involves exercise gets my vote...Some suggestions:3-legged race...Tug of war..."Horseshoes" or similar game like 'lawn darts...

Anything that involves exercise gets my vote...Some suggestions:3-legged race...Tug of war..."Horseshoes" or similar game like 'lawn darts...

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I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.

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