As many of you know, Del Sol’s color-changing clothing and accessories still change color outside on a cloudy, rainy day. The reason being that 80 percent of the sun’s UV rays still pass through the clouds. That’s why you can even get a nasty sunburn on a cloudy day. No excuse to stay indoors, though.
Whether it’s raining sunshine or water droplets, you can still find fun ways to play outside, especially with your kids. Here are 11 ways to get you started:
Chalk Impressions
Sidewalk chalk gets a complete makeover when you draw in the rain. The colors blend into a watercolor effect and the rain naturally melts the colors together to create a totally new canvas. Keep a separate bin of sidewalk chalk to use out in the rain and see how creative you can be once those rainy days hit.
Excavation Station
Before a storm comes, freeze a few plastic dinosaurs or other small toys in a large container and cover with water. Stash it in the freezer until solid. When that storm arrives, take out your ice block and place it out in the rain. Bundle up your kids in rain jackets and boots and have them collect rainwater to pour over the ice block. Slowly but surely, that ice will melt revealing the frozen treasures hidden inside.
Gushing Guesses
Grab several different-sized containers (a wide-mouthed jar, a narrow vase, small bowls, etc.) and rush them outside when it starts to rain. Have your kids try to guess how long it will take to fill up each container. Which one will fill up the fastest? Is it more important to have a narrow opening or a smaller capacity? Turn the rain into a mini lesson about volume.
Drizzling Drops
You can always stay inside for an afternoon of art, but you can only paint with rain when it’s stormy outside. Color different shapes or patterns on a piece of heavier white construction paper with watercolor paints or markers. Once the rain starts to fall, go outside and place your artwork underneath the drops. The raindrops will create a splatter pattern that you kids will love.
Cloudburst Camping
When you see dark clouds start to gather, set up a tent in your backyard. Bring out blankets and board games and a lantern. When it starts to rain, run outside into your tent. Spend the day outside (but cozy and dry), passing the time telling stories and playing games.
Make a Floodgate
Scout out a gutter that has a pretty steady stream of rainfall coming down and build your own dam. See how deep you can get it before the water wins out and the dam breaks.
Drip-Drop Colors
Snag a paper plate and place a few drops of food coloring on the plate before letting the rain create a work of art. The raindrops create little streams of colors on your plate.
Rainfall Racing
If the gutters by your house create a natural stream, build boats and have a race. See whose boats can float the furthest down the gutter, or whose boat can race down the stream the quickest.
Wetland Adventures
If your rain boots haven’t dried out from your last rainy adventure, take a drive and see how the rain affects places you see every day. If it’s raining hard, it could raise the water levels of the stream or pond near your house or park.
Misty Music
Big raindrops make it simple to create a symphony of sound. Place pie plates, metal strainers, pots and pans outside and spend some time listening to the rain fall — and your own little outdoor orchestra.
Raindrop Races
After playing outside, have a raindrop race on a window. Mark a starting line and finish line with a post-it note, pick a raindrop and see whose choice wins.
When the forecast calls for rain, don’t plan on spending your time indoors—there’s loads to do outside.
This article by Emily Cummings originally appeared on FamilyShare.com and has been republished with permission by the Family Share Network.