
20 nature activities for kids
Fresh air and time in nature offer myriad superpower benefits: improving sleep quality, strengthening our immune systems (dirt is good!), lowering stress levels, and evenimproving eyesight. In fact, time outdoors in nature is so vital for our well-being that Iceland’s forestry service encouraged people tohug a tree for five minutes during the pandemic to combat feelings of loneliness and isolation.
If you’re looking for some new ways to help your child connect with nature close to home, try these creative and explorative nature play activities with your family. Hopefully, you’ll all have fun, relax, and maybe even learn something new as you stay connected to the wild.
In the spring, at the end of the day, you should smell like dirt.”
-Margaret Atwood, Bluebeard’s Egg
Nature art activities for kids
1. Hapa zome art
Using natural materials from your yard or found on a walk, createhapa zome art (beating up leaves with hammers), using the pigments in berries, leaves, and flowers to create prints, cards, orcolourful sheetsto use for outdoor forts!
2. Sun catchers
I want these beautiful sun catchers in every window of my house. This simple craft is such a fun way to use recyclables and preserve flowers and natural items using little more than plastic wrap, recycled containers, and string.
3. Stone art and learning games
If you have a collection of treasured stones at home (we do!), these rock activities make great sensory and learning games. I especially love the stone puzzle game that helps with spatial awareness.
4. Get messy
Kids will love this sensory-stimulating play that gets them outdoors. Hang up a clear shower curtain or plain sheet outside, and let the kids at it with theircreativity and paint!
Outdoor nature activities for kids
5. Go on a nature scavenger hunt
I love the ideas in this spring scavenger hunt [PDF]. Using a colour wheel to search out all the different shades and hues of the natural world is a great way to discover the colours of nature. You can also try adding an active twist!
6. Sensory play opportunities
As you walk around the neighbourhood, peek around under pine trees for cones to use in pine cone palaces (shown at right) or as part of a nature sensory bin. Little ones will love running their hands through rice (I’ve also used dried beans), and feeling the texture of their various treasures.
7. Go for a listening walk
Take a “listening walk”: notice everything you hear. With fewer cars on the road, it’s a great time to start a conversation with local birds using this sound identifier, or to listen to chirping crickets and the sound of geese’s wings as they fly low overhead.
8. Gardening
This is a great activity to teach kids about the biology of plants, learn about the life cycle of our food, help develop fine motor skills, and explore different senses.
Little Sprouts Learning has tons of ideas for urban and container gardening, and even tips for making tasty goodies like your own dried herbs. My kids love getting their hands dirty and taste-testing everything when it’s ready.
Backyard nature activities
9. Set up a tent
Spend the night outside in your backyard—with storytelling, stargazing, and s’mores of course!

10. Backyard bingo
My kids love having a mission. Print out this active bingo sheet [PDF] for a ton of nature exploration in your own yard.
11. Make a mud kitchen
One of my favourite and most vivid childhood memories is of the outdoor “candy shop” and kitchen I regularly set up along our backyard fence. My mom would come along and buy a pine needle and mud confection for the low price of one popsicle. Thanks, Mom! Here are some tips for making your own mud kitchen.
12. Practice math skills
Use a hands-on, creative approach to learning math skills by using items from the natural world to play with math concepts in the backyard. You can find more outdoor learning opportunities here.
13. Observe the teeny tiny world of insects
Try this insect safari activity either with your kids at home or, if you’re an educator, in the classroom! It’ll teach kids about bugs, why they’re important to the ecosystem, and how to identify them.
Indoor nature activities for kids
14. Build a fairy garden
Using simple items from the house and yard, kids can make this adorable fairy garden to take care of and play with throughout the summer.
15. Telling time
We’re at the stage where my littlest is trying to learn how to tell time on an analog clock. This project using stones and twigs makes it SO much easier, and way more fun, than paper and a pencil. I painted some stones with addition and subtraction symbols so we can also practice math!

Connect screens with green
These programs and digital resources can help inspire your kids to get outside.
16. Outdoor activities for families via PBS Kids
Outdoor Family Fun from Plum Landing at PBS Kids offers daily activities that will get your family outside, exploring your neighborhood and learning about nature.
17. Parks Canada resources
Parks Canada’s Facebook page shares weekly challenges and activities that kids can do at home or in the backyard.
18. The Ecologist School Program
This program offers ideas to get out into nature, to encourage siblings to play and learn together at home, and to support or supplement science education. There are 16 lessons on topics like climatology and paleontology, which can be done in a backyard or even inside your home using minimal materials.
19. Audubon for Kids!
Birds birds birds! Audubon brings together activities, including the classroom curriculum Audubon Adventures, DIY activities, and content that can be done at home.
20. Sur le balcon
This French program offers fun and free tools to discover nature hidden around your house. With downloadable sheets, you can learn about neighbourhood animals and plants.
Editor’s note: This article was originally published on July 30, 2020. Photos of the pinecone palace, backyard camping, and rock clock courtesy of Christine Latreille.







Some really special activities here that my great niece and nephews will love. I will share this article with several Moms with small children as well as with my sister.
Thank you, Rita!! We greatly appreciate that!