An Old-Fashioned Summer: Classic Outdoor Games for Kids

When I was a girl, summer had a sound to it. The slap of a screen door. Mama hollering that supper was ready. And that low hum of cicadas meant the day was finally cooling off. Do you remember staying outside until the lightning bugs came out? Because I sure do.

We didn’t come in for anything, y’all. There wasn’t a thing inside worth staying in for. We had a whole yard, a dirt road and my bike, a few good games and Nancy Drew books, and a mama who wasn’t calling us back until dark.

I’ve been thinking about that a lot this month. About how much of what made childhood feel like childhood happened out in the grass, with a game somebody’s daddy set up before supper.

So this July I’m leaning all the way into an old-fashioned summer — the screen-free, grass-stained, come-in-when-the-streetlights-come-on kind. And I rounded up all the classic outdoor games that make it happen. The best part? Most of these are the very same games we played thirty years ago. (Good ideas don’t go out of style.)

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Why the old games still work

Here’s the thing nobody tells you: kids don’t actually need much.

They need a little grass, a little sunshine, and something to do with their hands. The magic was never in the toy. It was in the doing — the running, the taking turns, the somebody-always-cheating-at-something.

Children are the very epitome of hope, and there’s nothing that fills a summer evening quite like the sound of them out in the yard. It’s the same lesson I keep coming back to in my own home. A slower summer isn’t a boring one. It’s just an unhurried one.

Related: Summer Boredom Busters — Screen-Free Activities for Kids

Back in the 90s. My son James drawing with sidewalk chalk in our driveway.

The classic games I rounded up

These are the outdoor games I keep coming back to — the ones that get everybody off the porch and into the yard. I linked them all over on my LTK, so you can shop the whole roundup in one place: tap here to shop the old school summer roundup.

Here’s what made the list:

A little structure keeps everybody sane

Now — I love a free-range summer as much as anybody. But I’ve raised enough children to know that some structure keeps the whole thing from falling apart by the second week of July.

So I threw two printables into the roundup that make it easier: a summer screen-time chart and a simple summer chore chart. Nothing complicated. Just enough rhythm that the kids know chores come before the slip-and-slide, and screens come after the sun’s done its work.

That’s really the heart of an old-fashioned summer, isn’t it? A little order, and a lot of room to play.

Related: How to Start a Chore System That Actually Works

Let’s bring it back

I know the world has changed since we were kids. But the yard hasn’t. The grass still stains, the bubbles still float, and the lightning bugs still come out right around bedtime.

This is the summer to give your children the one you remember, sweet friend.

Shop the whole old school summer roundup on LTK here →

Or, you can shop it on my Amazon Shop here

And if you want more of this slow, homemade kind of living, I’d love to have you inside the Homemaker’s Society. We keep a whole shelf of family-time and outdoor resources waiting for you in there.

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