|
Family Physical Activity Center
A family physical activity center can help children and youth develop physically and
also help the whole family achieve and maintain physical fitness. It can also provide
inexpensive recreation close to home.
Activity
In a family council or home evening, discuss what you might do to develop
a family physical activity center. First, find a small area, outdoors
or indoors, which you might use. Visit a park, school playground, health
spa, or athletic club for ideas. Consider equipment that will help family
members work on balance, flexibility, strength, coordination, and endurance.
Include items for the ages of your family members. Try to find inexpensive
ways to build your center. You probably won't need everything listed below.
A few versatile items may be all you can afford and all you have room
for. And remember: you can build it over several years' time, getting
one piece of equipment at a time.
- Make an overhead ladder from two 2- by 4-inch (5- by 10-cm)
boards, 8 feet (about 2.5 meters) long, and several lengths of 1- inch
or 11/8- inch (2.5- or 3-cm) dowels. Hang it from basement ceiling joists
or install it on posts outside.
- Make a balance board from a small log 12 to 16 inches (about
30 to 40 cm) long, and a cleated board 10 inches (25 cm) wide and about
24 to 26 inches (61 to 66 cm) long.
- Hang a climbing rope (even if it is short) from ceiling joists
in the basement. It can also serve as a swing where children use their
arm and shoulder strength to hang on instead of sitting on a seat. It
can also be mounted outside from a tree limb.
- Make a chinning bar out of three lengths of 1 1/2 inch- (about
4-cm) galvanized pipe and a bag or two of concrete mix.
- Make a shinny pole or fireman's pole out of a 10- to 12-foot
(about 3- to 4-meter) piece of 2-inch (5-cm) galvanized pipe and a bag
of concrete mix.
- Make a tire vault by burying one-third to one-half of a large
truck tire in the ground.
- Make tire trees from 12- to 14-foot (about 3- to 4-meter) logs
about 10 inches (25 cm) in diameter with three sets of four used passenger
car or truck tires mounted up the log so that they overlap a little.
Putting two tire trees close together allows children to jump from one
tree to the other. Installation in the ground should be firm.
- Make a log walk (balance beam) from a pole 6 to 8 inches (about
15 to 20 cm) in diameter and about 12 to 14 feet (about 3 to 4 meters)
long. Mount it on two hewn-out small pieces of log.
- Make a log jam using varying heights of logs 10 to 12 inches
(about 25 to 30 cm) in diameter. Mount them vertically in an irregular
arrangement, side by side.
- Make a trapeze bar out of four eyebolts, two short pieces of
chain, and about a 30-inch (about 76-cm) piece of 1 1/2-inch (about
3-cm) dowel. It can be mounted from basement floor joists, outside on
an A-frame, or from a tree.
- Make beanbag targets from plywood to look like clowns, animals,
or trees. Bags can be tossed through holes shaped like mouths, eyes,
or fruit.
- Mount a dart board on a cloth-covered piece of celotex 4 feet
by 4 feet (about 1.25 meters by 1.25 meters). Then there is less chance
that darts will hit walls and floors.
- Make a jumping board out of a 10- by 42-inch ( about 25-cm
by 1-meter) piece of hardwood. Mount a 2 by 4 inch (5 by 10 cm) board
securely under both ends.
- Tumbling mattresses or mats
- Sit-up or abdominal slant board
- Basketball backboard and hoop
- Tire swing
- Volleyball and badminton standards and net
- Stationary bicycle
- Jogging trampoline
- Weights
- Ballet bar and mirror
- Gym scooters
- Tetherball pole
- Skip ropes
- Any other device for exercising muscles in which the resistance
can be progressively increased
After you have decided which items you want to make or buy, work toward
having them installed. Encourage regular use of the equipment.
|