...

JULY
2006
.

ENJOY SPENDING SOME TIME AS A FAMILY HAVING SOME PHUN

.

July Metro Word Search
Click On New Game
How quick can you find all 10 words?

JOKES & RIDDLES
Click & drag your mouse on the empty line below each question
.....
What do you get when you cross a duck with a flame on the Fourth of July?
- A fire quacker.

Why does Uncle Sam wear red, white, and blue suspenders?
- To hold up his pants.

What is the Declaration of Independence?
- A note excusing you from school.

What would you say if everyone in the United States sneezed at the same time?
- "God Bless America!"

What are the last 2 words of the national anthem?
- "Play ball!"

Our Metro Whiteboard - Save & Share Your Masterpiece With Our Readers

Margaret's Craft Corner
Decorate Your Bicycle For A 4th Of July Bike Parade
.

This is a fun neighborhood type of project. Gather supplies and have the kids decorate their bikes. Provide felt and glue if they wish to make a flag to hang from their handlebars. Kids, please wear a helmet!
.

This is a very easy project with little a little help from an adult.

What You Need

Red crepe paper streamers 
White crepe paper streamers 
Blue crepe paper streamers 
Scissors 
Tape 
Bicycle or tricycle

How To Make It

.
Decorate your bike with the different colors of streamers. 
Use the tape to attatch it and the scissors to cut the streamers. 
You can sometimes create streamers by pushing a bit of streamers in the handle bar grip end where there is a hole. These streamers will float when you ride your bike. 
Refer to the photo for ideas. 

LETS PLAY!!!!! 8 outdoor summer games and activities

The long hot days of summer have finally arrived so it’s time to turn off the TV and head outside to play. With the big 4th of July bbq coming up, keep the kids entertained with these seven fun outdoor games and activities. We promise you won’t hear the words, “Mommy, I’m bored,” all summer long!

1
  • Play Hide The Belt. You need many kids to play this one. Someone will hide a belt out of sight from the other children. When the belt is hidden, all other kids look for the belt. Whoever finds the belt whips the others as they try to make it back to their starting point. The person that finds the belt, hides it for the next round.
2
  • Send them on a scavenger hunt. Your child can do this activity alone, with a friend or in teams, says Lisa Hall, director of the Eastern Start School Age Program in Oriskany, N.Y. Give your child a list of items to find in nature, such as a rock, dandelion, leaf or something a bird would eat. Have the kids draw pictures of what they find and finish the hunt by tallying up how many things they ticked off the list.
3
  • Chalk it up to fun. An inexpensive box of colored chalk can keep the kids busy for hours. Have younger kids draw pictures on the sidewalk or driveway. For the older children, try a game of Tic Tac Toe or hopscotch: draw a hopscotch pattern with eight squares. Players toss a marker (try a stone or button) into a square and then hop over it on one foot. 
4
  • Bet on bug races. See how many critters the kids can spot—without actually picking them up--in the backyard for a short time period, such as five minutes, says Penny Warner, author of Kids Outdoor Parties (Meadowbrook Press). “Add up how many bugs they see and give them a sketch pad to sketch as many as they can. Then have them share their artwork.” 
5
  • Knock ’em over with backyard bowling. Find household items that will tumble over easily, such as empty cereal boxes, empty soda cans and small stuffed toys and align them in a row like bowling pins, suggests Warner. Then, using a smaller ball for older kids and a bigger ball for the young ones, have the children roll the ball. They score a point for each object they knock down.
6
  • Play Kick the Can. A variation on Hide and Seek, this game works best with at least three kids. One person is designated “it” and will guard the “can” (an empty coffee can or ball) which is set in an open space. While the other players hide, the “it” counts to 20 (or higher) and then tries to find and tag the other players. If captured, players must go to “jail”. Any player who hasn’t been caught can run in and kick the can, setting all of the captured players free. If the “it” finds everyone, he wins the game.
7
  • Create an outdoor canvas. Hang an old sheet on a clothesline or tape paper to a fence for your budding artist to paint on. Encourage them to try painting with different kinds of brushes, says Warner. “Try dipping grass into paint and swishing it on paper, then try painting with a leaf or a twig. The kids can also try painting rocks and creating little people or bugs with them.”
8
  • Host a mini-Olympics. Get the kids competing in running and wheelbarrow races, obstacle courses, water balloon tosses and jumping competitions, suggests Hall. Finish off the fun with a mini-Olympic awards ceremony to honour all of the athletes. Buy medals at the local dollar store or make your own with construction paper, coloured pencils and string.

Art Thief
Type in numbers on the keypad to unlock the works of art. Racing against the clock.

.


Click The Arrow To Turn The Page

| Home Page | McCarty News Jerry's World ' | July Calendar | Metro Health |
| DMGC Results | DJ's Golf Tips | Bluegrass Page | July Quiz | The Doctors |
| Peanut & Jocko | Survival | Phun | Dating | Mixology | Chat | Final Thought |

Website Created & Maintained by Kelly McCarty

Copyright 2006

&
The McCarty Metro
9323 Sussex Avenue  -  Detroit, MI 48228  -  VE8-9470