“I’m bored”: 30 Ways to Keep Kids Entertained When the Power Goes Out

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Let the wind blow, let the snow fall, let the power go out. You’ve got it under control. You have your water, your off-grid heating method and enough fuel to see you through until spring, your food that can easily be prepared without electricity, your candles and fully charged solar lanterns. You are set to weather this storm for however long it wants to assault your area.

Except.

The kids.

They are… DRIVING. YOU. INSANE.

In all of your preps, if it didn’t occur to you to put aside some activities that don’t require power or a lot of light, you may be in for a bumpy ride in the event of a power failure. Your children, since they are warm and fed, don’t understand (or care) that you had to prepare in advance to keep them warm and fed.  All they care about is…

I’m booooooooorrrrrrrreeeeeeeddddddddd.”

As a mom, I feel your pain, I really do.  “I’m bored” is like fingernails running down a chalkboard to me.  I like to respond, “Only boring people get bored. Interesting people find something to do.” And yes, my children repeat it along with me mockingly.

Last year, my youngest daughter and I spent a winter in a cabin that lost power every time the wind blew too hard. We learned a lot about taking power outages in stride.   If a winter storm is on route, there are a lot of things you can do to be ready for it. Here are just a few quick and easy things that have nothing to do with entertainment and everything to do with general comfort.

Fill the bathtub. If a storm threatens to take out the power, immediately fill the bathtubs. This water can be used for cleaning, for flushing if you are on a septic system, and for water for the pets.

Keep symbiotic items together. Store matches and lighters with candles. Store batteries with flashlights. We had off-grid lighting with matches in every single room of our house so that we could easily acquire light. Nothing is more than searching around in the dark for matches to light the candle that you need to be able to see to find the matches.

Have food set aside that requires no cooking. If you have no power, some of your normal cooking methods may not be feasible. Check out this list of foods that are perfect for a “Power Outage Picnic“.

Use paper plates. This is a great time to use up all of those old leftover birthday party paper plates and napkins. (My kids always found it fun to remember the party associated with the clown plate and the My Little Pony plates – also, competition was often fierce for who got what plate.)  Particularly if your water supply is affected, you don’t want to have to wash tons of dishes in the bathtub water.

 Keep boredom at bay

Keep a box of off-grid entertainment supplies in an easy-to-access place. Make one up for the different members of the family and make these items things that the kids are not allowed to play with at any other time so that they are novel and interesting when the time comes to use them.  Include things like stationary supplies, notebooks, pens and pencils, sharpeners, colors or coloring pencils, markers, glue sticks, glitter, puzzles, activity books, games, stickers…make it a treasure trove! Be sure you include all of the supplies needed for each activity because it’s hard to find things when your home is only lit by candlelight.

I asked our community on Facebook for their best ideas to keep the kiddos entertained and not “bored” when the lights are low and the power is out.  (Thank you to Andrea for the great article idea!) This is a round-up of the creative ideas! Stock up on what you need for these fun activities before the next grid-down scenario!

  1. Shadow puppets
  2. Books
  3. Hide and Seek
  4. Telling stories – kids are especially engaged with chain stories
  5. Reading aloud
  6. Card games
  7. Battleship!
  8. Board games
  9. Flashlight hide and seek
  10. Flashlight tag
  11. Guess the shadow
  12. We play ” how many pulls till the generator starts”
  13. Toys that do not need batteries, like dollhouses and kitchens, dinky cars, and floor
  14. Make your house an obstacle course. A way to run around, roll over beds, etc to get some energy out.
  15. Card games
  16. Coloring
  17. Board games
  18. Arts and crafts
  19. Send them out side, weather permitting
  20. Imagination games like playing house, cops and robbers, don’t step in the lava, camping in the wilderness
  21. Put on a play
  22. Play dress-up
  23. Collect song books and have a sing-along in front of the fire
  24. Play music together (piano, makeshift drums, harmonica, spoons, castanets, etc.)
  25. Make puppets and put on a puppet show
  26. Make “campfire food” in the fireplace – for example, roast marshmallows and make smores
  27. Get out those old photos and finally assemble them in scrapbooks
  28. Play word games like Hangman
  29. Playing old games like jacks, pick-up sticks, and tumbling towers
  30. Play with building toys like blocks, Lincoln Logs, or Lego

Believe it or not, my daughter actually got to the point where she was happy when the power went out because the games and activities were a welcome break from the overstimulated everyday world of school, work, and media. These days, we are pretty unfazed by grid down situations – they’re like a little vacation.

Spend your next power outage making great memories with your kids. You may discover that you actually prefer life without all of the bells and whistles.

How do you keep the kids entertained when the power goes out? Is it radically different from their everyday activities?

Daisy Luther

Daisy Luther

Daisy Luther is a coffee-swigging, globe-trotting blogger. She is the founder and publisher of three websites.  1) The Organic Prepper, which is about current events, preparedness, self-reliance, and the pursuit of liberty on her website, 2)  The Frugalite, a website with thrifty tips and solutions to help people get a handle on their personal finances without feeling deprived, and 3) PreppersDailyNews.com, an aggregate site where you can find links to all the most important news for those who wish to be prepared. She is widely republished across alternative media and  Daisy is the best-selling author of 5 traditionally published books and runs a small digital publishing company with PDF guides, printables, and courses. You can find her on FacebookPinterest, Gab, MeWe, Parler, Instagram, and Twitter.

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  • We homeschooled. My kids never got bored. I also had two boys,
    So that may be a little different than girls.

    Keep preppin’

  • One of the best is any golf game. You can buy indoor putting greens for pretty cheap, or you don’t really even need that. Just a few balls and little clubs for the kids and empty tin cans will do it.

    Also magnets are great to play with. There are lots of things you can do with magnets. (be careful with the supermagnet and kids, they can pinch.)

    Also marbles, pickup-stix (if you remember that one from the 60’s), singing, song books and any music source (the original karaoke machine) and of course you can use battery or windup karaoke machines. Legos, and even pvc fittings and short sections of pipe are fun to connect and make stuff and are dirt cheap in 1/2″. (flexpvc.com has a lot of really weird fittings and stuff that could be for this.) tic-tac-toe, checkers, etc. knitting, crocheting, needle point, cross-stitch, rug making and macrame. Etch-a-sketch. Slinkys, Puzzles. LOTS of puzzles. Clay/Playdoo, coloring books, comics, scrapbooks, shadow boxes, diaries are great for long term. Children’s bible stories are great too. Huluhoops. lots of colored paper, scissors, glue, etc. Basically all those things we grew up with in the 50’s, 60’s & 70’s. 🙂

    Light should not be a factor. There are so many LED lanterns and flashlights that will last for hours there is no reason not to localized light for activities.

  • Filling the bathtubs around here is second nature in the great white north, but so is keeping the bathrooms locked so an exploring little one doesn’t get too close to the water. We always kept a gate around the entire brick pad of our wood stove to keep rambunctious children from accidentally falling against the stove when that was our only heating method. Take a minute and look at the potential hazards that your alternative heating, lighting, and cooking methods might present. Our nanny society has even taken the danger of a hot toaster away so it’s easy to forget to be watchfull. Stay warm.

  • Wait, my kids are bored? Plenty of chores to do, or they can use their imagination and figure something out. Can’t remember the last time a kid being bored bothered me…

    “Dad, I’m bored.”

    Go pull all the weeds in the yard by hand.

    “Wait, I’m not bored anymore”

    That’s what I thought.

  • Yes Parent! Our adult children have often told us that they learned the hard way never to say “I’m bored!” because there was enough undone jobs around the farm that they would soon find themselves out weeding the garden or hauling in wood etc. My city grandchildren on the other hand… Oh well!

    Good article with lots of ideas that should keep most kids from driving their parents nuts in a lengthy power outage suituation. Thanks.

  • Physical competition: who can jump, hop, etc. the most times before the egg timer goes off. Figured this out to entertain my toddler while waiting in an exam room for the doctor to come in, but could also work on other occasions.

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