10 Best Arizona Fall Activities for KidsIt may not totally feel like Fall yet in Arizona, but those slightly cooler mornings and spooky Halloween decor hints that Fall is indeed here. Looking for some fall ideas for kids in Arizona? Look no further for the best Arizona fall activities for kids. It's finally starting to be the perfect time to let them burn that energy off outside! 1. Vertuccio Farms Pumpkin Patch (Mesa, AZ)This was our first time visiting Vertuccio Farms this year. Normally, we haven't added it to our pumpkin patch rotation. We are definitely changing that in the future. It may have easily become our favorite local pumpkin patch in Arizona. There are so many activities for kids to do!
Tips: For most of these events, you should definitely try to hit them early in the morning for the best weather while it is still so hot! You'll also avoid crowds during the week or right when they open! Also, get a discount on your admission here by bringing one canned-food per person. 2. Mortimer Farms Pumpkin Festival (Dewey, AZ)We visited Mortimer's last year and had a blast! It is BIG - meaning lots of spread out activities which the kids loved. We visited on their opening weekend and it wasn't too busy. That being said, I imagine the more into Fall that we get, the busier their attendance gets. Highlights:
3. Mother Nature's Farm Pumpkin Patch (Gilbert, AZ)Mother Nature's is one of our favorite pumpkin patches to visit. Here's what makes them extra special - included with the admission is a small/medium pumpkin to take home. The kids love this because we usually don't purchase a pumpkin at the pumpkin patch because, hello, they are expensive! Though it's a little feature, the kids love it. They can walk around the large pumpkins to purchase, but ultimately they get to leave with their own. Highlights:
4. Schnepf Farms Pumpkin Festival (Queen Creek, AZ)The Schnepf Farms Pumpkin and Chili Festival is one that we haven't actually tried ourselves yet, but we have had lots of friends try with glowing reviews! This is one of the priciest festivals/pumpkin patches in Arizona, but it does have some unique features that add to the cost. Highlights:
5. Rocker 7 Sunflower Field (Buckeye, AZ)Rocker 7 is more for some great fall photo opps and just a fun place to take kids for a quick get away. There is not as much to do here as at the other pumpkin patches, but we had to give the far West Side some love on the list. They usually have amazingly large sunflowers and do some great discounts for photographers wanting to get into the area. Highlights:
6. McCormick Stillman Railroad Park - Halloween Decor (Scottsdale, AZ)This was our first year visiting McCormick Stillman Railroad Park's Spook-track-u-la Event. You are definitely paying for the experience of visiting during Halloween time because although you get unlimited rides for your 1.5 hour timeframe, you get about 2 merry-go-round rides and maybe 2 train rides in (maybe!) . The admission price is a bit higher than paying a la carte during the day. The event claims it is designed with smaller children in mind, but we thought the decorations were extremely spooky. Imagine riding a train through the Spirit Halloween Store. It wasn't our favorite event, but the kids had fun on the 3 minute merry-go-round ride that gave us some of our money's worth. Highlights:
7. Phoenix Zoo - Spooky Safari (Phoenix, AZ)The Phoenix Zoo is offering three nights of its Spooky Safari. The Spooky Safari runs October 25-27 from 5:30-8:30. Highlights:
8. MacDonad's Ranch Pumpkin Patch (Scottsdale, AZ)MacDonald's Ranch is one place we've always wanted to visit during the Fall. Maybe we will make it there this year because they do have some unique offerings compared to the other fall events. Highlights:
9. Halloweentown Pumpkin Patch (Chandler, AZ)This Halloweentown event is on our to-do list this year. What makes it unique is that it doubles as almost a mini state fair (which also goes on at the same time here in Arizona) for the younger kids. Entrance to get in is $5 and all additional rides and games must be purchased separately with a wristband or individual tickets. Highlights:
10. Tolmachoff Farms (Glendale, AZ)We love that Tolmachoff is a family-run farm and has been for many years!
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Haunted Mansion Hitchhiking Ghost ActivityHave you watched the new Haunted Mansion movie? What perfect timing to release a haunted mansion film. It definitely got me thinking about haunted mansion related craft ideas we could do. There are so many cute Haunted Mansion decor ideas out there to purchase, but we really like to channel our DIY spirit to be unique. Since our Bluey cut-outs were such a hit at Teddy's birthday, we decided to do a little haunted twist on them! (If you haven't checked out the Bluey cut-out tutorial, I linked it above. It's definitely worth a glance to get the nitty gritty of how to create these projected cut-outs.) Our favorite characters are, of course, the Haunted Mansion Hitchhiking Ghosts. We got a little dancing one last year at Home Depot and since then, my kids love their cute little outlines. Also, if you've seen the new movie, they are definitely less scary than the Hatbox Ghost right now. I bet you could also try this technique on the singing ghost busts. What You Need To Create the Haunted Mansion Hitchhiking Ghosts
How to Create the Haunted Mansion Hitchhiking GhostsFor a crash course on creating the Haunted Mansion Hitchhiking Ghosts, you can watch the reel below.
You can also follow the below directions: 1. Assemble your poster board and pencils. Hook up your computer to the projector, so that your projector is shining on a blank wall. Tape the poster board to the wall behind the image you are projecting. I found the webpage with Doodleman Dan to have some of the best standard images to project. I went ahead and copied the image into a Word Document, so I could save it and also enlarge the different ghosts as needed. 2. Trace the outline of the image with pencil. 3. Repeat for all three Haunted Mansion hitchhiking ghosts. 4. Then you are ready to paint! I am torn whether I liked outlining the pencil marks in Sharpee before painting. You definitely have to do it after as well. Teddy helped me with some of the painting and it was kind of nice to have a clear division of Sharpee for his painting skills before he started working. 5. Paint the images to match the pictures you saved in a Word Doc for future reference (right now). 6. Once the paint dries, outline the sections in Sharpee again. We ended up outlining two times. The paint really seems to dry out the Sharpees quickly, so you'll want to make sure to have quite a few on-hand unless you are better at staying in the lines than we are! Let me know if you have any hints on how to avoid drying out those markers. Drop comments below! 7. Cut around the edges! I liked leaving a little outline border rather than cutting right along the character themself. Pumpkin Patch Project Idea for Toddlers We started our pumpkin patch project by building the pumpkin patch of course. I got this nice wooden unfinished pumpkin sign from Hobby Lobby for about $1. This worked as our perfect stencil for the pumpkin patch. We also purchased a roll of brown craft paper from Hobby Lobby for around $3. Activity 1: Fine Motor Skills - Trace the PumpkinsTeddy got some great practice outlining the pumpkin stencils on the brown craft paper roll. This is great for those fine motor skills of writing and tracing/outlining. Activity 2: Creativity - Decorate the PumpkinsThe boys loved being able to decorate their own pumpkin patch without rules or restrictions. Teddy opted for making pumpkin faces and jack-o-lantern heads while Cal wanted to color as many pumpkins as he could as quickly as he could! Activity 3: Handwriting PracticeThen we needed to add some real orange pumpkins to our pumpkin patch. I had purchased these die-cut pumpkins from Hobby Lobby (again) for about $2. You could definitely just use post-it notes for this part too if you didn't want to get pumpkins or make any sort of pumpkin cut-out. Teddy went through and wrote a letter of the alphabet on each pumpkin. This was great handwriting practice because we got to talk about how he forms each letter rather than just creating them on his own. Activity 4: Alphabet Practice - Hide and Seek with the PumpkinsAt this point, I took all of the newly lettered pumpkins and hid them around the house for the kids to find. They had so much fun looking for them. Then, they had to work together to sing the alphabet and place the pumpkins in the correct order in the patch. It was so cute watching them work together and watch Teddy think through exactly where all those pumpkins needed to go. It was great alphabet letter recognition practice for him. Activity 5: Letter/Sound Practice - Find Toys That Begin with the Same LetterOnce we had all the correct pumpkin letters placed in alphabetical order, the boys had to find toys that matched the beginning letters and place them in the "pumpkin patch." This was our long lasting pumpkin patch project idea. It probably took the boys an hour to complete all the activities and talk through them. We had a great time and they were tired from all the pumpkin brain power they needed!
Simple Pumpkin Painting IdeasWe have simple pumpkin painting ideas for big pumpkins to little pumpkins for kids of all ages. We love pumpkin season. Personally, I am torn between purchasing the beautiful real pumpkins versus the spacious fake pumpkins. I know with the real pumpkins, we invest in them every year just to see them rot and wither away in the warm Arizona weather. However, the fact that those fake pumpkins last season to season is both a blessing and a curse. Why? Storage. There is NEVER enough storage especially for those spacious pumpkin pieces that don't collapse down. There is a local pumpkin patch here that includes a small pumpkin with the entrance fee. That's how we stumbled upon coming up with simple pumpkin painting ideas. We needed a fun, quick and definitely simply way to paint our pumpkins. They are too small to carve but we still wanted to be festive and decorate them! Crayola Paint Stick PumpkinsI stumbled upon these Crayola Paint Sticks last year and think they are literally the greatest and easiest way for kids to paint. They are especially easy when painting odd-shaped objects like pumpkins and wanting to contain the mess to a smaller area. We love free play. Free play encourages creativity. There are times when my kids like to follow step-by-step directions, but most of the time, they like to follow their own free spirits when it comes to creating, crafting, and in this case, painting. For this Type A Mama, that free-spirited crafting can sometimes be stressful - the mess, the uncoordinated colors. It's a good exercise for them, just like it's a good exercise for me to embrace the unpredictable! What we love most about these marker sticks is the minimal mess, the lasting color, and the ease of use for kids as young as 1-2. You can use the sticks to create more tailored images - like ghosts, pumpkins, bats or spiders. But for my kids, they loved being able to use them to create patterns, dots, and images that they wanted to do. They also used them to easily draw a face on certain areas of their pumpkins. For super simple pumpkin painting ideas, this is definitely the easiest tool to grab. Simple Free Paint Pumpkin IdeasThis year the kids wanted to try something new and do free painting on their pumpkins. They wanted to use all the liquid paint colors that we had stocked up over the past couple years and incorporate them onto their pumpkin painting.
Free painting is, of course, amazing for encouraging creativity. Also, if you establish great rules and routines around how to use liquid paint early on, then it saves you stress in the long run. I've also come to invest in one of those plastic table covers from the dollar store as our go-to paint covering. We use it over and over again for painting and it's quick set up and quick clean up. With the free painting, Cal decided to just paint away with whatever colors he chose. He was so concentrated on the activity. It was great for his fine motor movements. Teddy, however, being a little bit older this year was able to use his free painting time to sketch Nightmare Before Christmas characters on his pumpkin. It was one step harder than the marker paint sticks, but still a super simple pumpkin painting idea. We love our sensory bin container and are always look for new ways to use it. We borrowed and adapted this idea from Busy Toddler. She often shares different ideas to wash toys and incorporate "baths" with your beloved sensory bin. We got this bin from Target, but you can really use any sized bin you'd like. I think the "under the bed" bins work best. They give you more space to play and the sides aren't too high for little arms to have much trouble reaching inside. Once you have your bin, then you can start incorporating different themed ideas to celebrate holidays, seasons, and just things that your kids love. We had visited a local pumpkin patch. Part of the admission was that you got to select your own pumpkin from the "patch" to take home with you. The nice thing about the included pumpkins was that they weren't huge carving pumpkins. They were a nice kid-sized pumpkin. The kids got to pick their pumpkins and bring them home for all the activities we had planned. When we picked the pumpkins from the "patch," they were actually super dirty, so this activity just naturally seemed to happen. We decided to give our pumpkins a special bath. I added water to the sensory bin (spread out a large tablecloth/towel/mat underneath for any spilling water). You could definitely do this outside if the weather is nice by you. Here it was still pretty hot in the afternoon by the time we got home, so we wanted to wash pumpkins inside. Add some Dawn dishsoap or even some bubble bath. Since we aren't eating the pumpkins, we really just want to get them clean with the most gentle soap for kids that we can use. We made sure to make bubbles though, because that adds the fun! I had some travel tooth brushes on-hand to use for scrubbing. We had washcloths for washing and extra towels for drying. Once the pumpkins were cleaned off, they were ready for our next activities and they were allowed to wait in the house for those! Hellooooo Hobby Lobbby Finds!- $1.50 Fall Paper ChainA little hard for Teddy to put together at first, but once he got the hang of it, he was clipping right along. It's nice because they have pre-cut notches to hook together on the thick paper, so we didn't have to tape each one.
We are using it as a paper chain countdown to Halloween which gives the craft purpose (and means it won't stay out on display FOREVER). It took about 10-15 minutes to construct depending on how much help I could provide. Want a fun, easy STEM Halloween-themed activity to do with your kids? Try this Witch's Brew! What you need:
What to Do:1. Place your cauldron on your cookie sheet or plate. Add about 1 tablespoon of baking soda to the bottom of your cauldron or cup. 2. Add a few drops of food coloring to the baking soda in the cauldron. 3. Fill your spoon or eye dropper with vinegar. 4. Drop a few drops of vinegar into the cauldron. Add more vinegar for a faster and larger chemical reaction. 5. Watch the potion bubble over! Why Does It do This? The classic baking soda and vinegar experiment is called an acid/base reaction. Vinegar is an acid and baking soda is a base. The bubbles that are created are carbon dioxide being released from the reaction. Learn more about it here. Check out our Instagram reel of this! |