spring flowers

10 Ways To Get Out and Enjoy Spring

Little by little the days are getting long, lighter, maybe even warmer. Green shoots are pushing up through the earth and the first flowers of the year are here. Snowdrops and crocuses dazzling us with their beauty. Spring is coming!

If, like me, you find winter hard, with being stuck indoors most of the time and it being dark and miserable. Then you might be as excited as I am to see spring coming. After a couple of very hard years for us all, we need a bit of cheering up. We hope that this year might be the year that life can return to normal in so many ways. Our children will be feeling the same way too, and we know that a bit of sunshine, fresh air, and natural beauty can lift all our spirits. So, here are 10 ideas that might help as you try to get your children out into nature again.

You can find nature everywhere.

You don’t have to live in the country to get close to nature. Look for your local park, or if you, a family member, or a friend have a garden then you can explore there! Even a window box can be packed with beauty and life.

What can you see?

Look together for how many different flowers you can spot, and how many different types of bird. What else can you find? Are there insects out and about? Catkins in some of the trees? Look up at the clouds in the sky, what shapes can you see? Maybe take some photos.

Embrace the mud!

Accept that it’s going to be messy when they get out there. Put on wellies and old clothes so that it doesn’t matter if they get mucky. We know they will! But it will give them the freedom to explore without worrying about getting muddy. If they’ve got waterproofs use those and encourage them to splash in the puddles!

Get whatever exercise you can.

Depending on the additional needs of your children, use the opportunity of being outside to get some exercise. Maybe your local park has a children’s play area that you could visit, or some safe trees to climb. Perhaps you could take a ball to kick or throw. Or just walk around the paths, enjoying the fresh air of being outside.

Breathe!

Take a moment while your children are exploring to just stop and breathe. Take in a lungful of fresh air and slowly let it out. Feel some of the stresses and strains of the winter melt away as you focus on your breathing. When was the last time you did that? Feels refreshing, doesn’t it?

Look forward

Spring is a time of hope and expectation. What are you looking forward to this year? While you are out in the fresh air and your mood is lifted, what plans can you start to make? What might you think about changing this year? As you see the flowers opening up, feel the opportunities opening up inside of you too. Commit to making this a great year for you and your family.

Bring a little spring indoors.

Now there are rules about not picking wildflowers. But if you’ve got some snowdrops or crocus flowers in the garden, why not pick some and bring them indoors to brighten up your living space? Or plant some indoor plants and watch them grow.

Create a natural fiddles box

What items could you collect to make a natural spring fiddles/fidget box? Here’s an article I wrote for Firefly about a natural autumn fiddles/fidget box. Perhaps you could adapt some ideas and make a spring one! https://www.fireflyfriends.com/uk/blog/how-to-make-autumn-fidget-box/

Remember what you did and seen.

Take photos that you can look at the memories again. So, on a showery day when you’re stuck back indoors, get the paints or colouring pens out and get your children painting or drawing. They can recreate what they did when you went out and remembering what they saw. Are they excited about going out again?

Have adventures outdoors with friends.

If you had fun exploring outdoors together, why not meet up with some friends next time? Sharing the fun is great to do! And maybe you have friends that live near, explore somewhere that you haven’t visited yet! There are more adventures waiting for you!



I hope these ideas help you to enjoy the springtime with your family, as well as getting some benefit from it yourself. Let this spring put a ‘spring’ in your step!

About Mark Arnold

Mark heads up Urban Saints pioneering additional needs ministry programme and is co-founder of the ‘Additional Needs Alliance’, a learning and support community. He is a ‘Churches for All’ partner, a member of both the ‘Council for Disabled Children’ and the ‘Living Fully Network’, and serves on the executive for ‘Children Matter!’ Most importantly, he is dad to James, a 17-year-old Autistic boy with Learning Difficulties and Epilepsy.