Large Scrabble style tiles with white letters are arranged on green grass to spell words like CAT and TEETH.

DIY Outdoor Fun & Games for the Family

Written by: Trex Outdoor Furniture Staff

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Published on

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Last updated on

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Time to read 2 min

With the Fourth of July fast approaching, we’ll all soon be busy gathering hot dogs, hamburgers, sparklers, and outdoor entertainment for guests. While setting up a sprinkler for the kids is always a great go-to, here are just a few DIY game/activity ideas to consider (and with plenty of time to get them ready for the 4th!).

Ladder and Bean Bag Toss

Landee from Landeelu organized an outdoor carnival event. Check out her full post for more fun outdoor ideas.

You’ll need:

  • A standard height folding ladder
  • Poster board, markers, and tape
  • A few beanbags
  • A pencil and notepad to keep score
  • Tape

Place your ladder somewhere steady. Cut the posterboard into four pieces with scores on them—25, 50, 75, 100—and tape one to each rung. Voila! Create a tape line 10 to 15 feet from the ladder, and get to throwing. Give each player 10 turns, and tally up scores at the end.

Children in swimsuits play a bean bag toss game using a decorated ladder outdoors, with colorful pennant banners overhead.

Football Toss

Need to improve your throwing accuracy, or simply channel your running back fantasies?

A person holds a football, aiming at a tarp with cutout targets during a DIY outdoor game.
See HGTV’s full tutorial.

You’ll need:

  • A tarp
  • A pair of scissors and a marker
  • Duct Tape (use fun colors or patterns!)
  • A football
  • String or rope
  • A place to hang the tarp

Draw shapes on the tarp at random spots. The shapes should be more than big enough through which to throw a football. Cut out those shapes, assigning score values to each shape. For instance, a narrower diamond shape may be 100 points.

String up the tarp either between two trees, on the bottom of a high-up deck, or on the edge of a carport or porch. Give each player five throws and tally up scores.

Hands line a square hole in a white tarp with orange tape on top, and a hand draws the number 10 on the same tarp.

Nature Scavenger Hunt

A paper containing pictures of various outdoor items and animals in a grid with checkboxes below each one.
Photo credit: MakeandTakes

You’ll need:


  • Grocery bags (paper or plastic)
  • List of scavenger items
  • Pens or pencils

This can be as easy or as complicated as you like, depending on the age of the players. For preschoolers, for instance, a scavenger hunt sheet may include photos of leaves, plants, etc., while an older child or adult may have more complicated instructions like “something thin and brown.” Give players five to ten minutes to collect as many items as possible. The player or team with the most items checked off the list wins.

MakeandTakes.com has a great free printable with the following list of items to find:

A hiking scavenger hunt checklist with pictures of outdoor items in a grid from makeandtake.com.
Photo credit: MakeandTakes

Lawn Scrabble

You’ll need:

  • 144 Masonite squares
  • Vinyl Letter Stickers (or paint if you have a steady hand!)

Whether you decide to use vinyl letters or paint them yourself, this game is a lot of fun for all ages. Larkin from Constantly Lovestruck used 12-inch squares to create the following breakdown of letters:


2: J, K, Q, X, Z
3: B, C, F, H, M, P, V, W, Y
4: G
5: L
6: D, S, U
8: N
9: T, R
11: O
12: I
13: A
18: E

Cardboard pieces with letters are placed in interconnecting words on a lawn in the left, two men and a golden retriever stand in the grass by the letters on the right.
Photo credit: Constantly Lovestruck