Childhood games of the early 50's. Outdoor and indoor games we played at home and at school and how they kept us fit.


Playground games of the 1950's

We had great fun during playtimes at the little Church of England school in a Lancashire mill town. Most of the children lived close by on newly built council estates or in stone built terraced properties.
Ball games
The best time of the school day was playtime. In the middle of our school playground was a stone building without a roof. Inside and open to the elements were the school toilets. The outside walls were great to use for ball games. We played ball up against the walls with two balls, and three balls if you were clever. Children who found it difficult to make friends could always occupy themselves with a small rubber ball; in that way they did not stand out as loners as they would today. We also used the wall for handstands, and with dresses tucked into our knickers, we spent much of our time upside down!
One ball game which we played was: -
One, two, three, aleri,
Four, five, six, aleri,
Seven, eight, nine, aleri,
Ten aleri, catch the ball.
I think that the game was played with two balls against the wall but when you said ‘aleri’ one ball went under your leg. (I’m not sure whether ‘aleri’ is spelt correctly.) However, my sister thinks that we bounced the ball on the ground!
There were many different kinds of ball. If you were posh you might have a tennis ball, but if you were in the habit of losing your ball, a squashy thin rubber ball was all you could afford. They came in various colours; my favourite was royal blue. The only trouble with those balls, when we were playing near home, was that if dogs ran off with them, their teeth would pop them! The best ball was a sponge rubber ball, which was solid black right through. The pattern on the balls was lovely, with every colour of the rainbow forming a marbled effect. Once the ball was getting old you could pick the sponge off until you had no ball left.
We weren't allowed footballs in the playground but could play catching games with large rubber balls. Piggy in the Middle was a ball game for three or more. The one in the middle was the piggy and the other players would throw the ball to one another over piggy’s head until piggy caught the ball and the child who threw the ball became the pig.

Zombie Tag Guide: How to Play Zombie Tag


Zombies are all the rage these days. They are taking over television, the movies, and even proms with their cravings for the brains of normal humans.
Would you like to be a zombie too? Would you like to participate in a zombie apocalypse without actually having to taste any guts?
Then play a game of zombie tag. It is the perfect way to experience a zombie outbreak with the comfort of knowing the world as you know it isn't over.
Mold the rules of the game to match your group, the size of the play area, the time frame and so on. Small groups can play in the backyard. Large-scale games will need a bigger space.
The game is exciting with the added bennefit of being great cardio exercise. It will help get you in shape and will serve as a drill in case there is a real zombie emergency.
Zombies are chic right now, so hop on the zombie bandwagon. Keep reading to find out how to play zombie tag with kids, at Halloween, on campus, and even a large-scale game of tag with thousands of players.
The question is, will you survive the game?

How to play Hopscotch....CORRECTLY!


Hopscotch (Pronounced hop-sko-ch) has been played by children in the streets, schools an gardens for decades, however, most of the time, people jst throw the stone and hop. It seems that very few people know the actual RULES for hopscotch. This hub will not only show you how to play hopscotch, but will tell you about its history, give you tips to help you win, help you choose the perfect stone to play with and tell you what hopscotch can do for your health!

The History of Hopscotch

Hopscotch started in ancient Britain, during the early Roman Empire. Original hopscotch courts were used for military training and were over 100 feet long. Roman foot-soldiers would run the course in full armour and field packs to improve their footwork. Roman children then made smaller imitations, added a scoring system and so hopscotch was created.
Below is the old layout of the hopscotch court:

Larong Pinoy - The Filipino Games


Traditional Pinoy Games

I've always wanted to be a kid! I remembered the times me and my childhood friends sneak out of the house just to play on the streets."Larong pinoy" is a term forFilipino games, we often play outside the house most of the day and especially at night. We didn't notice how time flies until we realized we're getting older. Now I just can't help but reminisce those happy times we spent together. That is why I have written a couple of games I had played wayback my childhood life.