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Family Traditions Thanksgiving Feather Hunt

Family Traditions: The Thanksgiving Feather Hunt

By Guest Contributor

By Sarah James of Whoorl

Thanksgiving Day is the perfect holiday for relaxing, catching up with family members, watching football and stuffing your face. However, those of us SWEATING OUR TUSHES OFF while painstakingly preparing the meal might agree to differ.

There’s a lot of action going on in the kitchen, is all I’m sayin’. Now, most of the non-food preparers simply steer clear of the general vicinity, allowing ample space for the cooks to perfect their final touches, but what about the kids? For the under 6 set, I don’t think a 3-hour football game and/or discussion about current events is going to keep them remotely interested, and most importantly, out of the kitchen.

Enter the Thanksgiving Feather Hunt! Our family’s super fun way to keep the little ones occupied while some of us desperately try to perfect grandma’s gravy recipe.

What You’ll Need:

Sacks
Stickers
Stack of feathers
Ridiculous looking turkey headdresses (okay, that one isn’t mandatory)

Grab the sacks and stickers and let the kiddos decorate their own special feather-hunting bag. Here’s my son looking rather proud of his wonderful creation. (With said headdress.)

Decorated bag for Thanksgiving feather hunt

While the kids are busy decorating their sacks with stickers, have one of the lazy football fans get off his rump and hide the feathers around the house. When the feathers are properly hidden, let the little ones loose!

The Thanksgiving Feather Hunt

Are they excited or what?

The Thanksgiving Feather Hunt (children with Turkey headbands)

After they spend a good chunk of time searching for feathers while you cook, the kids can finish the hunt by finding for the perfect place to spotlight their bounty.

Decorated bag filled with feathers for Thanksgiving

Easy peasy, right? I’m thinking a paper snowflake hunt might be just around the corner for our Christmas dinner preparation.

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Sarah James writes about her daily life and family at her personal blog Whoorl.

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About the Author

Guest Contributor

We often publish pieces by guest contributors. If you’re interested in being one, please drop us a line at contact[at]alphamom[dot]com.

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We often publish pieces by guest contributors. If you’re interested in being one, please drop us a line at contact[at]alphamom[dot]com.

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