All opinions are always 100% honest and my own. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. I also participate in: CJ Affiliate; eBay Partner Network; Rakuten Affiliate Network; ShareASale; Walmart Affiliate Program; independent affiliate networks.

Loretta from Lansing, Michigan, writes:

Summer is here. I always think it will be a glorious golden event with “precious moments” and sweet dreams and lifelong memories and on and on, until I will never be able to measure up to my own expectations. Too often, the hot days end up with bored kids squabbling over the bean-bag chairs in the TV room, grouchy and idle, while I slog through the housework, too grumpy to try to pull any co-operation from the young ‘n's.

I don't want this summer to be like that.

We can't afford to travel or party in any of the usual traditional ways, so it isn't as if we can “go to the cabin” or the beach or “the” anywhere. I need to make memories for free. Please tell me something inspirational. Hurry. School is out next week.

Alison says:

Well, Loretta, I'm not sure that I can really address your situation. You see, I homeschool my five children and, since we “school” year-round, summer's just about the same as winter, which is just about the same as autumn, which is just about the same as spring in most respects.

Before anyone decides that we are cruel and unusual (OK, we are unusual), let me clarify. By “year-round” I mean that we don't have any kind of huge break in our studies. We do take off regularly (as best suits our family) to participate in diversions, vacations, respites, and the like. In mid-May, for example, we spent nine days in Oahu and we usually spend most of the days between Thanksgiving and New Year's Day in “alternative education” activities. Anyway, we don't have the usual “the kids are gone six hours a day 180 days a year and what do we do now that they are home” transition, but perhaps some of our diversionary activities will give you some ideas.

  • See local sites, attractions, landmarks
  • Study city/state history
  • Look for free city- or church-sponsored activities
  • Do secret services
  • Watch parades
  • Hike
  • Swim
  • Play in the sprinklers
  • Draw/paint/sculpt
  • Participate in library summer reading programs
  • Read poetry aloud
  • Form a day camp for your kids and their friends
  • Conduct a full-fledged camp-out in the back yard
  • Memorize a bunch of hymns, scriptures, Articles of Faith, or seminary scriptures (have your own little Vacation Bible School!)

There are so many resources to help you. There is a great book called Wild Days: Creating Discovery Journals by Karen Skidmore Rackliffe that sets out a plan for making nature journals. These are great fun, along with other nature activities such as pressing/drying flowers, collecting bugs, learning about local flora and fauna.

You can find all sorts of inexpensive crafts in Family Fun magazine.

Lisa Neubert had a great “sharing station” booth at Women's Conference in March titled, Summertime, and the Learnin' is Easy. Don't forget to ask other, more experienced moms in your ward/neighborhood!

Homeschooling books are a great source of information for fun, educational activities to do with your children. (But be careful that's why I checked out my first homeschooling books and now I'm starting my ninth year as a home educator!)

When I was young, my mother would give us a mini-schedule in the summers. It usually included something like: swimming lessons, one hour yard or housework, one hour reading, one hour piano/violin/trumpet/clarinet practice. Then, as long as our rooms were clean and dishes done, we were free to use the remaining time at our leisure. We also helped with early morning fruit/vegetable picking and summer canning.

My awesome, wonderful, incredible, older (no, that's not “incredibly older”) sister, Nora Hess, who is the mother of ten children, eight living, seven at home (ranging in age from 5-17), has devised a very clever summer schedule. Her mission was four-fold: keep the children busy until afternoon; avoid the resemblance of a “short-order cafe” in the kitchen; encourage a reasonable bed-time; keep abreast of academics. Here is her family action plan:

  • 7:15 Devotional
  • 7:30 Breakfast
  • 8:00 Dishes (everyone helps)
  • 8:15 Clean house
  • 9:00 P.E.
  • 10:00 Brain work
  • 12:00 Lunch & dishes
  • 1:00 Free time

“Brain work” includes reading, assigned schoolwork, and piano practice. The older boys will choose between: working to earn money; scouting; Duty to God; reading quality books chosen by mom. The older boys will also be coaching youth sports that they excel in, which include ultimate frisbee, racquetball, soccer, baseball, and basketball. Fridays will include swimming and field trips to museums, canyons, etc.

I'm sure that many of our readers are brimming with ideas. I am looking forward to lots of reader input to help us all make this summer a little more memorable than most!

Kathy says:

I learned, along with you, that TV watching almost always led to grumpy, squabbling kids. Happily, my mom was a go-get-'em frontier girl who had no patience for Hollywood nonsense and thought it was probably a punishable offense to put kids in a dark room with an eerily glowing gizmo that laughed at itself and seduced her kids into a coma.

I inherited her suspicion. I bought poster paint when I couldn't afford milk, and baked salt-dough sculptures when I didn't have vegetables for the table. My kids survived to work themselves through college, marry in the temple, and buy beautiful homes. Here's a list of the things I remember now as the most fun parts of our summers together:

  • Cutting monster rain-forest-sized bouquets of roses from our California garden and keeping our house full of them
  • Lying on a blanket in the back yard reading “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe”
  • Making real lemonade from our lemon tree, the most prolific producer I have ever seen
  • Swimming in my aunt's pool, returning via the drive-through dairy, buying a yogurt push-up for everyone and tucking the babies into their cribs for naps. They loved to crash in their beddies after a long swim, and the big kids liked having those quiet afternoons to play “big kid” games like ball, or to work puzzles without busy little hands patty-caking all the loose pieces onto the floor
  • Grinding wheat and baking bread every day
  • Singing from the same songbook my mom had used with us when we were little
  • Swimming lessons in the park and private swimming lessons with a cute newly-married Red Cross instructor in the ward, with a number of our best friends in both cases
  • Dancing with babies in my arms to the Wee Sing party tape
  • In Utah, traveling by bus to Trolley Square or the ZCMI center and the library with my tiny preschoolers and their umbrella strollers
  • If I were to offer advice from my crusty ol' granny perspective, I would say if you can only schedule one thing, make it a snuggle session. You can do it on any budget. It can be your scripture time, your prayer time, a music time, a story time or any other quiet time but that will have been the best-spent hour of your day and will give you better long-term results than anything you might add to your schedule.

Children are natural snugglers; you won't have to pay for lessons. No expensive equipment is required, and it works just as well if your car isn't running or is out of gas. You can honor this time commitment every day of the summer, and I promise you will be richer for it come fall than for any other activity.

And hey, don't forget you can always bundle the little ones off to grandma's house!

Jeannie says:

Our summers were so unique I'm not sure our experience will map over to families who had a more “normal” life, but I think there are some common elements that might work for everyone.

If Alison was the principal and only instructor for her homeschool, I ran a home hotel for my kids' American friends all summer. We had a ball and I would not trade our experience for anything; but boy, that was a toilsome time for us. I don't think most European kids expect to be structured and entertained in quite the same way American kids do. Many American moms administer elaborate programs including gymnastics, computer shops, scouting (of course), league ball for guys and girls alike (often conflicting with Sabbath observance in most cities), swim team, band camp, girls' camp, cheer camp, flag, dance, children's theatre, children's choir, private piano lessons, and throw in family reunions on both sides. (Gasp…gasp…need I go on?)

I love Nora's schedule. It is such a sensible balance between work and play, temporal, and spiritual growth. I love that it keeps everybody on a productive schedule rather than allowing the kids to veg on the couch till midnight and sleep till who knows when the following morning. I nominate her as our model mom for this week's “Answers.”

I would say, only, that travel and exposure to as many cultures as possible are great foci for summer. As an example, my boys think of ballet as an athletic discipline as well as a legitimate “manly” artistic expression. And an honest, if rigorous, way to earn a living. They do not snicker when they encounter a male ballet dancer. That is simply a matter of having grown up in a culture where this occupation is respected.

Travel and exposure to as many different ways of contributing to the diversity of the human family as possible are wonderful ways to soak up that welcome summer sunshine.

If you're in a college town, there will be something interesting going on, probably for free, virtually every night of the week. Even if you're in a tiny outpost, you can create the culture yourself and invite your kids' friends. It doesn't have to be a big deal. A little reading theatre or field trip to the fire station can be just as much fun as following the world-class programs offered by the big universities.

If you participate with initiative and enthusiasm, there is always something to learn and a way to be of service. The kids will also soak up their parents' values so have some fun and stretch your own wings a bit right along with the youngsters.

All grannies will tell you these days are precious and they pass far too quickly. I'll add my “amen.”

Alison Moore Smith is a 61-year-old entrepreneur who graduated from BYU in 1987. She has been (very happily) married to Samuel M. Smith for 40 years. They are parents of six incredible children and grandparents to two astounding grandsons. She is the author of The 7 Success Habits of Homeschoolers.