The universal appeal of mud was demonstrated within the first few hours of setting up our loose parts playground and opening up the garden space; children got stuck in straightaway, making trenches, digging holes, bashing in posts and, once our mud kitchen was established, making all manner of muddy culinary delights. And the enthusiasm certainly hasn’t waned. Every lunch and break time the ‘loose parts garden’, as it is now termed, buzzes with activity as children across the grade levels happily play together. One of the observable wonders is how their play evolves over time and projects take new shapes and directions.
One such project is 'The Mud Racetrack' which has developed from a digging a simple hole to carving out ‘irrigation’ trenches to creating a complex raised racetrack for remote control cars. There are so many aspects to this project which are fantastic - the teamwork of the large group involved, the ingenuity and authentic problem-solving and the perseverance. But is the raw enthusiasm and joy which makes me so incredibly happy, as this was exactly the kind of project I’d hoped to see come about when initiating the loose parts playground.