[For Seniors] Fun Spring Recreational Activities: A Collection of Games and Play Ideas
Spring brings more warm days, with cherry blossoms blooming and trees putting on fresh green leaves—it’s the kind of season that makes you want to go out.
In this article, we introduce fun spring activities and games for older adults.
Daycare centers and senior facilities also offer more spring-themed recreation, don’t they? Even without going outside, there are plenty of activities and recreational games you can enjoy indoors while sitting, basking in the gentle spring sunlight.
Try enjoying spring in various ways.
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[For Seniors] Fun Spring Recreational Activities: Collection of Games and Play (141–150)
Popcorn Game

Even if you know that moving your body is good for your health, you might still feel reluctant to get active.
So here’s a fun popcorn game that lets you exercise your feet while enjoying yourself.
Sit in a chair and place paper plates on both knees.
Fill the plates with lots of crumpled-up paper balls.
Think of the paper plates as frying pans and the crumpled paper as popcorn for the game.
When someone says, “Ready, start!”, flutter your legs and march your feet to shake the paper popcorn out of the plates.
Watching the crumpled paper fall from the plates looks just like popcorn popping in a heated frying pan.
Because it’s an exercise you can do like a game, it seems like older adults can enjoy participating too.
mayonnaise

Even if seasonings differ in taste and texture depending on the type, the containers they come in are often similar.
This is a high-difficulty challenge: can you identify mayonnaise—one of those seasonings—using only the feel of its container? The main difference is the shape of the nozzle, so someone who can recognize that by touch might arrive at the right answer.
The premise of “seasoning” is already a big hint, and adding clues like flavor and color would likely help more people figure it out.
Balloon volleyball with newspaper-stick bats

Balloon volleyball played using rolled-up newspaper sticks lets you reach farther with the tool, while also challenging more delicate control of force.
It’s also important to treat the table like a volleyball court: set up a proper net in the middle so you can enjoy the volleyball atmosphere.
The higher the net, the more it encourages players to hit the balloon upward, which naturally directs their gaze up and can help improve posture.
Rather than focusing on winning, encouraging players to keep the rally going will likely help them enjoy it for longer.
Exercises related to spring

Did you know that people with declining cognitive function often show signs such as lower leg muscle mass, fewer red blood cells, and reduced agility? This time, we’ll introduce exercises with a spring-themed twist that can help address these issues.
The flutter-and-stop hand movement trains agility, and the leg-raising movement strengthens everything from the legs to the abdominal muscles.
Using onomatopoeia—like “pika-pika” (sparkling) for a shiny entrance ceremony and “goku-goku” (gulping) for cherry-blossom viewing—stimulates brain activity, and expressing them with the body adds exercise benefits.
The content is bound to make you chuckle whether you do it or watch it, making it perfect for recreational activities in senior care facilities.
Let’s change one character with a spring-themed prompt.

It’s a game where you change just one character in a word written in hiragana to make a different word, and see how far you can keep the chain going.
If you limit the category of words you can use, the difficulty becomes too high, so starting with words that evoke spring is recommended.
Since the flow involves searching your memory for words that fit, it really tests how many words you know and how well you can retrieve them.
The difficulty also changes depending on the starting word’s length, so try various patterns to train your brain.
An evolved word-association game with a spring theme

This is a variation on a word-association game where you throw out a theme word and have participants think of words that fit the condition.
Write two blocks on the board—adjectives like “cute” or “round,” and nouns like “animals” or “vegetables”—and have them quickly come up with combinations of the two.
Setting a rule like “things related to spring” makes it easier to form images from scenery, so that kind of tweak is recommended.
Since participants must think of combinations instantly after they’re specified, it should effectively stimulate the brain.
Spring Flower Quiz 2

Spring is the season when it gets warmer and animals and plants become more active, and there are flowers you often see around this time.
This is a quiz that tests how many spring-blooming plants you know by having you identify their names from photos.
Even for flowers you always see in that season, there may be some whose names you’ve never really paid attention to.
In such cases, use hints—like fill-in-the-blank names—to think them through carefully and turn it into an opportunity to gain new knowledge.



