Your Local Park and Recreation Guide

How does this save money?
It lets you test drive activities at a HUGE savings before you choose to invest in real ones. Example: Ballet. They have a ballet class that runs for a few weeks and is a LOT less expensive than a year at a local dance studio. You can let your kiddo try it out and, if after a few weeks, they don't like it - you haven't got a year long contract that is hundreds of dollars staring you in the face. Sarah LOVED dance last year and is at a real studio now. (Grammie is paying for it!)
Now that she is in school all day, Karate three times a week, Dance on Saturday, Daisies (girl scouts) and Sunday school, we are doing less and less. I think she is scheduled enough, LOL!
Perusing the fall guide, I see a few possibilities: Karate again for $28, there is a fairy fun class where they make fairy houses, etc that should be cute. Ice Skating lessons at the park across the street from us, A Turkey Time class for November and a Littlest Reindeer class for the holiday...everything is $10 or less!
This should nicely round our fall/winter when we add the fact that she is now in school 5 days a week, trips to the library, Park Crawl, the Holiday pageant at church and a few last minute garage sales.
If you want a few fun things to try, but it isn't in your budget, do what we did - tell family members that you would rather have the gift of activity for your child's birthday/the holidays. One set of grandparents was paying for Sarah's swimming lessons, one for the ballet, one for the tumbling. This helps prevent a chubby little girl, me tripping on a billion toys with small parts, a little person learning to be a part of a team and the concept of taking turns all while following directions. What a win-win situation!
Until next time - check out what your local community is offering. That $10 Tango lesson could make for a fun date night!
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