There
is something every child with even the tiniest backyard needs, and you’ve
probably never heard of it.
A few
years ago one of the boys received a play kitchen from their grandparents for a
birthday. With a rotating supply of tupperware, empty boxes, spice jars, egg
cartons and other food empties, the kitchen always provides some amusement
while I’m working in the real kitchen. The boys diligently mix imaginary soups,
cook eggs, wash dishes and serve up some pretty interesting dishes. However
they are not allowed to play with real food, water or anything else that would
create a serious mess.
One
day in the backyard they had again dug a giant hole in the turf to make mud
patties and I decided they needed a mud kitchen. Well, I didn’t know it was a
mud kitchen per se until I searched
the internet and found out that’s what it could be called: a station for beating
mud eggs, mixing grass soups, flipping wood chip pancakes and baking sand-leaf
muffins.
Once I
had designed a general plan it was a matter of finding the time to build it. We
had a large pallet and some scrap wood that we set aside for the frame, and we
dismantled a box that had been used to ship paintings for the top. I scavenged
garage sales for spoons, spatulas, an egg beater, a cheese grater, measuring
cups and spoons, sieves and brushes. After a trip to Habitat for Humanity’s ReStore
we were in possession of a sink, and a coworker donated a faucet. Then one
weekend we assembled the frame; the pallet provided the back, and we added a
few 2x4s to form a rough table-base, screwing scrap wood around the base to
stabilize it. The plywood tabletop was affixed last, after cutting a hole for
the sink.
The
mud kitchen saw some use in the next months, although we were awaiting the
grand finale to its construction – a tile counter. Partially for aesthetics,
partially to protect the surface from the elements, I wanted a durable and safe
work surface. When master-mosaic-layer vecmamma
Inga came to visit in August, we put her to work. She strategized with the
boys, using chalk to draw the basic designs and then following with tiles and
cement. After covering the entire surface she grouted the result, polishing the
tiles to get the desired look. Which was wow! and the realization that if we ever
move we’ll have to pack the mud kitchen. Not only have the boys’ Latvian folk
symbols been incorporated into the surface, but their drawings of people, cars,
mountains and circles decorate the table; it’s a work of art!
Roberts
paved a small area with bricks and placed the kitchen on top, to help keep it
level and to keep the area around
the boys’ feet from becoming… well, muddy. With hooks for the various kitchen
implements and a milk crate or two to store all their containers, it’s easy to
clean up. Every once in a while we pull the hose over to rinse it off, but the
boys don’t mind the leaves and pine needles that fall on top; if anything, they
get incorporated into that day’s cuisine.
Some
friends have suggested adding fittings to the faucet so that we could run the
hose directly to the sink, and a downspout under the sink for drainage, but we
tend to try and conserve water and I think the boys have enough fun as is. We’ll
pour a couple of pitchers for them to incorporate into their sauces and soups,
and that will usually last a while. An improvement I do hope to make is to
return to ReStore and buy a used cabinet. The shelves would make for better
storage, and I would fashion the surface into a “stove” of sorts, complete with
burners and knobs. Or maybe two cabinets, so they have an oven as well…
As
with any toy the boys will occasionally lose interest, but they always return
and spend a surprisingly large amount of time playing in and around their mud
kitchen. I don’t mind when the kitchen tools wander over to the sandbox or
picnic table, and we often find jugs of mysterious concoctions stored in the
playhouse or on the porch. Today Lauris had mixed up mud paint and was busy
painting his playhouse with the pastry brush, while Mikus sorted his little
treasures into a muffin tin. The kitchen is always a big hit when they have
friends over, and when playtime is finished we send them to the pool or rinse
them off with the hose. It’s a win/win situation; the boys can get creative
with little or no boundaries, and I get to keep the mess out of the house!
This
is a project that can be built to suit almost any budget and skill level. Our
most expensive additions were the sink ($10 used from ReStore) and the mosaic
top, but both of these could be omitted. Most people can find some extra
implements in the kitchen they aren’t using and keep a few plastic containers
out of the recycle bin to stock the shelves. For a more custom fit you could
spend a little more and not used scavenged lumber, but the beauty in this
project is that you don’t have to be an architect or in design – instead of building
the frame from scratch you could always use an old coffee table or cabinet (check out all the different kitchens people have come up with!). The
kids will love it just as much!
Now
that the days are cooling down we won’t be hosing off too often after our play
in the mud, but we’ll still be spending as much time as possible outside before
the cold really kicks in. You’ll find us collecting colorful leaves to use in
our next salad, harvesting pine cones for tea and picking weeds to put in our
casseroles... Maybe you’ll join us?
How awesome!!! Vecmamma did a gorgeous job!
ReplyDeleteIt was fun! It's great to see it situated semi-permanently and that it's being used!
ReplyDeleteThis is amazing, can't wait to play in it!
ReplyDeleteOh, the boys will cook up something, that's for sure ;)
Deletebookmarked!!, I love your website!
ReplyDelete