This is a great way to encourage your residents to get creative! Not only will this provide social interaction, it’s also a great sensory experience and gives your residents a sense of accomplishment!
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This is a two-day activity (so paint can dry). It can be a great way for residents to get creative and make pots for their own windowsill herbs and succulents or to share with a loved one as a gift.
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How to clean used terracotta pots:
You’ll need a stiff brush and soft brush, white vinegar, and a large plastic container or sink.
How to clean new terracotta pots:
Instructions for Painting:
Here are some examples of designs:
With spring here, there are many things to observe in nature. This activity is designed to be relaxing and restorative for residents and can be done as a group activity, a self-guided activity, or a one-on-one activity.
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Your residents can express their creativity by making flowers that can be used as centerpieces to add color and liveliness to the dining room. This activity can also provide a sense of accomplishment and pride to the residents, as they see their creations being used and appreciated by others.
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When various fruits and vegetables become available during their season, you can use them to create a beneficial sensory experience for your memory care residents. Here are some ways to incorporate fruits and vegetables into an amazing sensory experience!
Sight
Touch
Hearing
Taste
Smell
Since it's springtime, the birds are chirping and flying around in search of food. Maybe you can create some bird feeders with your residents to encourage them to come visit your community!
This activity is both eco-friendly and fun, as residents can turn old milk cartons into functional bird feeders. The residents can decorate the cartons with colorful paints, stickers, and other materials to make them their own unique creations.
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Note: It can take birds a couple weeks to find the seeds, so don’t be disappointed if they don’t come right away.
If rainy spring weather has you down, bring your mood back up by creating an indoor craft garden that won’t require any maintenance! This project is perfect for residents who enjoy gardening but may not have the mobility or space to do so.
Using simple materials such as paper, scissors, and glue, residents can create a three-dimensional garden that includes a variety of different flowers.
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Tip: You can spray a gloss over all of them as a finishing touch and then put them on display in your community!
Bring that sunshine inside by making some paper sunflowers out of plates! The result is a lovely garden of vibrant sunflowers that can be displayed around the community.
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Brighten your residents’ day by inviting their grandchildren or kids from a local elementary school for an intergenerational program, making rainbows together!
Find a blank rainbow template online and print out or photocopy as many as you need so there’s one for each pair. Make sure to use thick paper. Encourage pairs to colour together with pencils or paint. Allow the artwork to dry and glue to a piece of cardboard slightly bigger than the rainbow. Glue cotton balls at the base of the rainbows to look like clouds. Hang them up so passerby can admire all the colours!
This is a fun theme to ring in Daylight Savings time as we head into warmer weather and more sunlight! Celebrate the unofficial start of spring by throwing a sun-inspired social!
Invitations and Decorations:
Make this event feel extra special by creating invitations to hand-deliver to residents. Consider using a sunshine notepad as the base of your invitation, using a marker to write in the details of the event. Or, design an invitation on your computer using sunshine clipart and an easy-to-read font.
To decorate your space, focus on the yellows and oranges of the sun. Try balloon bouquets as centrepieces and sunshine-inspired confetti for the tables. You can even use clear jars or vases of different sizes and fill them up with Lemonheads, yellow sprinkles, orange sprinkles, yellow and orange Starbursts, or other colourful candies.
What to Serve:
Keep the mood bright and shiny by having a lemonade bar. Include a few varieties of lemonade as well as mix-ins for the residents to use as they’d like.
For food, you can keep it simple with bright citrus wedges or kabobs; be sure to use more than just oranges. You can also incorporate grapefruit and blood oranges for a delicious complement to the oranges.
Work with dining to create a sunshine-inspired dessert bar that could include lemon bars, sunshine cupcakes, or even yellow macarons.