You want your backyard to be a safe and inviting place for your children to play, but you can’t afford to build a playground back there. Go with a few basics and let nature take care of the rest.
Children need to play, but not necessarily organized, store bought games. Children need to explore, pretend and feel. They need the freedom of making their own rules instead of following the instructions on the box. They need to experience the wonder of discovery.
Have you ever seen a little boy who could not walk past a stick without picking it up? I saw a couple at the park the other day. Those sticks could be swords one day, guns another and yet another day they will be the walking stick they take with them while they explore the “mountains” that they imagine in the bushes.
Resist the urge to get that fancy expensive swing set that is shaped like a pirate ship, or whatever your child’s interests are this week. Instead, get a basic swinging and climbing set that will allow their imaginations take over. Then, allow them to climb up the slide. They are undoubtedly imagining that they are climbing a mountain, scaling the walls of a castle, escaping from sharks, or any other of a number of creative play scenarios.
Provide a place to dig and build. They are going to do it either way; you may as well let them know where you want them to do it. Otherwise, they’ll dig a hole in the middle of the lawn.
What you choose to provide can be as simple as a patch of dirt in the corner of the yard or as complicated as a wooden sandbox frame that raises and lowers the lid by a hand cranked pulley system. (I’ve seen that bad boy, it is a beauty.) Others, however, just have the dirt patch, though and it works fine. If you have issues with neighborhood cats, you might want to spend a little money here. The plastic animal shaped sandboxes with a lid will do the trick. Don’t be too disappointed though if they dig in the lawn anyway. Just try to confine them to that back corner.
Make sure you have some nature to explore. Bushes along the fence line or close to the house will do. There will be some insects in there ready to be discovered. The bushes will also create great hiding places that call out to be explored. A tree for climbing would be enthusiastically appreciated, but those are hard to install over a weekend.
With an environment like that to explore, a child can thrive and grow without having put a strain on the family budget. If you’d like to put in some activities for the family to do together, you might try one of those portable outdoor basketball hoops, and a bucket of balls and Frisbees. Just imagining a family outside on a late summer evening shooting a few hoops together or throwing a ball around makes you feel peaceful inside. Just make sure the little one hasn’t found a stick.
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Preasure treated lumber in the USA does NOT contain arsnec any more. It has been several years since any treated lumber you could buy contained arsnic.
If you buy newly treaded lumber for your sand box it will last for years and years. On the other hand if you only need the sand box to last say 3 to 5 years then regular pine should be sufficent. It will start to rot at the end of that time period unless you keep it painted etc.
For the cost you might just consider pine/fur/spruce and prime and paint it before you install it. It should last for several years.
I would dig the dirt out for several inches down to add depth to your sand box. You could put down a layer of plastic, but your children will dig through it sooner or later. Better they just learn to stop at the dirt. The bigger the sand box the more sand you need to don’t go too big unless you can have a truck drop off a load of sand (it is way cheaper this way too).
Also to cut down on lumber costs you could drive a 2 x 4 into the ground for your corners and use 1 x stock instrad of 2 x stock. Then you just atach the 1 xs to the 2 x 4s with screws and you have a frame.