Colombian kids’ games
Most of us recall the yard games that characterized our lives. We go over a gathering of children charmed in a similar hobby. In some way or another, these games always live on, delighted in by each age. Here is a portion of the customary games in Colombia. Also Read: Penguin Coloring Pages
Conventional games in Colombia
Oba: the objective of this conventional Colombian game is to duplicate the player’s activity before you and catch the ball. A player tosses the ball against the divider and plays out an activity of some kind (applauding, hopping, turning, moving, frowning, venturing back, venturing forward, hands up, and so on), then, at that point, gets the ball. Different players alternate rehashing a similar activity and getting the ball.
Rayuela: The game’s item is to be quick to finish every one of the 8 levels. Use chalk to draw the game on the floor. The principal player tosses the stone inside square 1. The player hops in each square, up to squares 7 and 8, pivots, and returns. On the off chance that there is a space, you bounce on one foot. Assuming two squares are straightaway, you bounce and land with one foot in each square.
It might be ideal assuming you avoided the square where the stone is. The player proceeds to a higher level by tossing the stone in squares 2, 3, etc., until square 8. The player has completed his turn if he puts his foot or feet on the lines of a square, involves some unacceptable number of feet in a square, falls or tosses the stone, and misses the square he was holding back nothing.
Cinco Huecos: On soil canvassed town roads or in towns with openings in the ground. Five players make four openings all around and one in the middle, then, at that point, resign to a distance of around two meters. Players attempt to toss coins into the openings and whoever has tossed the most into the openings toward the end dominates the match. Notwithstanding, on the off chance that individual tosses each of the five coins into the central opening immediately, they win.
Fuchi: Fuchi is a famous free-form sport in which youngsters utilize their feet to perform stunts with a little calfskin or engineered fiber ball without allowing it to contact the ground. Kids throw the ball from one foot to the next, performing mind-boggling stunts. While numerous kids can rehearse their stunts alone, others get together and challenge each other to a round of fuchi.
Fundamental standards: Fuchi (the footbag ball) can’t contact the ground during a stunt. Have a great time and be imaginative! There isn’t a champ for fuchi free-form. Players can decide a champ because of who played out the best deceives with the ball at their feet!
Stop: This game can be played with at least two players and starts with one player quietly discussing the letter set in their mind. After a tandem of moments, another party shouts. The player who arrives at the foreordained number of focuses before the beginning of the game dominates the match.
Tango, tango, tango: in this game, the players stand all around, and an assigned player arises. This player should cover their eyes, move a specific separation away from the circle, and rehash.
Old mother: one of Colombia’s most outstanding conventional games to release pressure for kids aged 6 to 10. Two safe zones ought to be situated on inverse sides. One player remains in the playing region while different players are set aside. At the point when the player in the middle yells “old mom,” the youngsters should hurry to the contrary side.