Ecuadorian games kids


















When played individually, the participant who jumps is the same as holding the rope. You can make competitions, such as who lasts longer by jumping. Jumping rope is not only fun, it also brings health benefits because it promotes the performance of physical activity.

The top is a round toy that ends in a point, usually made of metal, that allows it to turn. This toy is rolled up with a string and then thrown against the floor to make it spin or dance.

If you have enough skills, you can even make the spinning top into our hands. This consists of the participants getting into sacks of canvas and should jump to the goal, If they drop the sack, they will be disqualified.

The participant who reaches the goal first wins. Each participant will say a name belonging to the selected category. The player who fails to say a word, or repeats one that has already been said, will be disqualified. The game continues until only one participant remains. In this game, a leader hides an object somewhere in the place where they are playing; The other participants begin to look for the object while the leader gives clues about their location: it will say"cold"if they are far from the object; "Lukewarm", if they are approaching; And"hot"if they are very close.

The participant who manages to find the object will become the leader in the next round and so the game continues. In this traditional game, a stick of 10 or 15 meters is placed in the center of a square. The stick is covered in tallow, fat or butter. Subsequently, the participants should try to climb to the top of the club, where a flag is to be taken.

However, fat on the stick makes climbing difficult. To ascend, participants can only use their legs and arms, without using any additional object. With the arrival of the Spaniards to the territory of America during Century XVI, the game of the bad stick was introduced in the colonies.

This is a game in which participants are divided into two groups. Each of the groups is placed at the end of a rope and, at the count of three, begin to pull towards their side, so that the opposing team loses its balance and falls. Win the team that is managed to keep standing. This game promotes teamwork. In this game, the first participant sits on the floor and holds tightly to a pole.

The next participant sits behind the first and holds tightly to the back of the first; The other participants must do the same. You can also play standing. One of the players will be free and this should try to separate the others, peeling the layers of humans as if it were an onion.

In this game, one of the participants stands with his back to a wall. The next player places the head between the legs of the first player and five other players do the same, to be able to form the body of the donkey. The other participants should climb to the"burrito"avoiding not to fall. The game ends when all the participants are mounted on the donkey. However, if any of the children falls, the"riders"will become the"donkey". The hula hula, also called"ula ula", is a plastic ring that is placed at the waist in order to make it turn around the body of the player.

The participant who lasts longer without dropping the hula hula will be the winner. The person with more skill can pass the hula hoop from the waist to the neck, from the neck to the arms, and so on.

In some competitions, this ability to determine the winner is evaluated. This game is not exclusive of Ecuador, since some sources affirm that it has existed since BC; Similarly, in Ancient Greece, hula hula was used as a method for exercising and improving the health conditions of individuals.

The name"hula hula"comes from Hawaii. The name originated in the eighteenth century, when some explorers visited the island of Hawaii and saw the similarity between the movements of the hula dance and the movement that was made when the"hoop"was turned. In the s, hula hula were reinvented and started to be made in plastic, not in wood, so that the design was lighter. In a large group, a participant in charge of counting is chosen. This will cover the eyes and count from 1 to 20; Meanwhile, the other participants will seek a hiding place.

When the count reaches 20, he must say"ready or not, there I go"and, in this way, begins to look for hidden players. The first to be found will be in charge of counting in the next round. The game ends when all participants have been found. The person at the end with the reddest hand gets seven slaps from each person. The dealer has the deck of cards and everyone playing has a hand at the ready but not too close! The dealer, starting with ace and going up to king, counts off the numbers and he or she throws down the cards.

If he or she says a number and the card thrown down is the same number, everyone has to slap the deck. The last person to slap the deck had to take all the cards in the pile. The game ends when the dealer runs out of cards. The person with the most cards loses. This game will test your reflexes! I just learned this game last weekend. It is played with a pack of Spanish cards, holding forty cards, which is called a baraja. As opposed to many other card games, in Cuarenta the ace card has a low value.

The name of the game is derived from the deck of cards, as cuarenta means forty. Tantos and perros are the names of chips that are used to keep score, and each player or team needs to get forty points to win the game. The game begins with each player receiving five cards. If the dealer has dealt with an irregularity, such as the incorrect amount of cards, the opposing player is given ten points. The first five cards are stacked to one side face down.

Each deal gives the players five cards. The player or team on the right hand side of the dealer begins, so the game moves counterclockwise, and before the game commences, announcements are made, such as if they [a player] have three cards of the same rank. If a player has four cards of the same rank, they win the game automatically.

Each player then turns one card face up on the table, if it is their turn. These cards can be taken by the opposing team or player, and captured cards are then placed face down in front of the other player. Cards can be captured in various ways, and in Cuarenta, the Ace card only counts for one. A player is also able to capture all the cards, which is called a limpia.

However, the rules and way of scoring can change depending on the city in which the game is played. For instance, the game played in Quito is scored differently than that game played in Cuenca.



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