10 Things ’70s Kids Found That Became an Entire Afternoon
Kids growing up in the 1970s didn’t always need toys, tickets, or a scheduled activity to stay busy. Sometimes the only requirement for an unforgettable afternoon was finding something interesting before anyone else did.
A discarded box could become a fort. A pile of dirt could become a mountain. An ordinary object could keep half the neighborhood occupied until dinner, largely because kids had the freedom and boredom necessary to invent something to do with it. Here are 10 things ’70s kids could find and somehow turn into an entire afternoon.

10. A Giant Cardboard Box
An empty appliance box was almost never just trash.
It could become a fort, spaceship, clubhouse, store, tunnel, or something to roll down a hill inside. By the time the cardboard finally collapsed, it had usually lived several completely different lives.

9. A Long Piece of Rope
A rope immediately created possibilities.
Kids used it for tug-of-war, jump rope, homemade swings, obstacle courses, and games invented five minutes earlier. If there was a sturdy tree nearby, the afternoon practically planned itself.

8. A Pile of Dirt
To an adult, it was probably waiting to be spread across a yard or construction site.
To kids, it was a mountain. They dug tunnels, built roads for toy cars, staged battles, and climbed to the top of a mound that was perhaps four feet high but felt enormous.

7. A Shopping Cart
An abandoned shopping cart was transportation, playground equipment, and a terrible idea all at once.
One kid climbed inside while another pushed, usually with increasing speed and very little discussion of how the ride would end. Add a hill, and the afternoon suddenly became much more exciting.

6. A Sprinkler
On a hot day, one running sprinkler could attract every kid within shouting distance.
Children jumped over the spray, ran through it fully dressed, invented games, and argued about who was blocking the water. No pool was necessary.

5. A Fallen Tree
A fallen tree was nature’s playground equipment.
It became a balance beam, fort, meeting place, climbing structure, or imaginary ship. Kids could spend hours exploring the same few branches as though they had discovered an uncharted wilderness.

4. A Stack of Old Newspapers
Yesterday’s news could become today’s raw material.
Kids folded paper hats and airplanes, cut out pictures, made collages, built paper routes through the house, or rolled newspapers into objects that inevitably became part of some new game.

3. A Discarded Tire
An old tire had far more potential before adults started worrying about what was living inside it.
Kids rolled it down hills, turned it into a swing, climbed through it, or tried to sit inside while someone else pushed. The fact that it was dirty only seemed to make it better.

2. A Big Hill
A good hill didn’t need snow to become entertainment.
Kids raced bicycles down it, rolled down it, ran up it, slid on cardboard, and tested increasingly questionable objects to see whether they could be ridden to the bottom. Gravity supplied the activity.

1. Something Nobody Could Identify
The greatest childhood discovery was an object no one completely understood.
A strange machine part, abandoned piece of furniture, mysterious tool, or unidentifiable piece of junk could inspire hours of speculation. Kids invented stories about where it came from, decided what it could become, and built an entire afternoon around a mystery that probably had a very boring explanation.
Read More:
- If You Grew Up in the ’70s, These 30 Things Will Hit Home
- 10 Things Every Kid Carried in the 1980s
- 11 Vintage Backyard Games That Need a Comeback
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This article originally appeared on Resourcebuzz and was syndicated by MediaFeed.co.
