Scavenger Hunt Bingo

  

Turn a normal library trip into a treasure hunt adventure your kids will love using this free printable library scavenger hunt BINGO game. It’s official. Summer is here. The last bell has rung, and we are FREE until August. I have big plans for the summer…hopefully not too big. I’m trying to balance the desire to make it a summer of fun adventures with the reality that normal life STUFF has to happen, too.

Scavenger hunts Bingo Cards. Here you can find the printable bingo cards for 13 Bingo Cards we currently have available for lessons on scavenger hunts Bingo Cards.You may use them in your class, print them out, pass them around to fellow teachers, and link to this site. AllEars Scavenger Hunt Bingo Cards. DOWNLOAD THE CARDS HERE! WALKABLE SCAVENGER HUNT BINGO Cook or Eat Salmon The Cathlapotle townspeople were hunters, fishers, and gatherers. Fish such as salmon, sturgeon, eulachon, and minnows were caught with nets, spears and harpoons. But, salmon was the most important and prevalent resource. Once caught, salmon could be eaten fresh, smoked.

Scavenger Hunt Bingo

In my last post, I shared a free printable library scavenger hunt game to make summer trips to the library more fun. If you haven’t tried it yet, jump over to that post, print out the scavenger hunt cards, and head to the library today!

My boys have been digging this game during our last few trips to the library, and I’m happy to report that they have been much more actively involved in picking books because of it. Our favorite challenge card to date?

Indoor Scavenger Hunt Bingo

AllEars Scavenger Hunt Bingo Cards. DOWNLOAD THE CARDS HERE!

Bingo

Find the BIGGEST book you can! This week we found these two behemoth books that are full of gorgeous illustrations and tons of facts about animals. At first, we were going to look at them both in the library and pick which one we liked best to bring home, but my four-year-old couldn’t decide.

So I got to be the wonderfully indulgent mom who said, “Should we just bring both home?”

“Can we?!” he asked hopefully with wide eyes.

How great is it that I got mom points for allowing him to bring MORE learning and literacy into our home? WIN!

Bingo

And, since I can’t be stopped once I discover a good thing, I decided to add to our library challenge game…by turning it into BINGO!

We love BINGO games at our house. We have a summer bucket list BINGO as well as a Random Acts of Kindness BINGO that my boys have loved doing in the past. BINGO games have been a great motivation for my kids and an easy way to keep track of what we’re accomplishing. It seemed a perfect fit for this library scavenger hunt challenge!

How to play library scavenger hunt BINGO

Scavenger Hunt Bingo Pdf

You can use this printable library BINGO game in several ways:

  1. Use it in conjunction with the library scavenger hunt bookmark cards. As your kids draw cards and complete challenges, mark them off on the BINGO sheet (use stickers or color in the box to show the challenges you’ve done). You can keep this sheet in your library bag so you have it for every trip. Over the course of the summer, see if you can get BINGO (or even blackout!).
  2. Use it as a stand alone activity. Especially if you have older kids who need more of a challenge, see if they can get BINGO all in one trip to the library. Keep the board for your next library trip, though, and challenge them to get BINGO going in a different direction.

Note: There are 36 challenge cards in my previous post, but only 25 BINGO squares, so some of the challenges didn’t make it onto the BINGO version. You may want to pull out the not-included cards if you think your children will mutiny if they don’t get to put a sticker on a box (I have one child that certainly WOULD launch a coup).

That’s it! I’d love to see pictures of the books your find this summer. Use the hashtag #summerlibraryscavengerhunt and tag me @meg_themanylittlejoyson Instagram.

Let’s make it a great summer of reading!

Hunt

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This page contains links to a a variety of scavenger hunt sheets to help make your visit fun. Some are specific to Heckrodt’s Nature Center, but some of them can be used at other outdoor sites. Others are generic and are intended for use anywhere. Feel free to download and print any of them for your own use by clicking on the links below.

Designed for use at Heckrodt Nature Center

Tree Identification Walk
(corresponds to numbered tags along HWR trails)

Sensory Scavenger Hunt
(May also be used elsewhere)

HWR Outdoor Sensory Scavenger Hunt
(May also be used elsewhere)

HWR Winter Tracks Sheet
(May also be used elsewhere)

Advanced Winter Scavenger Hunt
(May also be used elsewhere)

Discover Wetland Scavenger Hunt
(May also be used elsewhere)

HWR Magnificient Miniatures Soil Scavenger Hunt
(soil critter section may also be used elsewhere)

Newly Added Scavenger Hunts:

Designed To Use Anywhere

Clean Up scavenger Hunt
(Designed for Tiger Cub Scout Elective 33)