Contestants have to fly their plane through the hoop to win a prize. Stand an upturned flowerpot on a tray of marbles. Contestants have to use a teaspoon to pick up the marbles and put them through the hole in the flowerpot's bottom. Hide all the marbles in a certain time to win a prize. Alternatively how many can you hide before a buzzer electric egg timer sounds etc. Have a tray with a large ceramic flower pot upturned in it. It needs a hole in the base just big enough to let a normal sized marble drop through it.
Have a large bowl of different sized marbles to the side, with a spoon. The number of marbles in the pot is counted and noted. At end of event the person who scores most wins. This is very similar to the marble game above but is a neat variation. The spoon is securely attached to a piece of cane. The stallholder had a number of different sizes for kids of different ages. Gooseberries are then spooned in to the top of the flower pot. This is another simple fundraiser that is very easy to organise.
Contestants have to balance a coin on top of a floating lemon for a count of five seconds. Whatever coin they use they win 5 times the amount. Try it at home - its not as easy as it looks!
Ok so this isn't such a simple fundraiser to start, but once you have built your wheel of fortune you can use it in all sorts of different ways at all sorts of fundraising events. Tombola is a game of chance, where customers pay for raffle tickets and win a prize for tickets ending in a certain number, normally ones and fives.
The event has a history going back 40 years, and is very popular locally. One year, we held snail races with garden snails, releasing them back into the field at the end of the day. Another time, a local archery club came and showed people how to fire a longbow. Toggle navigation. Read more.
Subscribe here to receive British Heritage Travel's print magazine! Sign up to British Heritage Travel's daily newsletter here! Stilton, Cambridgeshire, UK. Group of people playing traditional Easter games at Palaicholi village in Cyprus.
Members of Kyrgyzstan's Federation Salburuun traditional hunting group pose for photos on the shore of Lake Issyk-Kol near the village of Ton. The egg throwing and catching event is popular but messy game. Fun and games at the annual village fair and horticultural show at Damerham, Hampshire, UK. On behalf of Felpham Village Conservation Society. Families having an afternoon of fun with traditional fete games and music. Credit: Stuart C. West Sussex, UK.
Guests at the traditional Highland games which dates back to the 19th Century, included former Monty Python star Eric Idle. Scottish comedy legend Billy Connolly mixes with locals at the Lonach Gathering, in the village of Strathdon, Aberdeenshire. Drum Major Brian Jamieson at the annual Tomintoul Highland games and gathering held on the 3rd Saturday in July, at the showground in the village. Scottish marching band in Tomintoul, Scotland, UK.
Pig Dyke Molly entertain the crowds. Teddy tombola - is exactly the same as a bottle tombola but with teddies! Treasure hunt - layout a mini treasure island and get children to buy a flag 20p and put it where the think the treasure might be buried - winner gets a prize. The Big Balloon Burst — Firstly you need to hunt out some opaque balloons — cheap see-through ones will not do!
Squirt a little bit of shaving foam and a laminated raffle ticket in before inflating. Attach inflated balloons to a backboard and the participant then bursts a balloon, they win the prize that number corresponds to.
Messy and fun! The odd sock game — Donated clean socks are picked by the player off the washing line. Inside the sock there is a small prize i. The stocks — Well these have been around since medieval times, and are particularly popular with kids using a teacher as the victim! Hire the stocks, buckets and sponges, rope in a teacher or two and off you go. Send your ideas to us to share with the world!
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