Yesterday I found a way to make a Mancala game at home. Here's a picture of the one I made. Can you find the "pit" with 3 Reese's Pieces Cereal instead of 4? I couldn't help it, I'm training for a 1/2 marathon and was starving after a run.
If you want to make your own, just cut up an old egg carton. Put 4 pieces of something (dried beans, marbles, legos, etc) in each hole. I used empty yogurt containers as my mancalas. Here are the rules:
- The Mancala 'board' is made up of two rows of six holes, or pits, each.
- Four pieces -- marbles or stones -- are placed in each of the 12 holes.
- Each player has a 'store' to the right side of the Mancala board.
- The game begins with one player picking up all of the pieces in any one of the holes on his side.
- Moving counter-clockwise, the player deposits one of the stones in each hole until the stones run out.
- If you run into your own store, deposit one piece in it. If you run into your opponent's store, skip it.
- If the last piece you drop is in your own store, you get a free turn.
- If the last piece you drop is in an empty hole on your side, you capture that piece and any pieces in the hole directly opposite.
- Always place all captured pieces in your store.
- The game ends when all six spaces on one side of the Mancala board are empty.
- The player who still has pieces on his side of the board when the game ends captures all of those pieces.
- Count all the pieces in each store. The winner is the player with the most pieces.
Did your child tell you about Leap Year? How old would a child who was born on February 29th be in Kindergarten?
2 comments:
The boys came home telling me all about Mancala. When I told them that their grandma loves to play it. They insisted on going over to grandma's house for a visit just so they can play with her.
I'm sure their Grandma loved playing with them! I always LOVED playing Solitaire, Canasta, Monopoly, and Rack-o with my grandparents.
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