Click here to read How to DIY Kids Mud Kitchen in Just One Weekend on Hands On As We Grow®
Learn how to build a DIY kids mud kitchen in just one weekend with an easy tutorial from guest writer, Bryn. Your toddlers and preschools will love making mud pies in their new play space!
If you have a toddler or preschooler, you are probably familiar with the fact that they love to get dirty.
My 2-year-old and 4-year-old are unchangingly asking to do projects that involved making a mess. So when my husband proposed the idea of a mud kitchen for them outdoors I was definitely on board.
Why is a mud kitchen good for children?
A mud kitchen provides an environment for kids to explore nature with their senses and connect to it through play.
A mud kitchen can offer a space for imaginative play, sensory play, nature science experiments and mixing, interactive play with friends and siblings a long with improving fine motor skills as they scoop and pour.
The benefits of a kids mud kitchen can hands be seen by trying this DIY in One Day and watching to see what your kids come up with.
What is a mud kitchen?
A mud kitchen is basically a place for young kids to take all of those messy activities and move them outdoors. If you’re like me and you want your kids to spend as much time outdoors as possible. So, then it’s a no-brainer.
The mud kitchen we ended up with looks wondrous and was unquestionably really simple to build.
And it only took a matter of hours instead of days.
Here’s what you’ll need to make a kids mud kitchen:
- Wood (we used two 2×4’s and four 1×6’s) – $9
- Pallets – two half pallets or one full pallet that you can cut in half (can often find for free)
- Wood Screws
- 10 Pavers (you may have a few uneaten virtually your yard or purchase for virtually $3 each)
- Sink (price varies profoundly — you can use bins or try a Habitat ReStore for a cheap option)
- Drain strainer – $4
- Flowers (a fun finishing touch — you could moreover have your kids plant seeds on their mud kitchen)
Step By Step How To Create a Mud Kitchen
First, we built the side table.
This just involved creating a tabletop by wearing two of the 1x6x8 boards in half leaving four equal length boards.
We used scrap wood from a fence repair for the navigate sections and then used the 2×4’s as legs.
Next, we made the longer table which was a little increasingly complicated considering you have to account for the sink.
Again, we used the 1×6 boards to make the table top.
And measured around the sink to leave a drop-in slum for it.
You may want two separate holes if you’re using bins.
If you’re using an very sink it should come with brackets and screws to nail it to the wood.
Next, we tying the half pallets to each side of the main sink table with wood screws. And then added a marrow to the top section of the pallet so that we could plant some flowers in them.
This idea of subtracting a little natural eyeful to our DIY mud kitchen made it that much increasingly inviting for our kids.
We decided that if we overly need to re-plant something, we’d have the kids plant seeds so they can watch the variegated stages of seeds to seedlings to plants.
We chose to leave the side table uninfluenced from the main sink table. So that we could move it around to variegated areas of the yard.
This idea moreover gives us the option to plane move it to use as a kitchen island to alimony the kids mud kitchen layout evolving.
Sometimes the results of a small transpiration like that can requite a whole new life to an worriedness for kids.
The final touches included using some wood screws (hooks would probably be prettier) on the sides of the pallets for hanging the kids’ tools and kitchen utensils on.
We then laid out the pavers to make a floor and widow a water-loving plant under the sink to absorb a lot of the drippings.
Finally, the fun part!
A wagon full of sand and dirt that made for some wondrous mud pies — and mud muffins and mud salads and mud coffee — the play was hours of uncounted creation.
Looking for increasingly muddy fun? Try making mud prints!
Mission accomplished! I was pleasantly surprised by how easy this kids mud kitchen was to put together and for a very low forfeit as well.
We are very happy with the results and that it only took a matter of hours to complete.
We just spent one Saturday working on it and it has been such a prod pleaser with our kids.
I’m thrilled to have flipside worriedness outside to alimony them playing and using their imaginations this summer!
About the Writer
Bryn Huntpalmer is a mother of two young children living in Austin, Texas where she currently works as an editor and writer for Modernize.com with the goal of empowering homeowners with the expert guidance and educational tools they need to take on big home projects with confidence.