Our Tradition with Easter Baskets
Easter is only a few weeks away, and that means Easter baskets! We have a tradition in our home that we keep every Easter. It’s actually a tradition passed on from my childhood, and that is candy trails. Every Easter, Matt and I prepare four different candy trails, one for each of our kids. Each child lines up behind their starting point and follows their trail, picking up the candy along the way, until they reach the end of their trail. At the end of their trail, they find their Easter basket.
We’ve had lots of creative hiding places over the years—the trunk of the car, outside under the deck, inside a cabinet, in the dishwasher, in a closet, down in the basement, in the dryer, etc. It’s such a fun tradition and one the kids look forward to every year.
Kids’ Daily Journals
Each year, most of us feel the pressure of finding special things for our children’s Easter basket besides just candy. One of the things we recommend are our Kids’ Daily Journals.
The Kids’ Daily Journal is a tool to help your child learn to pray, read, and apply the Bible even at a young age. The Kids’ Daily Journal is perfect for ages 5 to 12 for both non-readers and readers.
Journal Features:
- Section for daily prayer: your child will have a chance to write down something they’re thankful for, something they’re confessing, and what they’re praying for
- Record daily Bible reading: your child will record what they read in the Bible
- Daily application: you child will draw a picture of what they learned and/or write a few sentences about what they learned.
- 6 months of journal entry pages
- Large spacing for young writers
- Creative drawing space for non-writers
- Designed for parent-guided journaling for the non-reader or self-guided journaling for the reader.
If you’re looking for a little something special to put in your kids’ baskets this year, be sure to check out our Kids’ Daily Journals!
What else to put in?
What else could go really well with a kids’ journal? You could add any of the products below and help your child build their own morning time basket.
- Bright colored pens
- A new Bible
- Highlighters
- A book
- Stickers
- Book marks
- Notecards
- Post-it notes
- Note cards
For More Encouragement
For more on this topic, check out my post, 12 Ways to Make Easter Special at Home. I wrote this post during Covid, but the ideas are still applicable.
You can also check out Matt’s book, Six Days to Sunday: Turn Setbacks into Comebacks.
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