18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (2024)

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My kids have always loved St. Patrick's Day. It all started 9 years ago when my mom stole into our house in secret to make messes and leave little green treats while we were at story hour at the library. She did that every year for quite a while, often culminating in a green donut and Shamrock shake.

The year she was dying from pancreatic cancer, she fell in the garage trying to make it happen. It was that important to her.

Even though my mom is gone (and has been for almost five years), we still carry on the Lucky the Leprechaun tradition though to a lesser degree. It's trickier when you're the one taking the kids out of the house.

Anyway, it is still possible and makes the holiday fun for the kids.

In any case, you will need a large bottle of green food coloring. Those little squirt bottles that come in the multi-color package will not do.

This is part 2 of my original 10 St. Patrick's Day Ideas for Kids post from 2011, so get the first 10 simple ideas from that post.

14 More St. Patrick’s Day Activities for Kids

  1. Leave evidence of Lucky.My favorite place to leave this evidence is in the toilet. Make the water really, really green. I have seen people paint little green foot prints on the toilet seat, but I don't want a green arse, so I don't do that. You can also dye the cat or dog's water (he won't mind) and definitely go for magic milk and other drinks as specified in the other post.
  2. Challenge your kids to make a leprechaun trap. Let them use their imaginations and be as creative as possible. Put in some bait - maybe chocolate coins or Lucky Charms cereal, and rig something up with a cup to trap him inside. Here's a great post full of examples of leprechaun traps to show them for some inspiration.
    18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (2)Pin
  3. Play Minute to Win It. We played Minute to Win It for Valentine's Day, and it was the best fun we've had in a long, long time. We liked it so much that I wrote out a whole post on St. Patrick's Day Minute to Win It ideas. (PS. This is my favorite item out of the whole list!)
    18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (3)Pin
  4. Make rainbow pancakes. These pancakes are really simple to make, and they have rainbow colored Fruity Pebbles in them which makes them perfect for St. Patrick's Day. They taste great, and your kids will love all the colors.
  5. 18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (4)Pin
    Make green pancakes. This is a fun and easy recipe that is really impressive! It's easier than Fruity Pebbles pancakes.
    18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (5)Pin
  6. Make a rainbow cake. This super fun cake includes rainbow-colored cereal in the batter which makes it perfect for St. Patrick's Day. We decorated ours with extra Fruity Pebbles for an added punch of color.
  7. Make green slime. Oh how I hate slime. It is all over my house and has gotten all over my towels, blankets, and the couch which we just threw out yesterday. But, if your kids are responsible with it or you throw it away in secret in a day or two, you could easily make some because it is a great science lesson and kids absolutely love it. Click the link for an article on the science of slime.
  8. 18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (6)Pin
    Make a rainbow paper chain craft. I think these are super cute, and they would be a very easy craft for even the littlest of kids.
  9. 18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (7)Pin
    Make a leprechaun mask and take silly pictures.
    Another really easy craft that would have great results. And my kids absolutely love to take pictures, so I know they would be ecstatic to have a leprechaun photo booth at home.
  10. 18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (8)Pin
    Make a rainbow out of Fruit Loops or buttons.
    I love button crafts, so I would personally give my kids rainbow buttons and have them do it that way, but Fruit Loops would certainly be better for younger kids.
  11. 18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (9)Pin
    Challenge your kids to make a Lego leprechaun house.
    I think this is genius. My kids are Lego fanatics, so I know they will love to make one of these. My only hesitation is that we might not have enough green Lego, but I know they will figure something out.
  12. 18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (10)Pin
    Make leprechaun donuts. These donuts are adorable and perfect for a leprechaun trap (instructions on how to build one in the post I linked). They're made from Cheerios (genius again) and candy melts from the craft store. I love them!
  13. Read some St. Patrick's Day books.That's a link to my 37 St. Patrick's Day favorites. Don't miss Jamie O'Rourke!
  14. 18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (11)Pin
    Play musical shamrocks. I know this is intended for preschool kids, but with a few modifications, I am certain that my much-older kiddos would love it.
  15. 18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (12)Pin
    Make homemade shamrock shakes. Grace loves these, and this recipe makes them so easy to make at home!
    18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (13)Pin
  16. Make green ice cream. Nothing says St. Patrick's Day like green food, and green ice cream makes the grade every single time. This particular recipe is easy to make because it's no churn (i.e. no ice cream machine needed!), and the flavor is perfect.
  17. 18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (14)Pin
    Make rainbow fruit parfaits. These are gorgeous and healthy, too! Even my picky eaters would love them.
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    Send them on a green scavenger hunt. My kids are gaga over scavenger hunts, so much so that I send them on one for every holiday - Christmas (big kids and little kids), Easter, Valentine's Day, and so on. This will be a great addition to your holiday line up.
  19. 18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (16)Pin
    Grow a lucky four leaf clover plant (called oxalis). My mom had a purple oxalis all the time I was growing up, and I loved it. I thought it was so interesting and pretty. She had a three-leaf variety. I ordered a four-leaf variety last week, and I'm currently waiting for them to grow. They're quite an easy houseplant to care for, requiring bright light and weekly watering. The reviews of this grower on Amazon are good, so I think they are going to be good. Planting some oxalis would be a great opportunity to talk to your kids about shamrocks and St. Patrick (find some background at the top of this post).
  20. 18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (17)Pin
    Make leprechaun play dough. This recipe looks easy enough and is sure to delight any dough fans, like my Allie who still adores Play-Doh.
  21. 18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (18)Pin
    Have a green food taste test. I think this is a great idea, although I don't know how it would go over with my extreme picky eaters. It's worth a try if it makes them at least attempt one new food, I guess.
    18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (19)Pin
  22. Read St. Patrick's Day books. There are dozens of really good books for kids on the history of St. Patrick's Day as well as legends and myths associated with shamrocks and leprechauns. Check a few out and read them with your kids this week.

St. Patrick's Day gets a bad rap in my opinion. It's frequently associated with green beer and drunken debauchery, but it can be a really fun and wholesome excuse to spend some family time together and celebrate the coming of Christianity to a whole nation. Try a few of these fun family traditions on this year and see how it goes.

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18 Fun St. Patrick's Day Traditions to Start with Your Kids (2024)

FAQs

What is the tradition for St. Patrick's day? ›

Corned beef and cabbage is a traditional Irish-American meal. Another tradition includes many Irish-American people in the United States eating corned beef and cabbage on St. Patrick's Day. People also gather to watch parades of traditional Irish dancers and musicians as they march through city streets.

What is St. Patrick's day for dummies? ›

Every March 17th, thousands of people don their greenest garb, march in Irish pride parades, eat green clover-shaped cookies, and quaff frosty mugs of green beer in celebration of the Catholic Saint, St. Patrick's Day.

What color did Saint Patrick wear? ›

Early depictions of St. Patrick show him wearing blue, and the official color of the Order of St. Patrick, part of Ireland's chivalry, was a sky blue known as “St.

What is St. Patrick's day real name? ›

His real name was not Patrick

Patrick's original name was Maewyn Succat and he was born to Christian parents in Roman Britain. His father was a deacon and his grandfather, a priest. But St. Patrick (according to his own account) was not religious as a child.

How to explain St. Patrick's Day to preschoolers? ›

It is a day to celebrate the St Patrick, believed to have brought Christianity to Ireland, and banished snakes from the country. People typically dress up in green and participate in parades. Corned beef and cabbage are associated with the holiday, and even beer is sometimes dyed green to celebrate the day.

What is a good St. Patrick's Day saying? ›

"May the luck of the Irish enfold you. May the blessings of Saint Patrick behold you." "Bless your little Irish heart and every other Irish part." "May luck be your friend in whatever you do, and may trouble be always a stranger to you."

What is St. Patrick's Day most known for? ›

Patrick's Day observes of the death of St. Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland. The holiday has evolved into a celebration of Irish culture with parades, special foods, music, dancing, drinking and a whole lot of green.

What is the leprechaun supposed to leave kids? ›

Leprechaun traps can also be run as a school project, where kindergarten and first grade pupils construct traps at school and arrive on St Patrick's Day to find that the leprechaun has "sprung" them but escaped, leaving behind chocolate coins and glitter.

How to make a leprechaun trap? ›

Harli's Honeys: Lay down a sheet of rainbow-striped paper for leprechauns to follow, then let the kids decorate the sides of a box covered in green paper. Prop it up with a wooden skewer cut in half. When a leprechaun comes to steal your pot of gold, the box will fall, trapping him inside.

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