Year: 2011

Make and Play Mancala

Mancala is an ancient family of board games, and there are numerous variants. This is a version of the basic game, known as two-rank Mancala and also known as Kalah.

Difficulty: Average

Time Required: 15 minutes

Here’s How:
The Mancala ‘board’ is made up of two rows of six holes, or pits, each. If you don’t have a Mancala board handy, an empty egg carton is perfect.
Four pieces — marbles or stones — are placed in each of the 12 holes. The color of the pieces is irrelevant.
Each player has a ‘store’ to the right side of the Mancala board. Cereal bowls work well. for this purpose.

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.

Tips:
Planning ahead is essential to victory in board games like Mancala. Try to plan two or three moves into the future.

What You Need:
Mancala board: egg carton, scissors, tape, optional: markers to decorate
48 markers: beans, marbles, pebbles, coins, etc.

Spring Flower Origami

 

Origami Flower

 

 
1. Start with a square piece of paper, white side up. Fold the paper in half, crease well and open, and then fold again in the other direction.
2. Turn the paper over to the coloured side. Fold the paper in half, crease well and open, and then fold again in the other direction. Your creases should look like this.
 

 

   
3. Using the creases you have made, Bring the top 3 corners of the model down to the bottom corner. Flatten model.
   

 

4. Fold toward centre line and unfold.
5. Using the crease you have just made, open and flatten this flap.
6. Repeat step 4 and 5 on the other 3 flaps of the model.

 

7. ‘Turn the page’ of the front and back flaps; so your model looks like this.
8. Lift the top layer up, folding along the crease shown.
9. Now repeat step 8 on the remaining 3 flaps, so the model now looks like this.

 

10. Turn over and make sure there are equal pleats behind each side of model.
11. Pinch these two creases through all layers.
12. Now pinch the narrow end to make the edges meet behind the model.

 

 
13. Holding the narrow point of the model very loosely, pull the outermost petals toward each other until they meet.
14. Now form the petals by pinching the ends, and slightly folding back these tips. Finished Flower.
 

Follow this link for a printable version and instructions for other cool origami projects:
http://www.origami-fun.com/origami-flower.html