Healthy snack for post kindergarten baseball game?

Anonymous
My 13 Y/Old DD's soccer team still does a snack. So annoying.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My 13 Y/Old DD's soccer team still does a snack. So annoying.


75% of the parents are probably just hoping someone will step up and try to stop it. Do it! Do it for the people!
Anonymous
How about that beef jerky that comes shredded in a can so it looks like chewing tobacco?
Anonymous
What age?

By second grade it gets easy (if they are still doing snacks).

Things like prepackaged chip assortments, oreos, cheese sticks, mandatin oranges (Peels still on please! No one wants food that your hands were all over.), cheetos...al very popular. Think treats vs meal foods.
Anonymous
Cupcakes with varying shades of neon frosting. The brighter the better!
Anonymous
Stop. Signing. Up. All of the other parents on the team will appreciate a week without snacks.
Anonymous
My kindergartener would not get home without a meltdown if he didn't refuel after a sports game. So if you are signed up for snack and aren't planning to bring one, please let me know in advance so I can pack a PB&J.

Bananas are always great. Mini bags of pretzels. Cheese sticks. Crackers.
Anonymous
Bananas or oranges and a cheese stick are perfect. My kids like sliced apples too. The girl that does the youth sports at our local YMCA is kind of fanatical about this. She will not let parents bring cheetos or juice for snack, so that kind of thing isn't an issue.

I am not sure why people are hating on these. When my kids were really little, they had snacks twice a day in addition to their meals. Once they got older (1st grade or so), they really were running, sweating, and playing hard, and they needed a snack or meal pretty soon afterward.
I don't remember this going away as I got older. Just kids bringing their own snacks. Even in college, I remember my coach making sure that we ate pretty soon after workouts/races.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My kindergartener would not get home without a meltdown if he didn't refuel after a sports game. So if you are signed up for snack and aren't planning to bring one, please let me know in advance so I can pack a PB&J.

Bananas are always great. Mini bags of pretzels. Cheese sticks. Crackers.


My goodness. Break the pattern.
Anonymous
Bottled water.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My kindergartener would not get home without a meltdown if he didn't refuel after a sports game. So if you are signed up for snack and aren't planning to bring one, please let me know in advance so I can pack a PB&J.

Bananas are always great. Mini bags of pretzels. Cheese sticks. Crackers.


My goodness. Break the pattern.


How, exactly are you proposing that I should shift his metabolism?
Anonymous
If your child needs s snack after a baseball game, bring one. Most kids don't need one. It isn't like it's an all day tournament. And it's baseball. Hardly an exhausting sport.
Anonymous
What is a snack? Something from the 1970s?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:What age?

By second grade it gets easy (if they are still doing snacks).

Things like prepackaged chip assortments, oreos, cheese sticks, mandatin oranges (Peels still on please! No one wants food that your hands were all over.), cheetos...al very popular. Think treats vs meal foods.


No, that's the problem! Not OP, but my child takes part in a 1hr soccer game, playing maybe half of that. She needs water and possibly a piece of fruit, not a package of cheetos! My kid doesn't need oreos and a juice box every Saturday afternoon.
Anonymous
I'm so glad I'm not the only person who thinks it's ridiculous that a snack even has to be arranged. How about if your kid needs a snack to get through a baseball game (or whatever sport or activity), you bring it for him and her? So simple.
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