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We just joined the team and I got the request to bring snack this weekend. This is all new to me. Can someone give me some ideas of what to bring? Team is about 15 girls, plus I need to cover a few siblings.
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Granola bars, orange slices, grapes, bag of apples. (I usually give them a choice of two.)
You might check with the person who told you to bring the snacks if there are any food allergies you need to work around. |
| Doughnuts. |
You just joined the team and the first thing they send is bring the snack? Find a new team. Most teams of kids this age do not have to supply snacks to 15 kids and multiple siblings. What a waste of time, effort and money. I avoid the snacky teams. |
| Fruit. Bananas are good post-exercise food. Also try clementines. |
Anything really. I'm the snack coordinator for my son's team (which just means I get people to sign up). People bring everything from bags of chips/pretzels, or cookies to granola bars. When the kids were very little, we used to have a halftime snack, and that was usually fruit. I wouldn't bring fruit for an end of the game snack personally It's healthy and a lovely gesture, but 10 year olds just want the good stuff. We usually also bring a drink (sports drink or drink pouch. We've had people bring donuts and juice (like a PP suggested), but usually if it's that kids' birthday. Same thing with cupcakes and cookies. We've had parents bring popsicles to hot games -- I have no idea how they keep them frozen, but the kids really like that! Just think about little bags of stuff you put in your kids' lunches - same thing.
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| Doritoes and KookAid. Or Cheetos. Always gobbled up quickly! |
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When does this nonsense end?
10 year olds? |
| My dd's team of 13yo girls all love Skinny Pop and frozen grapes. Put the grapes in small snack size zipper bags then freeze them. They are a huge hit. |
snack parent again here. Our coach thinks it gives the kids a reason to hang out for a bit after the game - he thinks it's a bit of team bonding. Plus the kids look forward to it. It's usually just one game that parents are asked to cover. You might spend $20. I hear what you're saying, but I don't think this is nearly as bad as giving everyone a participation trophy
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OP here. We are new to the team but not new to the group of kids. The snack coordinator is the mother of a good friend of my kid. She had the originally assigned mom drop out for Saturday and I assume she knew if she kicked it to me, it would get done. I am not upset at all about it, I just need to know what to bring. She said "carb" and I am just not sure what that means. Thanks to all who replied! |
| Really popular at our games is chips, brownies, popsicles. Plus lemonade or gatorade. |
| Why do 10 year old need a snack after a soccer game? They cannot hang out after with the coach giving them a pep talk but need a snack to do so? We have not had snack after games since they were 6 or 7 unless there is a tournament. |
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Anyone else notice the snack coordinator mom is always "THAT" mom?
Stop the insanity. The kids barely break a sweat and if they do, all the better. They don't need to eat 200 calories of food/drink afterwards. They need to drink water and stick to their basic meals. We are raising kids that emotionally eat. |
I'm the PP "snack mom". I'm not sure what "THAT" mom means. If you mean a mom who continues to agree to volunteer to do things that support kids, coaches and teachers, then I guess I'm "that" mom. The coach asked if someone would step up and organize this, and I said I would. I would never say that these kids "need" a snack, but I don't think it's such a bad thing either. |