Anonymous wrote:I am happy to either bring a snack routinely for my own kid, or sign up to rotate snacks. Either is fine with me. Same amount of food either way, so it's no skin off my nose whether I do it all in one day or across a bunch of days. Happy to share with whichever kid is hungry.
What I really don't get is get why some people are so snarky about feeding kids. They are children. We are adults. We can't find a snack to feed a hungry kid?
Anonymous wrote: If I saw that some siblings consistently expected something, I put together extras.
Anonymous wrote:I always did bananas for halftime - super easy and had the grocery store bag for the peels after. For after the game, I did a "goody bag" with a juice pouch, salty treat, sweet treat and just handed them out to the players. If I saw that some siblings consistently expected something, I put together extras.
Disclaimer: I enjoyed doing the after-game bag and tied the theme to the team name.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don't like it, then why sign up?
Exactly, and please tell your kid not to have any.
Anonymous wrote:Volunteer to coach. Send out a welcome email. If the kids are 2nd grade or younger, say that there won't be time for snacks at practices, but if parents would like to sign up to provide orange slices at half time, here's the sign up. If the kids are older than 2nd grade, remind the parents that the kids need to bring their water bottles to every practice and game, and say you can't have snacks at every game because you need half time to prepare the kids for the second half of the game and thank the parents for getting their kids to practices and games at the scheduled time. The 3rd grade parents might be shell shocked at the lack of snacks, but they'll quickly realize it wasn't necessary and their kids survived.
Anonymous wrote:If you don't like it, then why sign up?