Boring Indian Childhood Games || Refresh your memories || AP ki beers baraf paani game , chain chain game
Lagori, Kanche, Bhavra, Chhupa Chhupi - do you recognize these names or do these names evoke nostalgia? If yes, it is most likely that you have had an awesome childhood. Scenes of vacations spent playing outdoors with friends may be flashing in your memory. Those were the golden days.
Played all of them ... if you are from mumbai the last game you also played Koy-ba with three big cement marbles in a box and a gill(ditch in the box)...
- And two more - Saliya-Kutchi - played by metal rod and stick it in the rainy grass or mud...and no one got hurt except one guy got his ear clipped when another one threw that metal rod :)
- Aavli peepli was also played if people remember - jumping on the trees and someone comes to catch u.
Born in 80’s kids will know these games. But now kids play games like cricket, tennis and football. No one remembers the games like Goli, Ghilli, Lagori. Let’s see few of the remarkable Ancient Indian Games which we have forgotten.
Lagori
Lagori is a game which is a popular game in India. It is called Dappa Kali in the northern parts of Kerala, especially in Kannur. This game requires a considerable amount of physical exercise and is mainly played by boys. This game is played between two teams. It consists of 10 marble pieces piled one above the other. One team targets this pile and once they strike it then their next aim is to keep it back while the other team has to block the opposing side from arranging it back. This is almost same as Seven Stones game.
Kite Fighting
Fighter kites are kites used for the sport of kite fighting. Traditionally most are small, unstable single line flat kites where line tension alone is used for control, and an abrasive line is used to cut down other kites.
Gilli Danda
The game is played with two sticks: a large one called a danda, which is used to hit a smaller one, the gilli. Gilli Danda is known by various other names in India. Standing in a small circle, the player balances the gilli on a stone in an inclined manner (somewhat like a see-saw) with one end of the gilli touching the ground while the other end is in the air. The player then uses the danda to hit the gilli at the raised end, which flips it into the air. While it is in the air, the player strikes the gilli, hitting it as far as possible. Having struck the gilli, the player is required to run and touch a pre-agreed point outside the circle before the gilli is retrieved by an opponent. This aspect of the game is similar to runs in cricket or home-runs in baseball.
Kancha/Goli
Kancha was one of the most popular games among children in the neighborhood. It is played using marbles called ‘Kancha’ or ‘Goli’. The players are to hit the selected target ‘kancha’ using their own marble ball. The winner takes all Kanchas of rest of the players.
Kabbadi
Kabbadi is a contact sport that originated in Ancient India. In the international team version of kabaddi, two teams of seven members each occupy opposite halves of a field of 10 m × 13 m in case of men and 8 m × 12 m in case of women. Each has three supplementary players held in reserve. The game is played with 20-minute halves and a five-minute halftime break during which the teams exchange sides.
Hide And Seek
Kannamoochi or Hide and seek is a timeless game that has been played by children throughout the ages. It isn’t only children who enjoy it – a natural instinct for parents is to play a facial form of hide and seek with their children from the earliest age, as it teaches children about attachment and detachment in a safe and caring environment. Leaving aside the psychology, however, the outdoor game provides wonderful interaction amongst children is easy to play and never gets boring.
Satoliya
This game is loved by the maximum number boys and girls; it is a funny simple and inexpensive game. It needs seven small flat stones; every stone size should be less than the other stone. Put these stones over another in decreasing order its looks like a small tower then hit it by cloths made hand ball form a fixed distance. Any number of people can play it. This game is also known as Pithoo in some regions of India.
Carrom
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