Players form a circle and place one hand on their back while using their free hand to hit a foam ball to the player on their right without letting the ball fall to the ground. The goal is to pass the ball around the circle as many times as possible before a mistake is made. Variations include players arranged in a row passing the ball down the line or back and forth as many times as possible. A similar game among Australian Aboriginal people passes dried fruit while singing instead of using a ball.
Players form a circle and place one hand on their back while using their free hand to hit a foam ball to the player on their right without letting the ball fall to the ground. The goal is to pass the ball around the circle as many times as possible before a mistake is made. Variations include players arranged in a row passing the ball down the line or back and forth as many times as possible. A similar game among Australian Aboriginal people passes dried fruit while singing instead of using a ball.
Players form a circle and place one hand on their back while using their free hand to hit a foam ball to the player on their right without letting the ball fall to the ground. The goal is to pass the ball around the circle as many times as possible before a mistake is made. Variations include players arranged in a row passing the ball down the line or back and forth as many times as possible. A similar game among Australian Aboriginal people passes dried fruit while singing instead of using a ball.
Espacio: indoor/outdoor N de participantes: +8 Duracin: Descripcin del juego: Its origin is from the USA Players form a circle, standing or kneeling, and placed a hand on his back. The goal is that the ball go past a player to his right, hitting it with the palm of the free hand and preventing it from falling to the ground. Normas/reglas: You cant hold the ball. Sometimes the players count how many rounds they made until the ball touches the ground. If you move the hand on your back to the front, counts like the ball bound in the ground. Variantes: Sometimes the same game takes players being arranged in a row, side by side, so that it is intended that the ball reaches the end of the row. Sometimes they try to go back and forth and back as many times as possible before the ball fall to the ground. Among the aborigines of the Torres Strait Islanders in Australia a similar game called "Kai wed" in which a song is sung practiced while passing from one player to another the dried fruit of a tree called kai.