What's in the Easter Basket?

Materials
1. Sealed Plastic Easter Eggs with small objects inside
2. Paper and pencils for everyone.
Game Objective
The person who correctly guesses the most objects inside the Easter eggs is the winner.
Game Preparation
Place objects inside hollow plastic Easter Eggs and place them in an Easter Basket. Tape the eggs shut with clear tape so no one can take a peek. By shaking them, participants try to identify the contents. Number each egg for easy reference.
Some objects that you might use are:
paperclips, salt or sugar, coins, a marble, a rock, sand, nails, pins, jacks, a ring, a small bell, buttons, hershey's kisses, jelly beans, screws, keys, M&M's, dice, thumbtacks, staples, aspirin, flour, rubber ball, cork, cottonballs, rice, beans, peanuts, beads, a chain,
an eraser, scrabble tiles, raisins, etc.
Game Play
Give everyone a piece of paper and pass the sealed plastic easter eggs around. Participants can shake and smell them but cannot open them. Have them write down what they think is contained in the egg beside each number corresponding to the numbers written on each egg.
Variation
List the objects included in the Easter Eggs. Kids try to match the objects with the correct egg that contains it and write the egg number beside the object on your list. For your list you can use some of the objects from Easter Egg Hunt.
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