Throwing Heinzen
„The Heinze stick wants to fly, land in a specific area and, ideally, remain stuck there.“
Each participant must throw the specified number of Heinzen sticks into a defined field (women/young people and men have their own areas). Extra points are awarded if the Heinzen sticks remain stuck and no part touches the grass. The aim is to score as many points as possible.
snow pole mikado
There are two rounds in which approximately 20 differently marked snow poles are bundled together and held by one person. By suddenly letting go of the bundle and making gazelle-like, jump-like escape movements, the snow poles fall over in an unpredictable manner and scatter across the meadow.
The aim is to collect as many poles as possible. The snow poles must be lifted gently so that none of the others move. As soon as a pole that you do not intend to pick up wobbles, the round is over and the opposing team can show off their pole-collecting skills. The poles that you tried to pick up and the ones that moved may not be picked up and remain in play.
There is one round, and the team that starts is determined by tossing a coin. To ensure that the game flows smoothly, the pole to be lifted must be selected and touched within 15 seconds.
The winner of the game is the team with the most points.
audience games
Nagla
Five nails must be hammered into a specified position as quickly as possible. The number of strokes is not counted – only the time is decisive. A hammer is provided as a tool and the striking surface is defined (certainly not the large surface 😉).
The winner will be honoured with a prize.
Huat werfa
Four different types of headgear must be thrown from a specified distance onto separate wooden sticks. If the thrown object falls to the ground, no points are awarded.
The person who throws all the headgear onto the sticks the fastest wins and is rewarded with a prize.