St. Anthony Treasure Hunt Activity
- Catholic Inspired
- Sep 30, 2012
- 3 min read
Updated: Mar 6
“Dear St. Anthony, please look around; something is lost and must be found.”
So why is St. Anthony the patron saint of lost things?

An old story tells us that St. Anthony, was using a valuable psalter (Book of Palms) but the book was unknowingly carried off by a novice. St. Anthony prayed very hard that the psalter would be found. After seeing an alarming apparition of St. Anthony, the novice returned the psalter.
St. Anthony may be the Patron of lost things, but more importantly he is the patron of lost souls — those who have fallen to mortal sin, have abandoned the Church and have grown apathetic to the practice of the faith. Personally, I often like to pray to St. Anthony when I feel like I have lost my way in life -when I’m just not sure what it is God wants me to do.
St. Anthony is such an AWESOME saint!(Some of the above information was taken from: The Real Presence.org Please visit their site to read more about this wonderful saint!)
Last summer, for Saint Anthony’s feast day, we did a fun activity! It was a treasure dig! The kids had to dig through the rock block to find the treasures hidden inside! They had so much fun!

I thought it I’d share it with you all now because it could be used as a fun activity for an All Saint’s Day event. But please remember it will take a few weeks to dry so plan ahead!
You will need:
Download Printable Insructions (below)
Mixture of sand and cornstarch (3 parts sand to 1 part cornstarch)
water
old bucket or other large
trash-ablecontainer
Mixing stick or spoon (trash-able)
Foil cake pan or
disposable plastic cups
Small “treasures
” (beads, sequins, shells, small plastic animals, etc.)
paper towels or napkins
popsicle sticks for each child

Download the St. Anthony dig instructions here:

First put your sand and cornstarch together in a bucket or other container. (Choose a container that you don’t care if it gets messed up. The sand will scratch it.)

I used about 6 cups of sand and 2 cups of cornstarch to fill my 13×9 inch foil pan.
Add enough water to make the mixture liquidity with a consistency of a very thick cake/cookie batter. You don’t want it to be runny, the more liquidy the mixture is the longer it will take to dry and the harder it will be to break apart.

Pour half the mixture into a pan. (Use something that can be trashed later.) I used a 13×9 inch foil pan. You could also use plastic cups if you want to give each child their own personal treasure dig.
Now add your treasures!! Make a layer of the toys over the sand/cornstarch mixture.

Now top it with the remaining sand/cornstarch mixture.

Pat the top of it with your stir-stick or your hand to get it to settle.
You might need to push the treasures back down in as you pat it. As the water rises to the top, use some paper towels or napkins to pat the water off the top.
Continue to pat the paper towel/napkins on the top until you stop seeing excess water.

Every hour for several hours, pat the water from the top.
After a few hours the water should stop rising. The amount of water that rises depends on how liquidy your mixture was.
Place your sand-cake(s) in a warm dry spot for a week or two. (maybe three) I placed mine on a foiled cookie sheet for easy transport.
After a few weeks you should have a rock solid sand-cake!(As my kids joke, “Mom’s baking again!”)
Now that the “cake” is dry have the kids use wooden popsicle sticks to dig into it to find the treasures!!

My kids LOVED it!!!
But be warned it is messy and dusty when they break it up!
You might want to do it outside or in a garage.
Have fun and God Bless!
St. Anthony, pray for us!
~Jen-Marie
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