Secwepemc Child and Family Services Hosts Family-Friendly Bath Bomb Workshop
Secwepemc Child & Family Services hosted a family-friendly DIY bath bomb workshop in Kamloops to promote hands-on wellness and community connection; registration was limited to 25 participants ages 5 and up.

Families gathered at Secwepemc Child & Family Services' Kamloops office for Elkstwécw Urban Night: DIY Bath Bombs, a hands-on workshop running 5:30–7:30 pm that offered craft-based wellness and intergenerational activity. The session, scheduled for January 28, 2026, brought parents, children and caregivers together for an evening meant to mix creativity with community supports.
The event was limited to 25 registered participants and open to ages 5 and up, with registration required in advance. That cap kept the setting small and manageable for both instruction and child-friendly safety, allowing organizers to focus on active participation and one-on-one help where needed. Attendance limits and the requirement to register reinforced the intimate, community-oriented feel of the program while ensuring supplies and supervision matched demand.
Secwepemc Child & Family Services positioned the bath bomb workshop as part of its January events calendar and ongoing community wellness programming. Hands-on craft nights like this serve multiple practical purposes: they provide low-cost, skill-building activities for families; create shared, calming experiences that support mental health and sensory development for children; and function as informal touchpoints where families can connect with agency staff and learn about other local supports. For parents in Kamloops, the workshop offered an accessible way to spend time with children in a guided setting and to take home a tangible result, bath bombs that bring a little extra self-care into daily routines.
The workshop format reflects a broader trend in community outreach that uses simple, repeatable crafts to lower barriers to participation. Making bath bombs requires minimal materials, scales easily to mixed-age groups and produces immediate, sensory rewards, fizz, scent and color, that are especially appealing to younger participants. For Secwepemc Child & Family Services, those attributes make bath-bomb sessions an effective tool for engagement across families from different parts of the community.

Practical takeaways for attendees included new crafting skills they can replicate at home and a reminder that local supports can be approachable and activity-driven. For organizers, limited-capacity evenings like Elkstwécw Urban Night provide clear feedback on demand for family programming and help tailor future offerings to community interest.
As Secwepemc Child & Family Services continues to use hands-on workshops in outreach, readers can expect more small-scale, participatory events aimed at wellness and family connection. Those interested in similar opportunities should note the value of early registration and watch agency announcements for future calendar entries.
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