Five disciplines and a festive torch ceremony
Spread over two weeks, a total of five Olympic disciplines take place. The Feuerstein Olympics begin with a special and festive torch procession. Parents and children walk together with self-crafted flags, accompanied by music, cheerful atmosphere and small refreshments, making their way to the hotel garden. There, everyone gathers as the Feuerstein Olympic flame is lit, officially opening the Olympic week.
Every participation counts. For each completed discipline, children receive a stamp in their personal activity pass, which accompanies them throughout the Olympic week and reflects everything they have experienced and achieved together.
The Feuerstein Olympic disciplines
Opening with the torch procession
Ice hockey & broomball
A lively start to the Olympic adventure, focusing on team spirit, movement and fun on the ice.
Biathlon (can shooting), bowling, ring toss, ball throw
A discipline day where accuracy and skill take centre stage in a playful way.
Ice skating course
A creative course on the ice that combines balance, courage and movement.
Sledging
Pure winter fun. Going downhill together, laughing on the way back up and starting all over again.
Ice stock sport
A calm and atmospheric finale, where sensitivity and concentration are key.
The activity pass – Collecting moments that connect
A central element of the Feuerstein Olympics is the personal activity pass. It accompanies parents and children throughout the Olympic week and makes shared experiences visible.
For each completed discipline, whether on the ice, in the snow or during playful target games, the pass is filled in. It is motivation, a keepsake and a small diary all in one. No comparison, no pressure, just a loving way of collecting moments to remember.
The grand finale: archery
At the end of the Olympic week, the grand finale takes place with archery. For every completed discipline, children receive an arrow. The more arrows collected, the greater the chance, and the better the shot, the closer they come to victory.
But here too, the same applies: the true reward is not hitting the centre, but taking part, being there and feeling proud of what has been experienced and achieved together.


