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Two or more players, any age.
Find a reasonably level area near a beach that is at least 12 feet long. Then place two larger beach rocks 12 (or more) feet apart. (One is used as the bull's-eye and the other is the starting point. Each player then selects 10 smaller beach rocks (stones). from the starting point the first player then tosses (underhand) each of his stones at the other bull's-eye, trying to strike it or get as close as possible. Any stone that strikes the rock, he gets to keep. The second player then has a turn. After all players have tossed their stones, the player who struck the rock with the most stones gets first chance to "flick." If no one strikes the rock during the "toss," then the player with the stone closest to the rock goes first. To "flick" a player bends his index finger and places the finger's second joint flat on the ground behind the the stone closest to the bull's-eye and flicks it toward the bull's-eye. {NOTE: The motion of the flick must not be more than 30 cm (6 inches) If he strikes the stone with the flick, he keeps it and moves on to the next closest stone. He continues until he misses, then the player with the second-most strikes (or the second-closest stone) during the toss, gets a chance. Once a player loses all his stones (even after the first round) he is out of the game. In the second round the number of stones used in the toss is determined by the person with the least stones left. (If one person has only three stones then that is the number everybody uses in the second toss). The game goes on for a predetermined number of rounds at the end of which the person with the most stones is declared the winner.
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