Our Teddy Bear Adventures coloring pages are packed with exciting journeys, brave little explorers, and big bold landscapes waiting to be colored in. From mountain hikes and jungle discoveries to pirate treasure hunts, space missions, and friendly dragon rides, these cuddly bears are always ready for their next adventure.
Each printable design features bold outlines, large coloring spaces, and dynamic full-page scenes that are perfect for kids of all ages. Whether your child loves real-world exploring or magical fantasy quests, these pages can be downloaded from CraftyJosh and printed at home or in the classroom for creative, high-energy coloring fun.
Tap on the color palette icon in the top right of any image to see an inspiring color version of the line art, or click on the magnifying glass to see a bigger version of the artwork.
10 Fun things to do with Teddy Bear Adventures coloring pages
If you’re using the Teddy Bear Adventures category on Crafty Josh, these activities help you stretch one printable into a whole mini lesson or play session, using the adventure themes already in the pictures (beanstalk climbs, treasure islands, crystal caves, jungle exploring, hot air balloons, space missions, rope bridges, and more).
10 Fun things to do with Teddy Bear Adventures coloring pages
All of these ideas are realistic, affordable, and easy to do at home or in a classroom with basic supplies you probably already have.
Make an “Adventure Passport”
Turn each finished page into a “stamp” in your child’s travel passport - one day they’re hiking a mountain, the next they’re sailing toward treasure. It’s a simple way to encourage finishing pages and talking about what’s happening in each scene.
You’ll need:
A few completed coloring pages
Paper or a small stapled booklet
Markers or stickers (optional)
How to do it:
Fold and staple 3–6 sheets of paper into a small “passport.”
Cut small squares from each coloring page and glue one onto a passport page like a stamp.
Add a date and a one-sentence “where I went” note (jungle, space, treasure island, etc.).
By the end, you’ll have a keepsake “travel record” of every teddy bear mission.
Build a Giant Adventure Map Wall
Make a big class or family map that connects different teddy bear scenes with paths, rivers, and routes. This works great with pages like mountains, canyons, beaches, jungle trails, and sky adventures.
You’ll need:
Several colored pages
A large sheet of paper (butcher paper or taped-together printer paper)
Glue or tape
How to do it:
Place the pages on the big paper like “locations” (mountains in one corner, ocean near the bottom, sky up top).
Draw connecting routes between them (dotted hiking trail, wavy river, dashed flight path).
Add a simple map legend with 3–5 symbols (camp, treasure, cave, castle).
It looks awesome on a wall and gives kids a reason to talk about direction and distance.
Create a Choose-Your-Own-Adventure Story Chain
Use the pictures as story checkpoints where kids make a choice about what happens next. Adventure pages naturally fit this format—especially treasure hunts, mysterious caves, and sky journeys.
You’ll need:
3–5 coloring pages
Pencil or marker
Scissors (optional)
How to do it:
Pick one page as the “start,” then choose two possible “next pages.”
On the bottom of the start page, write two choices (example: “Climb the beanstalk” or “Explore the cave”).
Repeat once more so the story has at least two endings.
Kids love reading their story aloud and letting someone else choose the route.
Treasure Hunt With Clue Cards
Lean into the beach treasure chest and pirate island vibes by hiding simple clue cards around the room. The coloring page becomes the “treasure map” and the hunt becomes the activity.
You’ll need:
One treasure-themed coloring page
Small paper scraps or index cards
A small “treasure” (stickers, erasers, a note, etc.)
How to do it:
Write 5–8 clues (picture clues for younger kids, short reading clues for older kids).
Hide the clues in order and place the treasure at the final spot.
Let the child circle “map landmarks” on the coloring page (palm tree, waves, chest) as they go.
It’s a fast, low-cost way to turn coloring into active play.
Adventure Vocabulary Labels (Easy Geography Mode)
Turn a finished page into a mini learning poster by labeling what you see: canyon, rope bridge, waterfall, cave, compass, mountain path, savanna, clouds. It builds observation skills without feeling like homework.
You’ll need:
A completed coloring page with scenery
Sticky notes or small label strips
Pen or marker
How to do it:
Pick 5–10 things to label (start small for younger kids).
Write the word on a sticky note and place it near the matching part of the picture.
Add one “challenge label” (example: horizon, trail, cliff, or telescope).
Once it’s labeled, the page doubles as a quick review tool later.
Mission Control: A Space Checklist
For the rocket, astronaut, and planet pages, create a simple “mission checklist” that kids complete while they color. It adds a STEM-flavored structure: prepare, launch, explore, return.
You’ll need:
A space-themed coloring page
Paper for a checklist
Pencil or crayons
How to do it:
Write a 6-step checklist (example: “Fuel the rocket,” “Count down,” “Spot a planet,” “Float safely”).
As they color, they check off steps and circle matching parts of the picture (stars, rocket, tether, planet).
Finish with a one-sentence mission report: “Today I explored ____.”
It’s structured enough for class time, but still feels like pretend play.
Shoebox Diorama Adventure Scene
Turn one page into a 3D scene by folding key parts upright inside a shoebox—great for castles, crystal caves, jungle leaves, or hot air balloon skies.
You’ll need:
A coloring page and a shoebox (or small box)
Scissors and glue or tape
Scrap paper for extra details
How to do it:
Cut out the teddy bear and 2–4 big background elements (tree, cave crystals, castle, clouds).
Fold a small tab at the bottom of each cutout and glue/tape the tabs to the box floor so they stand up.
Use scrap paper to add quick extras (a flag, treasure, stars, or mushrooms).
The finished diorama makes a brilliant shelf display.
Adventure Puppet Show (No-Fuss Edition)
Some Teddy Bear Adventures pages practically beg to be acted out—dragon rides, rainbow bridges, pirate sailing, jungle swinging. Stick puppets let kids retell the scene or invent a new ending.
You’ll need:
Colored page characters (cut out)
Craft sticks or recycled cardboard strips
Tape or glue
How to do it:
Cut out the teddy bear and 1–2 “helpers” (dragon, unicorn, boat, balloon).
Tape each cutout to a stick to make puppets.
Use a table edge or an open folder as the stage and act out a 1–2 minute story.
Short shows are perfect for sharing without turning it into a big production.
Hot Air Balloon Weather Station
Use the balloon and cloud scenes to talk about weather in a simple, kid-friendly way. Kids can match colors to “sunny,” “cloudy,” “windy,” and even create a daily weather note.
You’ll need:
A hot air balloon (or sky) coloring page
Small paper strip for a “forecast”
Crayons or colored pencils
How to do it:
Color the sky to match a chosen forecast (bright sun, lots of clouds, or mixed).
Add a simple wind arrow somewhere on the page (pointing left/right/up).
Write one forecast sentence: “Today is ____ and the wind is ____.”
It’s a calm add-on activity that still fits the adventure theme.
Adventure Gallery Walk With Kind Comments
Make coloring pages feel “worth finishing” by turning them into a mini art show. This works especially well with big full-page scenes like mountains, waterfalls, castles, and pirate islands.
You’ll need:
Several completed pages
Tape or clips for display
Small sticky notes or slips of paper
How to do it:
Hang the pages at child eye level around the room.
Have kids walk around and leave 1–2 kind comments (“I like your stars!” “Cool treasure chest!”).
End by letting each artist pick their favorite comment to keep with their page.
It’s an easy confidence boost and a great way to build classroom community.