“Strive to make everyday the best day of your life, because there is no good reason not to.” Hal Elrod
Isn’t Hygge just about being cosy?
This is something I get asked lots!
A big part of hygge is about feeling cosy and comfortable but it’s also about appreciating the nature around you. It’s about learning to celebrate the joy that each season brings and spending time outdoors because it’s good for your mental health.
When it comes to our practice with the children we want our children to grow up with a natural love for their world. This is how education for sustainable development happens. We want our young children to see the beauty in the early hazel catkins, to dawdle and pause at the little daffodil dancing in the breeze and wonder in awe about how spider webs are formed.
This is why the Danish daily rhythm and early years curriculum is built around opportunities to experience the great outdoors.
For all your printable nature study resources, journals and nature study guides click here
February can be one of the hardest months of the year with the distance from Christmas and the sunnier days still feeling a long way out of reach.
As I write this blog post I feel hope.
“Today you are planting seeds to your dream. Be patient because it will be a large harvest.”Â
Boris announced the roadmap out of lockdown for England last night and although we must still be careful it feels as though brighter days will be here sooner than we think.Â
I wanted to share a few ways to help you thrive and flourish over the next month and support you in having a positive mindset.
I have had a fascination with rocks from a young age. I was always the child with my pockets full of natural treasures and would spend hours looking at what I had collected, sorting them into egg boxes or making patterns with my natural finds.
I remember as a child taking a visit with my Grandparents to the North Yorkshire sea-side town of Whitby and a shop keeper handing my a tiny piece of the gemstone Jet to admire. I loved the A school trip a few weeks later was a visit to Stump Cross Cavens, a series of underground caves in North Yorkshire which left me curious wanting to know more.Â
For my 7th Birthday that year I had asked for a subscription to a magazine called Treasures of the Earth. With each monthly magazine came a different rock or gemstone to admire and learn about. When I received the Pyrite (Fools Gold) I remember being in awe of it's sparkles.Â
Another fond memory I have is of my Grandad bringing home a bag of beach pebbles from the garden centre. I spent hours pickin...
The days are starting to get longer and brighter and new shoots are poking through the soil. It feels so good that Spring is on it's way!
Now feels like a good time to share some of my favourite spring resources and books (as i get asked this question a lot!) to support your nature based play. All of the resources I share on here are my personal recommendations and are not advertisements. It is also worth noting that it has taken a few years to collect the bought resources I show in the photos and nature based play can be done so effectively without any of these too! Just get outside and use the nature around you like we did when creating our Very Hungry Caterpillars out of twigs and leaves.Â
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I often get asked on my training around nature based play if this is something that can be done if you're in an urban area and the answer is yes! We can do nature study by opening up the curtains and watching the birds from our window, setting up a provocation on the northern lights inside...
28th February 2021
Are you ready for Intern1ational Hygge Day?Â
Around the world Early Educators will be taking inspiration on Hygge and doing lots of cosy activities for themselves and children and sharing them using my #hyggeintheearlyyears
Why not have a coffee and cake break in the afternoon, wear your comfy clothes to work or have a family story time event?
Why not create your own hygge shadow puppets and tell a story or set up a cosy mountain small world scene!
If you're look for some ideas or inspiration then why not download my free guide here
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Here are some of my followers favourite ways to make Christmas time more magical for the children.
'Add fairy lights everywhere' Mrspodmed
'Create an activity advent calendar' s28xoxo
'Make cranberry sauce with the children and give them a jar to take home and share on Christmas Day' Acorn_Class
'Have a North Pole tea party with twinkling lights' Dawnwebster29
'Dress up and sing Christmas songs together' Seafoam_green
'We have a nativity advent and each day we add to a wooden nativity scene' katmurphy81
'Sprinkle the children with magic dust from Santa as they leave school for the holiday' amberlou_d
'Family walks in the woods' nerdishmum
'We have a Christmas story that we read a chapter a day of and do an activity related to it' Littleonesatplay
'The children help to decorate the tree' Sarahs_littlestars
'We have a Christmas movie night with the projector and snacks' Laura_diamond_childminder
For more Christmas Child Led Ideas check out my training here.
Hygge feels different for everyone and I wanted to share with you what it feels and looks like for me by telling you about our very Hygge Sunday.Â
We began our morning by having a slow breakfast together as a family where we lit the candles and talked about what we all wanted to do on such a cold foggy day. Despite the weather we decided to get wrapped up and embrace the great outdoors. We headed out for an autumn walk through the woods and to a nearby dam.Â
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Danes enjoy spending time connected to nature and away from electronic devices. Being outside allows you to live in the moment and notice what’s around you which is really important for your mental health. It’s also a wonderfully sensory experience too.Â
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As we walked along we took in the smell of the trees, the oozing of the mud on our boots and the sound of the birds in the trees. We also loved collecting up many natural treasures like; pine cones, leaves and stones. We used our rustic nesting bowls which were perfect for...
I don’t know about you but I used to over plan my days and schedule too much into them. Having an over flowing to do list. I would find myself rushing from one thing to the next, never having time to eat properly and by the end of the day was exhausted and usually hadn’t got the tasks done that I needed to do. As I mentioned a few days ago the Danes are brilliant at planning their time in an efficient way- working less but in a more focussed way.
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Inside the accreditation I talk about the importance of goal setting and aligning these to our overall vision.
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3 Ways to Bring Hygge to your learning environment
Hygge is often miss understood and people believe that they can buy that hygge look by just changing the environment. Instead hygge is an investment into yourself and the journey of embracing it should be taken slowly. There is so much to hygge from slowing down, discovering what lights you up (and the children you work with) and bringing more balance to your day.
1. Hygge lighting is about creating a warm atmosphere. Open up your blinds and let the natural light flood in. Turn off the harsh strip lights and instead go for table amps, twinkly lights and LED Candles. Add a beautiful glow to your room by draping twinkly lights around suspended branches, the edges of your display board or filling empty jars with them.
2. Adding nature into your environment brings in calmness and also removes the toxins from the air. Yucca's and Spider Plants are safe for young children. You could also incorporate this natural background into small worl...