“Strive to make everyday the best day of your life, because there is no good reason not to.” Hal Elrod
The beautiful white, frothy elderflowers tend to bloom in late May, turning toÂ
Find out more about Hygge in the Early Years here.
Ladybirds are a beloved and valuable part of our natural world. It is lovely to find them in the garden or out and about in parks.
From the beetle family.
Common colors include red, yellow, and orange with black spots, but some species can be black with red or yellow spots.Â
There are about 5,000 species of ladybirds worldwide.Â
The seven-spot ladybird is one of the most familiar species in Europe.Â
The bright colors and spots of ladybirds serve as a warning to predators that they are toxic or distasteful.Â
When threatened, ladybirds can secrete a yellowish fluid from their leg joints, which has a foul taste and can deter predators.Â
Ladybirds are essential for natural pest control in gardens and agricultural fields, helping to reduce the need for chemical pesticides.Â
Ladybirds are often considered symbols of good luck and are associated with various folk beliefs and superstitions around the world.
Lavender is a versatile herb with numerous properties beneficial to health, wellness, and everyday life. Its calming aroma, therapeutic benefits, culinary uses, and role in personal care and household products make it a valuable and widely appreciated plant.
Lavender can be grown from seed and is a great sensory ingredient to explore. It attracts pollinators like bees and butterflies, making it a beneficial plant for your garden. Add it to playdough, potions, make lavender perfume or dry it and add sachets to your room indoors to create a beautiful calming scent. Lavender oil has antiseptic and anti-inflammatory properties, making it useful for treating minor burns, insect bites, and skin irritations. You can also use it in cooking and natural cleaning products. Lavender has a calming effect, relaxing you, aiding sleep and reducing stress and anxiety.
Encouraging children to get outdoors in nature with a fun activity that will keep them engaged.
Create a nature Journal with your children to help them have a better understanding of nature and to encourage them to ask questions about the nature that surrounds them.
Go on a walk to the park, forest, pond, stream, woodland, beach. Use your journal to make notes and draw what you find most interesting. Write down what you see and hear, stick special leaves and flowers that you find in. Draw around leaves and create leaf and bark rubbings on the pages.
Take some watercolours and crayons to use - what colours can you see? Take this journal with you over the summer holidays to make a record of the adventures you have been on and the nature that you have found. Take it to the beach and draw shells, fish and seabirds. Take it to the pond and sketch the tadpoles, frogs and ducks. Stick any feathers that you find into your journal. Stick in a photo of you collecting natural treasures or j...
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Collect fresh daisies with long stems. Make a small slit near the base of each stem using your fingernail then thread the next daisyâs stem through the slit and repeat to create a chain.
Pour a small amount of white, yellow and green paint. Show children how to dip their thumbs in white paint and press them onto paper to create daisy petals. Use a fingertip dipped in yellow paint to make the center of each daisy. Add stalks with green.
Plant some seeds and look after them until they grow. Ox Eye daisies are a lovely alternative as they are much bigger.
Create mud pies and buns in the mud kitchen and decorate with daisies! You could make a daisy potion.
Simply count your daisies on a ten frame or in a line. How many can you count?
Add Daisies to your playdough station.
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