Thursday, 19 January 2017

8 Great Books For Babies and Toddlers


If books did sport these would be the ones playing rugby, American football and ice hockey. Life in the danger zone. Existence with thrills, spills and an awful lot of violence. All that sticky tape isn't there for decoration - it's the only thing holding most of these books together. Sometimes even that isn't enough.

Welcome to 8 of the best - and bravest - books in existence. Your toddlers will love them so much they'll want to eat them!

1. 'my first' series
[Dorling Kindersley, also printed by Sainsbury's]
Packed with colour
'Simple but effective' are the best words to sum up this series, which include such titles as My First Words, My First Animal Book and My First Farm. These board books are divided into subjects such as 'Food and drink', 'At the seaside', 'Minibeasts' and 'Farm vehicles'  and contain loads and loads of photographs - as many as 20 on a double page spread - with the name of each picture written underneath it to be individually pointed out to your child. Many pages also have questions that you can ask your child about what they see in front of them: 'Which tractor would you like to drive?' 'What do you like best about the seaside?' They are attractive, colourful and have so many different pictures that toddlers will never get tired of them. Big tabs with an appropriate picture makes it easy to find which page you want to look at.

2. Noisy Baby Peekaboo!
[Dorling Kindersley]
Full of happy baby sounds
Another book in a series, this board book has large flaps inside for children to open. When they do a little sensor is revealed which recognises daylight and makes sounds, such as a baby laughing or a goodnight lullaby. Babies love looking at pictures of other babies, which already makes this book a winner as it has lots of photos of babies playing and doing all the things that your baby does. Throw in some sound effects and you're just increasing the enjoyment.

This is a book for reading in the daytime only, though, as my experience indicates that the sensors don't pick up on artificial light, only daylight. So always make sure you're reading this near a window!

3. Who Said Moo?
[Parragon]
A noisy trip around the farmyard
Our first copy of this probably came from a charity shop. When it finally disintegrated we bought another second-hand. Not the easiest to get hold of then but well worth the effort. This board book tells the story of a cockerel who finds himself supplanted when a loud 'moo' wakes up the animals on the farm before he gets the chance. He tours the farmyard to find out which animal is responsible but all deny it by demonstrating the noise that they make instead - until he gets to the last one... This book has buttons to press with the sound each animal makes (and unlike many buttons they're quite easy to push for little fingers). Experience shows that this is a story that will be read again and again and again...

4. Dinosaur Roar
[Ragged Bears Publishing]
Crunch, munch, dinosaur lunch
Simple, catchy rhymes, crazily imaginative drawings and lots of roarsome dinos. What not to like?
"Raar!"
(That's what the kids will say.)

5. v-tech Peek-A-Boo Book
[v-tech]
Toy or book? Who cares?
This is probably branded as a toy but it's a pretty good book and practically indestructible as well. Made from hard plastic, this brightly coloured toy/book plays a selection of nursery rhymes as you turn the pages. There are things to twiddle, push and pull inside too so lots of things to keep little ones interested.
Only one problem: there isn't an 'off' switch. Be prepared for 'Hey, Diddle, Diddle' from morning through 'til night.

6. Farmer Duck
[Walker Books]
A touching tale
A modern classic(?) this is the story of a downtrodden duck whose life is made a misery by a lazy old farmer. The duck does all the farm (and house) work, while the farmer lounges in bed eating chocolates. That is, until the other animals take a hand...
The plot may be highly improbable (but there are lots of children's books with improbable plots) but this is a good read nonetheless. The big selling point as far as toddlers are concerned is all the animal noises that you can make. You'll have them 'mooing, baaing and clucking' until the cows come home. Enough to drive you quackers!

7. Say Goodnight to the Sleepy Animals!
[Macmillan]
Say "night-night"
Another brilliant story for animal noises as cat goes on a tour of the countryside saying goodnight to every animal he meets. Great bedtime book.

8. Hippo Has A Hat
[Macmillan]
Hats off to you J.D. & N.S.
A list of children's books wouldn't be complete without at least one Julia Donaldson creation and I've chosen this one to finish with, although Chocolate Mousse For Greedy Goose is equally worthy. This is the rhyming story of the day that a party of animals go into a clothes shop and start trying things on. Want to see what a gorilla looks like in blue fluffy slippers with rabbit ears? Or a pig trying to get into a pair of jeans a size too small? Wonder no longer. The answer is here.

Happy reading! 

Saturday, 14 January 2017

Photo of the Month: December 2016

Face-to-face on Dartmoor
Our family like Dartmoor. We like its brutal and majestic scenery, we like its emptiness, we like its moodiness, we like the cafe in Widecombe and we like having lots of rocks to climb around on.

What we don't like is having to share all this 'emptiness', etc with several thousand other people which is exactly what we had to do on the second bank-holiday after Christmas. Being winter, and cold, we thought that the place might be pretty much empty. How naive! The place was packed. People swarmed over the rocks and paths in their hundreds. All the car parks were full and we drove helplessly around trying to find a place to stop that didn't involve driving into a ditch. Eventually we managed to squeeze into a tiny car park near Bonehill Rocks and popped out for a modest scramble and a picnic.

It seemed as though the place was a bit of a magnet for rock climbers, which we thought was a bit odd as the rocks were fairly puny in comparison to some other sites around Dartmoor. But then, I'm no climber. Perhaps these rocks were peculiarly suitable for the sport in a way that other places aren't. As well as shoes, chalk, large mats and various other climbing paraphernalia it appeared that an essential part of every climber's kit was a dog, either individually owned or shared among several people. While the owners climbed, their pets - including the one above - went walkabout.

Not sure who's most curious here...

Tuesday, 10 January 2017

Little Brother Copies Big Brother

"You did it, I'll do it!"
As a younger brother I know what it's like to look up to your older sibling. Three years' seniority means a lot, particularly in one's formative years and there are many gems of wisdom imparted by my older brother that have stuck in my brain down through the ages. Sagacious pearls such as, "it is better to wash your hands in cold running water..."
Or was it hot running water?
Anyway, something like that.

Wherever he went, I followed. I began by following him into the world (debatable - unkind 'friends' may suggest that I normally inhabit a little world of my own). I followed him to the same primary school, the same secondary school and the same university. Being four academic years ahead he'd left university before I got there but he did me the honour of visiting me occasionally. Finally, as if all that wasn't enough, I followed him to work. There our paths diverged. While he was given a comfy chair and trained in how to fix complex electrical items I was handed a broom, sent out into the rear yard and told to 'look busy' - a feat that I managed with such self-effacing competence that my overseers forgot to give me a lunch break.

So it has come as no surprise to find Isaac copying Graham sometimes. This can be:

Useful
Isaac has gone through the usual fussy-eater toddler stage. Having an older brother to demonstrate just how tasty cold cornish pasty can be is extremely handy. Sometimes it even persuaded him to eat it.

Noisy
It isn't often that Isaac and Graham have baths together. When they do it is always advisable to leave your fingers free in order that you may plug them securely into your ears. First one screams, then the other one screams. Number one screams a bit louder, number two follows suit. Each successive scream gets a bit louder and more piercing. We only have a small bathroom. By the end of thirty seconds it begins to sound as though a whole herd of pigs were being brutally murdered in there.
Then number one begins to throw water about... It is mainly for this reason that I refuse to bath any small child unless liberally draped in towels. The floor just has to look out for itself.

Active
We have a good game in our house. It's called 'Running up and down the hallway as fast as possible'. We've got a nice long hallway but even so it can take a long time for them to get tired out. Very useful if they've had a day cooped up indoors and haven't been able to wear off any energy outside.

Inspirational
I'm not sure that's quite the right word but it's certain sure that an effective way to get Isaac to move forwards on his trike is to place Graham on his scooter in front of him and say 'follow Graham!' Saying 'follow Daddy!' never seems to work quite as well, however encouragingly uttered.

Hilarious
Dancing, jigging and all other unco-ordinated movements are generally that little bit more humorous when the smaller participant doesn't really know what's going on but is trying to have a go anyway.

But then, as Darth Vader didn't quite say,

The Student becomes the Master
There are so many things that younger brothers are better at than their older siblings. Compared to my brother, for example, I am an absolute master at body-boarding. He's never actually tried body-boarding, which helps, but I reckon I still get the bragging rights. Currently Isaac is better than Graham in at least two things: babbling in a cute way and eating. The despiser of meat pie has become the devourer of meat pie, usually culminating in second and even third helpings. Graham is normally content with one helping, washed down with ice cream, cake, biscuits and sweets.

Haec est vita, dessert is sweeter!

Saturday, 7 January 2017

Are You a Bad Parent?


Pinterest, the world's mightiest corkboard, has become (alongside Google) my go-to site for finding out what I can only term all-embracingly as 'stuff'. It possesses that incalculable appeal of being a place where anyone can type anything into the search box and be presented with a jumble of information any piece of which can be pinned immediately to one's personal subject-specific boards. Admittedly, not all that information is useful and there are times when it may be nigh-on non-existent (there is a distressing lack of data regarding caramelised doormats, grey faced dartmoor sheep and dental implants in guinea pigs, for example) but Pinterest - noble fellow! - is not in the habit of professing ignorance.

Pinterest has become a vast online community; a mini-globe where everybody can display their views, interests and passions. And, like any community, there will be times when you find things that you disagree with or which cause you discomfort.

It was a couple of weeks ago that an article about Bad Parenting popped up in my Pinterest page. When I say 'article' what I actually mean is a poster-like presentation containing 11 statements, boldly printed in capital letters and freely besprinkled with the colour red, that explained why it was the parents' fault if they raised weak-willed, obnoxious kids. Take this as an example: IF YOUR CHILD IS LYING IT MEANS YOU OVERREACTED TO THE MISTAKES IN PAST (sic). Or this one: IF YOUR CHILD IS SECRETIVE, THE REASON IS YOU BLOW THINGS VERY BIG. And, finally, the killer: IF THE CHILD BEHAVES RUDELY, IT IS LEARNT FROM PARENTS OR OTHERS LIVING WITH THEM.

Talk about THE WALK OF SHAME!!!!!

Perhaps the first thing to say is that there is a lot of truth in all this. It cannot be denied, for instance, that children are more likely to share problems, troubles and misdemeanours with you if they know it isn't automatically going to end in them being sent to their room, grounded for a week and losing all their pocket money for a month. Good parenting is all about listening as well as instructing and trying to think like your child instead of always assuming that they think like you.

Unfortunately, there are very few parenting paragons in the world. There won't be many of us who have not, at some point in our lives, experienced the problems dealt with by this poster but telling me in block capitals exactly why I'm a terrible parent is not particularly helpful. Reading it, I felt like the hero of Jerome K. Jerome's novel Three Men in a Boat who idly picks up a book on illnesses in the library one day and reading through the symptoms of each increasingly virulent malady finds that he is apparently suffering from all of them - with the exception of 'housemaid's knee'. I found myself remorsefully scanning the page, sadly murmuring "true, true" as each example of my parenting deficiencies was unfolded to me, blazoned to a horrified world. I even admitted guilt for crimes which I had no recollection of ever committing, just in case.

Most parenting is subjective. Bad parenting to one person is reasonable or even good parenting to another. To take two extremes, there will be some people who advocate punishing children for even the most minor offences and others who don't want to punish their children for anything. The 'whys and wherefores' for both cases would (and do) fill entire books. Who can say which end of the spectrum produces the best or worst parents?

Parenting is complex. There are so many things to consider. And if your child is naughty, how do you react?
For what it's worth I devised this little 5 point Bad Parenting plan for any time a child does misbehave.

1) Wrongdoing without Consequences.
2) Consequences without Justice.
3) Justice without Listening.
4) Listening without Thinking.
5) All Of The Above without Love.

Jerome's hero finally discovered that he was suffering from little more than an active imagination. The book had given him an imperfect picture of himself. The Bad Parenting poster, likewise, can only present half-truths. Take lying, for example. A child telling a lie could mean they fear the consequences of telling the truth; it could also mean that they have a fertile brain and confuse lying with storytelling and so go on without considering that the yarn they are spinning is simply untrue. This attaches no fault to parent or child; it is infant exuberance taken a bit too far,

This is a fallible world. Parents are fallible people and like our children we sometimes need sympathetic handling. Shouting at me does not, in my eyes, constitute sympathetic handling. It is like painting the world black and white, forgetting that there is a whole spectrum of colours in between. Somewhere in the middle of that spectrum sit many of the world's mothers and fathers. We are not perfect, our children are not perfect and we are painted so many different shades that it would be impossible to say which particular colour is our exact match.

But we do our best.

I shall keep a copy of that Bad Parenting poster and sometimes I shall look at it in the hope that it inspires me to greater and worthier deeds. It has its place. Sometimes we need harsh words to jolt us out of bad habits. But if someone could come up with another 'How Not To' parenting guide without all the capital letters, with a bit more background detail and with a few more helpful hints as to how I can turn my miserable self around that would be greatly appreciated.