Hape Home Education – The Perfect Match

Hape Home Education range endorsed by teachers from around the world

Hape’s beautiful range of home education toys allows for endless hours of fun and play. Each product is designed to encourage children to explore and learn. The complete range has been developed to build children’s skills and confidence in a fun, gentle way following Hape’s ethos that; ‘children do not play to learn; children learn because they play’. These three products, all part the Home Education range, are endorsed by teachers from around the world.

Each game is made from high-quality natural materials, water-based paints and non-toxic glues. The designs and pictures are vibrant and cheerful. It’s a joy to play with such a good quality product. All games meet European and American safety standards.

Hape’s Motto is Love play. Learn and it certainly scores on every front. I remember so many happy times playing similar puzzles with my own children, and what fun we had. Now it’s the grandchildren’s turn. A lovely gift for Christmas but I couldn’t wait until then. It’s another one for grandma’s toy box.

Hape Converse – Find, match and describe pairs of opposites.

Converse encourages kids to find, match and describe pairs and opposites using brightly coloured picture cards. It’s a great way to develop children’s communication skills and have fun at the same time. The set contains; 20 pairs of playing cards, 1 red card and instructions. The cards are lovely to touch and the use of animals and children to describe opposites such as big and little, wet and dry, front and back are a delight to the eye.

The Hape converse set is recommended for 4 years+ and is available from Amazon priced £12.00.

 

Hape Listen to the Clues – Children use their own words to guide one another in selecting the correct picture sequence.

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Listen to the Clues is a delightful communication game containing 4 game strips for the listener and 32 colourful playing cards for the speaker. The aim of the game is for the players to use their own words to guide one another in selecting the correct pictures to match a sequence. Cooperation and teamwork are developed and strengthened. A really lovely game that helps with description and storytelling. Great size for little hands as well as larger ones.

The Hape Listen to Clues set is recommended for 4 years+ and is available from Amazon priced at £13.42.

 

Hape Combino –  use colourful transparent overlays to complete pictures.

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Combino  provides children with the opportunity to develop their experimental skills. The wooden tiles are only partly drawn and finished by laying on transparent image overlays to complete the picture. There’s lots of fun to be had by completing the correct pictures but even more from creating odd combinations – propellors on cakes, umbrellas in goldfish bowls.

The Hape Combino is recommended for 4 years+ and is available from Amazon priced £13.42

 

 

The New Mrs Clifton by Elizabeth Buchan

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It’s so nice to be able to breathe out again. Talk about tension.

The New Mrs Clifton had me gripped from the off. I had eagerly anticipated its arrival and was not disappointed. I am still haunted by the characters of Elizabeth Buchan’s previous novel, I Can’t Begin to Tell You and now I can add Gus and Krista Clifton to the cast list that has taken residence in my head.

As the Second World War draws to a close, Intelligence Officer Gus Clifton surprises his sisters at their London home. But an even greater shock is the woman he brings with him, Krista – the German wife whom he has secretly married in Berlin.

Krista is still suffering from her experiences at the hands of the British and their allies as Berlin fell; she is all but broken by the horrors she cannot share. But Gus’s sisters can only see the enemy their brother has brought under their roof. And their friend, Nella, Gus’s beautiful, loyal fiancée, cannot understand what made Gus change his mind about her. Bewildered, they cannot fathom the hold  Krista has over their honourable Gus. How can the three women get her out of their home, their future, their England?

The stifling atmosphere  of the house oozes from every page, the  suffocating tension between the women pervades each chapter.

We learn of the consequences of Krista’s arrival in the first two pages, so the reader is in no doubt as to what the end will be but the who, and the why and the how keep you hooked until the end.

An absolute eye opener to post-war England for anyone who is under the impression that once war was over it was a series of hope and happy endings. I couldn’t help but think  of the war in Syria and the people of Aleppo as I turned the pages, drawing parallels, thinking about the future they face when war is eventually over. Let us hope that is sooner rather than later.

It is a story of deprivation and resolution, and what it takes to survive when the future is bleak. What choices we are left with.

A fabulous read from start to finish.

 

Elizabeth Buchan’s previous novels include the prizewinning Consider the Lily, Revenge of the Middle-Aged Woman and I Can’t Begin to Tell You. Her short stories have been broadcast on Radio 4 and published in a range of magazines. Elizabeth is patron of the Guildford Book Festival and of the National Academy of Writing. She has been a judge for the Costa Novel Award and sits on the authors’  committee for the Reading Agency

The New Mrs Clifton is published by Penguin

www.elizabethbuchan.com

www.penguin.co.uk

Crobar by Gathr – Award Winning cricket flour protein bar

 

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Crobar is the first insect-based food product to retail in the UK and Gathr have now added Coffee & Vanilla and Raspberry & Cacao to the original range of Peanut and Cacao. They are made from fruit, nuts and cricket flour and contain no added sugars or sweeteners.

Gathr is leading the trend of food producers who are looking at alternative sources of protein and vitamins in their products, and have plans on developing insects into a viable and more sustainable source of protein in our diets. Crickets contain more protein and less fat than an equivalent amount of beef, plus are high in iron and vitamin B12. They are not only good for you, they are good for the planet.

Insects are already available to buy as food in the UK, but Gathr has taken things one step further by using them as a key ingredient and incorporating them into everyday food.

Gathr’s products won ‘Best New Food Concept’ at the IFE World Food Innovation Awards.

Don’t be put off by the fact that it contains insects, albeit that they are ground into a flour. I can happily say it tastes delicious. I’m not partial to coffee flavoured sweets or cakes but the flavour was subtle and suitably balanced by the cacao. That said, I preferred the raspberry & cacao flavour.  Free from gluten, soy and dairy it was a tasty snack and easily satisfied my sweet tooth. I’d love to say it made me jump higher as well – but it didn’t.

Available in smaller 30g sizes the new flavours RRP from £1.79 each and are available online on the Gathr website, Amazon Prime and at selected retailers. For further information and multipack orders visit the Gathr website.

They will also be available to buy in-store from South East Asian Cuisine specialists Nusa Kitchen.

As well as energy bars, Gathr also stocks organic cricket flour, which can be used in everyday cooking. Recipes on the website.
 www.gathrfoods.com

www.gathrfoods.com/recipes

www.nusakitchen.co.uk

Port Lympne Hotel and Animal Reserve

 

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It was our anniversary and we didn’t want to escape too far but we were looking for something different. We certainly found it at Port Lympne Hotel, Kent and enjoyed a superbly relaxing two-day break.

From the moment we arrived, we were entranced. The reception is housed in the library and the shelves spill with old books – the perfect welcome. The house was  built in 1911 for Sir Philip Sassoon with later additions after WWI and abandoned after WW2. It was in a sorry state when John Aspinall bought it in 1973 to cope with the overspill from his venture Howlett’s Animal Park. The house was restored over a ten year period and the animal reserve began to take shape.

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The rooms are named after the guests that Sir Philip Sassoon entertained there. We were shown to the Sir Winston Churchill room, overlooking the garden with views beyond the trees to the flatland of Romney Marsh. It was absolutely stunning and a joy to wake early and sit up in bed, enjoying the vista. It was exceptionally quiet, a few bird calls and the odd animal noise from a few animals that start with X but nothing disturbing at all. Bliss.

Our room had a new shower suite but the other rooms retain the original bathrooms from 1911 with art deco porcelain ware and tiles. Quite extraordinary given that most homeowners take on a total revamp once they have purchased a new property. Everything was clean and warm, and most importantly, the bed was comfortable. There was also a plentiful supply of hot drinks and biscuits which will always be a huge plus to me.

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I was offered a peek into the other rooms: T E Lawrence, Sir Herbert Baker, The Rex Whistler and the two bridal suites – Sir Philip Sassoon and Charles  Chaplin. All were unique and any one of them would be a pleasure to stay in; all had fabulous views.

There are six rooms at the moment and two more were quietly being prepared during our stay.

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Dinner and breakfast were served in the dining room that was rather breathtaking, even a little intimidating. The mural was painted by Martin Jordan, a self-taught artist and over 200 animals adorn the walls and ceilings. In John Aspinall’s words ‘It is to be a tribute to the heroism of wild animals in the face of their continuing persecution by mankind.’ As we were alone in the room that evening I enjoyed spotting the various species, right down to the butterflies and insects that hide in the cornices and window frames.

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The hotel bar was restful and elegant, again with the safari theme but with all the comfort of the house. There is a TV on the wall which is almost the only reminder that the world still exists beyond the grounds.

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Just off the hall was a reception area, The Whistler Tented Room. Sir Philip commissioned his friend, Rex Whistler, to paint, on canvas, this room in 1933. It is thought to be the best example of his work in existence. The mural suffered badly from damp and decay when the house lay empty and restoration was undertaken by the Tate Gallery. The hotel is a popular wedding venue and this room is a rest area for guests; toilets and cloakrooms are located here. The hotel staff were busy preparing for a wedding that would take place the day following our visit – so we timed things perfectly.

The beautiful  gardens that surround the hotel are tranquil and soothing and if you never strayed toward the animal reserve you would barely know it was there.

One the second night we drove round to Bear Lodge, one of the other types of accommodation at the reserve – glamping on a hill overlooking the bear and black rhino area. Each ‘tent’ sleeps 6 and has simple kitchen and bathroom facilities, and a wood burner for colder evenings. There is a clubhouse and play area so it’s perfect for families.

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We visited the clubhouse to try the Mongolian barbecue we’d heard so much about.  We were shown bowls of three sizes that we were to fill with a choice of  meat and/or fish in one, vegetables another and lastly, noodles and rice. There was a selection of sauces – satay, sweet and sour, curry etc and we were to add a large tablespoon before taking over to the cooking area.

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It was the perfect portion size and our meal was ready in minutes. You could leave it to the chef or get stuck in – so we did. It was great fun but the heat was intense and I had great admiration for the chef who effortlessly coped with four meals at once, time after time.

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No matter where your accommodation on the reserve entrance into the parks is included, as is travel on the safari trucks. These run every fifteen minutes and there are various stop-off points along the way so that you can disembark and wander through different sectors of the reserve.

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Private safari tours take place throughout the day and evening and I would definitely make use of these when we visit again. Whereas the trucks follow a given route the safari jeeps go across the terrain among the animals. There are other experiences on offer and you can find more about them on the website.

During our stay the staff were attentive and friendly – the right kind of friendly – not too intrusive and not over chatty but they really were a huge part of the enjoyment of our time there. We spent far too long just sitting and enjoying the view but it was so restful it was hard to drag ourselves away.

We thoroughly enjoyed our break but it would be far too quiet if you are looking for something with a bit of a buzz. As it was, we were glad of the quiet and respite.

www.aspinallfoundation.org

Shelter From The Storm by Ellie Dean

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The latest saga set at Beach View Boarding House in Cliffehaven.

It is 1943 and nineteen-year-old April Wilton has joined the WRENS and is busy servicing ships’ engines in Portsmouth. Here she has found freedom, friendship, and fulfilment.

April meets Daniel, a young American soldier, whose mother is Sioux and father is of African descent, The attraction is immediate, and coming from strict racial segregation in South Carolina, Daniel finds the freedom he has in England overwhelming.

But with war and race both involved, their relationship was never going to be simple.

Rejected by her mother and facing an uncertain future she travels to Cliffehaven. However, she carries a secret, one that could change her life for ever.

Can the warmth and support of Peggy Riley and those at Beach View Boarding House heal the wounds of April’s past and bring her hope amid this time of turmoil?

This is my first encounter with the characters of Beach View Boarding House even though it is Ellie Dean’s eleventh family saga.  However, it didn’t matter  that I hadn’t read any of the others  as I was soon swept into the warm and welcoming arms of Peggy Riley and the members of her hotch-potch household. It quite easily stands alone but it did make me curious to find out the back stories of the other members that now reside at Beach View – which can only be a good thing.

Ellie Dean handles a wide range of characters and makes you warm to each one of them – no mean feat at all. She takes us back to a time when life was difficult enough fighting a war and dealing with rationing, let alone the complications that relationships bring. A heartwarming and uplifting story for lovers of family sagas.

www.ellie-dean.co.uk

www.penguin.co.uk

www.tracybaines.co.uk

 

An Orphan’s Christmas by Katie Flynn

 

 

 

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Katie Flynn’s latest novel will no doubt be eagerly awaited by her many fans.  Molly Penelope Hardwick is abandoned and living in Haisborough Orphanage in Liverpool. She befriends another orphan, Lenny Smith and together they sneak out to roam the streets of Liverpool.  Flynn gives the reader a gentle insight into life in the orphanage, the rules and regulations, the deprivation and hardship that is met with stoicism and humour. Even though the sun was blazing away outside I was soon swept into the chill winter of 1936.

Molly is feisty and curious and before long runs into trouble. When she is forced to leave the orphanage Lenny has no idea of where she has gone. When war is declared Lenny signs up with the RAF and soon forgets about his childhood pal, turning his focus to fighting the war from the skies.

Molly is desperate to join the war effort and with her sights set on joining the WAAF chances are they will see each other again.

Katie Flynn is the UK’s biggest selling saga author, with every novel a top ten best seller. This is likely to do exactly the same.  It’s a warm, feel-good novel, a story that races along leaving you wondering whether the two friends will meet and if they do, will love be in the air? A relaxing, easy read, with lots of twists and turns, lively characters and enough detail to give a flavour of wartime without slowing the story down. A welcome in many a Christmas stocking for sure.

Published by Century on August 25th

Hardback £20.00

Also available in ebook

www.katieflynn.com

The Saffron Road by Christine Toomey

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A Journey with Buddha’s Daughters.

 

‘People think that Engaged Buddhism is only about social work and stopping war. But at the same time that you stop the war outside, you have to stop the war inside yourself.’ Sister Chân Không.

It took Christine Toomey two decades of covering wars around the world, looking outward rather than inward, for her to appreciate that any true understanding of conflict can only come from facing up to our own inner battles.

A chance meeting with a Buddhist nun in India made a deep impression on her. It sent her on a journey that lasted two years, in which time she covered over 60,000 miles, across continents, to discover more about the women who were embarking on the Buddhist spiritual path. She follows a trail across Asia, Europe and North America and thereby covers the history, past tradition and modern practice of women who become Buddhist nuns.

The book has three interwoven strands: the path of Buddhism from East to West, the individual paths taken by women to becoming nuns and the third her own personal path to healing the grief she felt on losing both her parents within a short time.

She converses with highly educated women who have had successful and stimulating careers but have found  something lacking  in their life that sent them searching for something more. Many have left marriages and older children behind on their journey of the spiritual path. Those she interviews include an acclaimed novelist, a princess, a former BBC journalist, a Washington political aid and a concert violinist.

There are many tales of great suffering, hardship, and violence that women have had to escape from, and overcome, to follow their calling. That they have endured and found inner peace is inspirational.

It is quite simply the most fascinating book I have read this year and I felt strangely calm whilst reading it. There is much to be found among the pages, of wisdom and of coming to terms with things you cannot change.

A foreign correspondent and feature writer for the Sunday Times for more than twenty years, Christine Toomey has reported extensively from Latin America, the Middle East and throughout Europe. Her journalism has been syndicated globally and she has twice won Amnesty International Awards for Magazine Story of the Year.

 

www.portobellobooks.com

 

Do It Like A Woman by Caroline Criado-Perez

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Do It Like A Woman …and change the world by Caroline Criado-Perez

Doing anything like a woman used to mean being a bit rubbish.

No longer. Now, as the women in this book prove, it means being brave, thinking differently, speaking out, standing up, taking a risk, fighting back, dreaming big, and being more than a bit amazing.

Every day, all around the world, women are reinventing what it means to be female in cultures where power, privilege or basic freedoms are all too often acquainted with being male.

From physical strength to having a voice and being heard, women are still being overlooked and even dismissed. I still find it hard to believe that women not only have to fight to be heard but that the fight is not over. Many of the older generation will remember when things were much worse in the UK and USA and we have come a long way over the years but women in others countries are not so fortunate. FGM is one topic covered and the graphic description and potential side effects suffered by young girls made me grit my teeth as I was reading it – and sadly, women continue to be the perpetrators which I find baffling.

The book contains examples of women challenging various boundaries on a day to day basis which differs from country to country. Speaking out, not keeping silent, putting your head above the parapet can be traumatising and draining but it has to be done. Criado-Perez tells of the consequences.

We could, in the next few weeks, see leaders of both Conservative and Labour parties,  and we already have female first ministers of Scotland and Northern  Ireland. It will be interesting to notice how the general reaction differs as to when Margaret Thatcher came to power in 1979. I remember many males objecting to being told what to do by a woman. I think there will be fewer protestations now, it is much more common to have women leading companies and businesses.

One quote that stood out for me, as women continue to work harder for equal recognition was the following:

‘I am reminded of the aphorism that we will have equality when there are as many mediocre women at the top as there are mediocre men. ‘

Quite.

www.portobellobooks.com

www.carolinecriadoperez.com