Very nice! Great ideas! Going to get my buttons from upstairs ;). I'm pregnant with our second, how did/do you handle chocking hazards? Maybe only playing in a tray/when baby is sleeping?
I suggest starting off with bigger sized loose parts. Wooden rings, wooden rounds, twigs, pine cones. Most of these are too big for a child to be able to fit entirely in their mouths. They are all natural (in case the child chews or licks) so no worries about toxic chemicals either.
@@alittleglamalotofmom Nice idea! Our girls will be 3 years apart though, so that would be bigger sized parts until age 5½-6. Maybe some smaller parts during naptime. We'll see.
Wonderful video and great explanation and examples of loose parts play! 😀
Glad it helped!
Your videos are so well done and informative. Love what you share 🥰
Glad you like them!
So helpful, thank you!!
Why is there a thumb down 🤔...
I have been watching your videos all day 😅 😊
Where are your owls from? Beautiful explanation. Thank you
Learn a lot here 💕
Wonderful collection! It’s so sad that I can’t find Grapat anywhere 😭.
Maybe keep an eye out on the wooden toy bst sites. I see Grapat listings from time to time.
Where did you buy your grapat loose parts? I am having a hard part finding them.
Very nice! Great ideas! Going to get my buttons from upstairs ;). I'm pregnant with our second, how did/do you handle chocking hazards? Maybe only playing in a tray/when baby is sleeping?
I suggest starting off with bigger sized loose parts. Wooden rings, wooden rounds, twigs, pine cones. Most of these are too big for a child to be able to fit entirely in their mouths. They are all natural (in case the child chews or licks) so no worries about toxic chemicals either.
@@alittleglamalotofmom Nice idea! Our girls will be 3 years apart though, so that would be bigger sized parts until age 5½-6. Maybe some smaller parts during naptime. We'll see.
Did you make the numbers on the cut up trees?
Wonderful. NZ💕