Please note that the following suggestions have been quoted directly from Kaz Cooke "Kid-Wrangling"?. The lists were compiled from suggestions by parents who completed a survey.
Please ensure that you use safe versions of all these suggestions and ensure adequate adult supervision where necessary.
Please feel free to add any ideas and suggestions that you have to this list.
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Good toys for babies (0 to 1 year)
* Dangly toys to hang on the pram or above the baby to swat at â?‚??€œ if they make noises, so much the better
* Small things that are easily grabbed, such as cars or blocks
* Floor mats with interesting patterns for tummy play
* touch and feel books
* Balls too big to swallow, easy to grasp with two hands and not too hard or full
* Rice in a tightly sealed plastic jar to rattle
* teething rattle/ring that plays music
* Crackly packaging for grasping (but be careful, it will be eaten if possible!)
* A baby photo album with photos of family and friends for you to look at and talk about together
* A safety standard bouncing harness (e.g. Jolly Jumper)
* Little toys with wheels, which they can pull or push, or a small trolley or dollâ?‚??„?s pram to push along if theyâ?‚??„?re toddling already
* Stacking cups
* A ball with a bell inside
* A low toy shelf rather than a box so that they can see things better and learn to take them off and then, you hop, put them back
* Plastic chains or rings
* Soft toys with long ears or tails for sucking
* Plastic ware and cooking utensils
* Net bags used for oranges, filled with scrunched up paper
* Tightly sealed plastic bottles filled with coloured water or rattly dried beans
* Broken or toy phones (battery removed from old mobiles) for pretend calls and button pushing
* A soft stubbie holder for holding, biting, pretending to drink, rolling or cutting things into (but not soft enough to bite off bits, i.e. not polystyrene)
* A packet of chips (unopened) to pulverize
* Blocks
* Board books
* An activity play centre
* Teddies and fluffy toys (some babies and kids never really get into fluffy things although they're often given heaps)
* A yoghurt container with a plastic block in it
* Books that have little flaps to open and look under
* A musical mobile
* Unbreakable plastic spoons
* A xylophone
* A hammering game (pegs or balls are pushed or whacked through holes with a hammer)
* Cloth books
* A cloth dolly with a rattle inside
* A battery-operated piano-style keyboard
* A cardboard carton to be sat in, to put things into, and to be pulled along in down the corridor at warp speed
* Cardboard tubes
* An inflatable ball
* Sticky tape half-stuck on something for the baby to pull off and put on (but don't let them eat it)
* A baby-proofed cupboard for unpacking and packing contents
* The saucepan cupboard
* Foam jigsaw bases with numbers or letters that pop in and out
* A napkin or tea towel for playing peek-a-boo with
* A tissue box with bits of ribbon, material and different-textured things to put in and take out
* Large plastic animals
* A small squirting animal
* A set of key rings with lots of keys
* Pegs either rby themselves or pegged onto something
* A baby-sized plastic watering can for bathtime
* Balloons (but make sure the baby doesn't eat bits when one pops or deflates (get it straight into the bin)
* Empty plastic yoghurt containers to experiment with (babies love to stick their hands in, roll them, put other things in and rattle, and tip things out of)
* A stuffed caterpillar
* A toy wagon
* A safe mirror
* A large rubber bath plug
* A tambourine and anything else musical
* A broken calculator, phone or anything with buttons to press
* A sturdy plastic potato masher
* Old paperbacks or magazines with pictures of kids and animals
* A clothes basket and pegs
* A squeaky duck
* Finger puppets (big ones can be scary)
Good games for babies
* Peek-a-boo
* Hide something and make it reappear
* The baby throws and you catch
* Rhyming games or songs
* What noise does a duck, cat, truck (or whatever) make?
* Pat-a-cake
* Blow bubbles for them to look at and try to catch
* Flap a cot sheet or coloured fabric gently above the baby, cover them with it and remove immediately
* Round and round the garden
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Good toys and games for toddlers
* Cars, trucks, trains
* Large click-together blocks
* A plastic picnic set
* Baby dolls and a baby doll's stroller
* Playing pretend games
* Drawing and painting using non-toxic, washable poster paints
* Pasting using bits of fabric, paper, pictures torn fro magazines, cut-up streamers
* Plastic tools and a construction hat
* Books
* Musical instruments, particularly bells and a recorder
* Printing with large potato stamps and paint
* Stickers
* Any dress-up clothes, for either sex
* A box of bandaids which can get emptied and filled over and over
* Coloured wooden blocks
* High-heeled shoes
* A tricycle
* A tea party set
* Playing pretend to fix things
* Kid-sized kitchen utensils to pretend to cook with
* A wipe-clean magnetic drawing slate
* A tent or cubby with blankets
* Biscuit cutters, rolling pin and playdough
* A small train set
* Ladybird beetles in various incarnations
* Pretending to be dinosaurs
* Plastic frogs
* Bangles
* Wooden or plastic farmyard animals
* Balls
* CDs and tapes
* Sewing enormous buttons onto a piece of cardboard with holes punched on it, or threading beads with a shoelace
* Bubble blowing
* Party whistles (the ones that roll and unroll when you blow them)
* Coins and a money box
* Letters and a posting box
* Alphabet and number posters
* Early jigsaw puzzles
* Old purses and handbags
* Coloured chalk on the footpath
* Toy phones
* Cardboard boxes
* Pretending to have a tea party or playing (cooking stuff)
* Playing "shop" with or without fake money and a cash register
* Sanded offcuts of wood to stack or arrange
* Soccer and footy
* A toy hammer to hammer golf tees into Styrofoam
* A spinning top
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Good toys and games for pre-schoolers
* Playdough
* Sticking things such as their own paintings, on the wall
* Paint, crayons, pencils, felt-tip pens
* Large empty cardboard boxes for cars, houses etc
* Imaginative play
* A plastic tool set
* Glitter on and in anything and everything
* Cars
* Dollies with their own beds, prams etc
* Snap-together blocks
* A magnetic screen or a homemade metal tray with magnet letters or pictures on it
* Plastic skittles
* An old phone
* Homemade musical instruments
* A tea set
* Brooms and feather dusters
* Books
* Age-related jigsaw puzzles
* Dress-up clothes
* Blocks
* Simple card games e.g. Snap and Go Fish
* Pack of cards
* Dominoes
* Easy board games such as Snakes & Ladders with big squares on the board and large dice
* Op-shop teddies
* Magic wands
* Plastic farm animals
* Balls, bats, rigged up "goal posts" and low, big netball goals
* Making jewellery from pasta, cotton reels, big bedads
* A doll's house and dolly people
* Dinosaurs
* A keyboard or a guitar
* A torch with batteries (ensure batteries are secured safely)
* A toy medical kit
* Pirate costumes
* Toy animals
* A superhero cape and dolls
* A fire engine
* A trolley to pull or push
* A magnetic drawing slate
* Wood offcuts, hammer and big nails (supervision is essential)
* Plastic jars with lids to screw n and off
* Listening to tapes
* Own personal tape player with earphones
* Transforming toys
* Plastic sea creatures for the bath
* Assorted kitchen stuff such as old sieves, beakers and squirters for the bath
* Plastic jugs with food colouring in them and something to pour into and out of
* Balloons
* Puppets
* Scissors for kids
* A pop-up tent
* A bucket and spade set
* Wrapping presents and making cards
* A xylophone
* Marbles
* A spinning top
* Chasey
* Hidey
* Tag
* Simple tippety-run cricket
* Tree climbing
* Sand castle building
* Hole digging
* Nature rambles
* Beachcombing
* Cooking with an adult
* Gardening with an adult
* Reading alone
* Drawing and painting
* Cutting and pasting
* Chatting on the phone or a pretend phone
* Writing or dictating and decorating letters and posting them
* Looking at kids websites
* Making cards and wrapping paper
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Here is a list of craft ideas from BellyBelly Members.
Craft Supplies
â?‚?¢ Paddlepop Sticks
â?‚?¢ Carboard Boxes any sizes
â?‚?¢ Yoghurt Containers
â?‚?¢ Assortment of different glue
â?‚?¢ Glitter
â?‚?¢ Pipe Cleaners
â?‚?¢ Coloured Cardboard/Paper
â?‚?¢ Brushes
â?‚?¢ Paint Stampers
â?‚?¢ Paint
â?‚?¢ Magazines
â?‚?¢ Picture Punchers
â?‚?¢ Felt
â?‚?¢ Sequins
â?‚?¢ Stickers
â?‚?¢ Wool or Coloured Twine
â?‚?¢ Googly Eyes
â?‚?¢ Kids Scissors plain & decorative edge
Craft Ideas
â?‚?¢ cut out the letter of their name out of stiff card to stick things on, magnet on the back and its a fridge magnet.
â?‚?¢ excess paintings make good wrapping paper.
â?‚?¢ a photocopy of a photo on a card to decorate becomes a birthday/mothers day etc card.
â?‚?¢ crowns and wands, anything that can be worn pretty much.
â?‚?¢ get clear contact paper and stick it to the table so its sticky side up. The the kids stick coloured paper like cellophane, glitter, sequins, anything really to it, then you put another piece of clear contact on top and hang it on the wondow, or cut them into butterfly shapes, flower shapes, stars etc. before hanging
â?‚?¢ fill up an old nappy bucket full of water, and put food colouring in it. Sometimes just one colour, other times, we mix them up for a bit more fun. I collect different sized containers, anything from old J&J baby bath products, yoghurt containers, icecream tubs, plastic cups, jugs..old bottles, anything you have lying around the house basically..and he just has a ball, tipping the water into containers, and from container to container. We also play a game called 'float or sink'..where he gets to guess if certain objects will, you guessed it..float or sink! I always make sure I have some objects that WILL sink, like a rock etc...in the wamer months, he could play this for hours..and it cools him down too.
â?‚?¢ Gardening - Why not make a small patch of the garden just for the kids, so that if you have a bit of weeding or planting to do they can get in on the action as well.