Wednesday, 11 June 2014

LEGO Mixels Series 2 - Gobba and Lunk

The new Summer 2014 LEGO ranges are out - Mixels Series 2, the Arctic LEGO City range and the Ultra Agents. LEGO have sent me a selection to try out and show you, and we're starting with the new LEGO Mixels Series 2.

LEGO MIxels Series 2 Review Gobba and Lunk

We've been sent 41510 Lunk and 41513 Gobba. Mixels are available in sets of three, each set can be joined together to make a new larger Mixel - or just rebuilt however you fancy using all the great elements in the builds. There are 9 Mixels in each series, and in some of the bags you will find a bonus Nixel enemy! All Mixels are recommended for age 6+.

LEGO Mixels Lunk Frosticon review 41510

Lunk is one of the three Frosticon Mixels. Lazy, but very powerful, and with an ice blast sneeze that can freeze his enemies, he's really rather useful!

LEGO Mixel Lunk Frosticon review 41510

Lunk has 51 bricks and at 9cm is really tall with an incredibly long neck and huge frozen 'sneezes'. I think he looks like someone with a streaming cold - and isn't actually very happy about it.

LEGO Mixels Lunk Frosticon from Cartoon Network review 41510


Gobba is one of the three Fang Gang Mixels. The Fang Gang are hungry Mixels who will plant anything to see if it will grow into food - and they'll eat just about anything, so I guess for the most part it usually will.

LEGO Mixels Gobba from Cartoon Network review 41513

Gobba has 57 bricks and is over 6cm tall and wide. He's actually very cute and I think works very well. He's the most character-filled Mixel I've seen and is really excellent for posing.

LEGO Mixel Fang Gang Gobba 41513 Review

His face has such a great range of expression that you can't fail to be amused by him.

LEGO Mixel Fang Gang Gobba and Frosticon Lunk 41513 41510 Review

The Mixels were easy to build and my 5 1/2 year old was able to build them both by himself except for one fiddly bit with Lunk's belly. There are a lot of small elements that tiny hands can't put together or pull apart yet, so for that reason it's not possible for my 4 year old to build them yet - although he can sure play with them and rebuild to his own design!

I like these Mixels more than Series 1, they have more interesting movement.and loads of expression - but that could just be because I think Gobba is brilliant.

At £2.99 each I feel the LEGO Mixels offer excellent value for money. They're a brilliant toy for children and great for a collector or builder as they have so many interesting and rarer elements.

LEGO Mixels Series 2 are available from the LEGO shop online or in store and cost £2.99 each. You can catch the LEGO Mixels animated series on Cartoon Network. You can also join in the fun online and find loads of building instructions and designs at LEGO.com/Mixels


We were sent our Mixels for review as part of our role as LEGO Family Bloggers.

Green Toys Recycled Plastic Recycling Truck Review

We love Green Toys. They're big, chunky, sturdy and most importantly they're made almost entirely from recycled materials. The Green Toys Recycling Truck is made from 100% recycled plastic milk bottles.


The packaging for Green Toys is fantastic, it tells you all kinds of useful information and is entirely recycled and recyclable cardboard. This means the toy can be removed quickly and safely, even by a small child. 


 In this case, the packaging even includes cut out 'recyclables' for you to play with. 


Before you even unbox, you can see the toy - you know what you are buying. You can also see some of the detail that makes these toys such beautiful objects. 


The textured surface of Green Toys is really nice to touch, and feels almost soft, and easy to grip - like the plastic milk containers it's made from. It makes them lovely to hold and very different to most plastic toys. 


At the sides of the Recycling Truck we have 3 different sections for your recyclable rubbish - bottles, cans and paper. They're clear and universally understood. My boys knew what it meant straightaway.


 The way the wheels are attached means there is no metal, so the toys can be completely submerged for washing and won't go rusty. You can hose them down or even wash them in the dishwasher. Handy if a very young child will be playing with them indoors. 


It wouldn't be a proper bin lorry if it didn't tip up to empty out the rubbish! 


And the back of the Recycling Truck opens right up, so your child can retrieve the 'rubbish' they've used to fill it very easily. Again it's brilliant for cleaning purposes. There's a notch at the bottom of the tailgate so that it's really easy for any child to open.


My 4 and 5 year old boys have played with this a lot. They love being able to take it outside and no-one cares if it gets dirty or muddy. I don't mind them filling it with beautiful flowers, sticks or insects.


The 2 boys play really quite complex games with the Recycling Truck. They fill it with sets of 3 items for 'recycling' - usually things like stones, sticks and grass. They'll then go and sort these items and put them into the 'correct place', so grass will go into our compost bin for example. I think it's an excellent way to make recycling a part of everyday life, nothing special or exciting as such, just something we all do.


The Green Toys Recycling Truck costs £19.99 and is suitable from 1 year. It will last your child(ren) for years, making it a really good investment.

Green Toys are available online from Bigjigs Toys website with free UK delivery on all orders over £50.


We've also reviewed the Green Toys Dumper Truck shown in these photos, and the Green Toys Rocket with 2 astronauts.


We were sent our Recycle Truck to review as part of our role as Eco Friendly Toy Testers

Tuesday, 10 June 2014

Algy's Amazing Adventures In Space from Orion Children's Books (Early Reader)

Algy's Amazing Adventures In Space is written by Kaye Umansky and illustrated by Richard Watson, and  is one of the latest releases from Orion Children's Books. It's an Early Reader in the Red Band, suitable for children who are beginning to try and work out trickier words. 

#algy's Amazing Adventures In Space Early Reader from Orion Books review

This isn't our first book about Algy and his friends Cherry and Brad, we read Algy's Amazing Adventures at Sea last month, and when my 4 and 5 year old boys saw this book they were really excited. Algy has very good adventures. 

This child chose his own bedding. He's colour-blind, he likes patterns!
#algy's Amazing Adventures In Space Early Reader from Orion Books review

Algy is a regular boy living an ordinary life and the book starts with his Mum trying to get him to clean his room. It's only when he goes down to his shed and moved the loose plank at the back that it all changes....


Behind the loose plank lies another world, and but what world they will find is always a surprise for Algy, Cherry and Brad. This is very 'Mr Ben with a shed'. It has a familiar, nostalgic feel. The illustrations are friendly and modern and in fact I like them more than the previous book, they're more settled and natural.

This time they find space behind the loose plank - a distant strange world and they float out to explore. We were unsure where their helmets came from - and if they'd explode with the pressure because they were wearing regular clothes. There's lots to talk about and much discussion to be had around this book.


This is a proper book with 74 pages split into 6 chapters. The chapters are fairly short and just the right size for a new reader to read before they begin to flag. It has challenging words and my Reception Class 5 year old would be too frustrated to read it alone, although after a read through with me he is happy to re-read by himself.

The text is large and well-spaced out, with not too many lines on a page. It's not an intimidating book and I think makes an excellent addition to the Orion Children's Books Early Reader range. Algy is very likeable, his adventures are fun, and my boys would be more than happy to find out where he and his friends go next!

Algy's Amazing Adventures In Space has an RRP of £4.99, and is available at a bookshop near you.

We've been lucky enough to review a few Early Readers and other children's stories for Orion Books. All of my reviews can be found here on this page.


We were sent our copy of Algy's Amazing Adventures In Space for review.

Goodbye to the People's Poet and the Free Bird.

On the face of it Rik Mayall and Maya Angelou have very little in common.

One was an English actor, writer and comedian, who introduced me to subversive humour and really did give a good kick up the backside to all the safe and boring TV that we were all watching. 

One was an African-American author born in 1928 in St Louis, Missouri. Friend of Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr, and the person who taught me what racism and segregation and 'having a hard life' really meant.

They both had a place in my life at a very important stage. They were both there when I was a teenager. They wrote things that made me think and cry and laugh. They both left a mark and were people I respected very highly.


I was exactly the right age to be desperate to watch The Young Ones, but it was just after my bedtime. I was 11, anxious to fit in and be at least a tiny bit cool. I missed the first series, but when it came back 18 months later I was there - I already knew all the characters and storylines by then, it was the stuff of legends. The show was the best thing on the TV for any 12 year old in their first year at High School.

Rik Mayall stayed on my TV screen for years. The Comic Strip and Kick Up The Eighties cast were the alternative stars who made it mainstream. They changed TV, they changed TV comedy, they brought politics and anarchy to early evening viewing. They took risks and for the most part it worked.

In 1991 I went on my one and only weekend away in London. We stayed in a Hotel and went to see a show. In fact we went to see Waiting For Godot - with Rik Mayall, Ade Edmonson and Christopher Ryan. It was completely different to anything I'd seem them in before, and it was brilliant.

Maya Angelou I read as part of my English Language A Level. I thought I was politically aware and as I was living pretty much independently already, I felt I was more mature and had experienced more than most of my peers who lived with their parents and didn't have to go to work before and after College.

Maya proved that anyone can do anything. My life had never been so bad, I had advantages she'd never had.  She really did show why the caged bird sings. Her books made me cry and laugh and I got to know a woman I'd never meet, a woman who had never given in.

Maya lived a life far longer than could have been forseen when she was a child. Despite the hard knocks she was an impressive 86 when she went, and I think she had probably ticked off that job as done.

Rik never recovered fully from driving his quad bike into a tree in 1998. Brain injuries are invisible for the most part, and when the initial recovery is done, everyone thinks you're all better. They don't see the tiredness, the depression and the frustration. Rik's long term memory and his temperament were affected and I guess only his widow will know just exactly how much was lost or broken. He was only 56 and ready or not, both are unfavourable.

In the same week as Maya Angelou said her goodbye I lost a friend. Someone I first met around 10 years ago. A huge man with a great big voice and I never saw him do anything other than smile. He was brilliant at Karaoke and could make the whole room silent when he sang. He loved to laugh and every minute was for enjoying. He was barely 40, he wasn't finished.

As I get older I am painfully aware of the increasing speed at which my friends and heroes are leaving. The movie stars and performers who used to grace my walls are beginning to slip away. Several people who were with me at school have now died, 3 in the last year. What I'm also realising is that these people may not be here standing with us any more, but they're never gone.
“I feel sorry for you, you zeros, you nobodies. What’s going to live on after you die? Nothing, that’s what! This house will become a shrine! And punks and skins and Rastas will all gather round and all hold their hands in sorrow for their fallen leader! And all the grown-ups will say, ‘But why are the kids crying?’ And the kids will say, ‘Haven’t you heard? Rick is dead! The People’s Poet is dead!’ ... And then one particularly sensitive and articulate teenager will say, ‘Why kids, do you understand nothing? How can Rick be dead when we still have his poems?’”Rik Mayall as Rick in The Young Ones episode Bambi.
“I've learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.”Maya Angelou.

Coincidentally while I was taking a break from typing this I noticed I wasn't the only one to have the very same thoughts....Boo, Roo and Tigger Too.

Sunday, 8 June 2014

Geek Girl 3, Picture Perfect by Holly Smale ~ Review and Giveaway

Geek Girl 3, Picture Perfect is the 3rd book in the series by Holly Smale. It follows on from Geek Girl and Model Misfit, continuing the tales of Harriet Manners - the 'geek girl'. Geek Girl was the UK Children's no.1 debut book of 2013, and winner of the teen category of the Waterstones Children's Books Prize 2014.

Geek Girl 3 Picture Perfect by Holly Smale Review

The 3rd book in the series and I won't spoil it for you, but we see Harriet and her family move to the US. It's a book full of humour and rarely takes itself very seriously.

Aimed especially at young women aged around 11+, my 14 year old daughter has read the 1st book in the series but not the 2nd, and now reading the 3rd book she felt it is not necessary to have read the others first in order to enjoy Picture Perfect, it works on it's own.


Here are the main points from her review -

  • Best for age 13+
  • Lots of big words like 'propitiously' unlike lots of boring teen books
  • Relatable to girls 13-16
  • Funny and upsetting
  • Makes you want to read the whole series
  • Not the same as all of the other 'teen' books and shows you the world from a 'geek' point of view, however still has the enemy, best friend, boyfriend, the love triangle and the parents she feels she hates. 
  • Double thumbs up
  • Ending makes you cry

 

This book is mainly aimed at pre-teen and teenage girls and we think it hits the mark just right. The language is grown up and doesn't condescend, but the themes are not too mature. My daughter read it in 2 days, and at 400 pages I think that's a good measure of how much she enjoyed it.

Geek Girl 3, Picture Perfect (hardback edition) is published by HarperCollins Children's Books and has an RRP of £12.99. It is currently available on Amazon for £6.00.

I'm delighted to be able to offer a copy of Geek Girl 3, Picture Perfect as a prize for one of my readers. Entry is by Rafflecopter below. The giveaway will end at midnight on Sunday 29th June. UK entries only please. Terms and conditions are shown at the bottom of the Rafflecopter form.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

We were sent our copy of Geek Girl 3, Picture Perfect for review. 

Saturday, 7 June 2014

Ad | Putting a bit of excitement into your picnic with Roberts Bakery

We were recently given an invite we'd have been daft to turn down - a picnic in a gorgeous forest with a storyteller to amuse the children and food provided by Roberts Bakery. It was even a nice warm, dry day.


We picked up Pippa and the children from RedRoseMummy blog and drove down to Delamere Forest. It wasn't hard to spot where we were meant to be - and the storyteller had already arrived.


The children all had fun playing on the hill and in the nearby trees while we all made introductions and had a coffee, before we sent them off to the story tent.


The Roberts Bakery staff had done a fantastic job of getting everything ready - the picnic tables looked amazing! 

 

We were given a short introduction and an explanation about how bread has changed. Did you know that white bread is fortified with the vitamins and minerals which are present in wholemeal? In fact, it's not so bad for you as it's reputation would have us believe.

1. Roberts 50% White 50% Wholemeal bread contains protein, complex carbohydrates, calcium, iron and the B vitamins - thiamin, niacin and a little riboflavin.
2. Bread provides more protein, iron, B vitamins and complex carbohydrates per penny than any other food.
3. It is the major source of fibre in our diet, providing a quarter of our daily intake.
4. All white bread in the UK is fortified with calcium because of mandatory flour fortification laws.
5. It contains very little fat and virtually no sugar.

Roberts know that a lot of people (mainly children in my experience!) aren't so keen on wholemeal bread, so they've brought out a range of 50/50 bread, and will soon be introducing rolls/cobs/baps/muffins (or whatever you choose to call them depending on where you live).


The Roberts Bakery nutritionist Carina Norris wants us to try something a bit different, so they had 4 different sandwich fillings for us to try - 2 savoury, and 2 sweet. While we made our sandwiches Karol, Anetter and Mags from Roberts Bakery were on hand to demonstrate.


Our first recipe was the SLT. Roberts 50/50 rolls spread with a mix of Greek yogurt and mayonnaise, and filled with (in my case Veggie) sausages, slices of fresh tomato, lettuce and sprinkled with black pepper.


Delicious! The black pepper really made the difference and it was interesting to spread the bread with something really very different. 


The second sandwich was one to encourage the children to eat some veg with their lunch. the Sunshine Sandwich. 


More usually eaten as a salad, carrot, raisins, sunflower seeds and Cheddar cheese actually makes a delicious filling for a sandwich, and it's packed with useful nutrients. We cut 3 holes in the top of ours to form a traffic light. If you want to get the colours spot on you can add sweetcorn, lettuce and tomato.

Then we moved on to the sweet fillings. Strawberries & Cream was first. Roberts 50/50 bread shaped with a heart shaped cutter and spread with lashings of cream cheese, fresh rocket and strawberries, and sprinkled with black pepper.


This was a really different sort of sandwich for me, although my partner has always loved strawberries and black pepper sandwiches. I have to say I'm with him now. It was fresh and not too sweet, the flavours go exceptionally well together. It's so attractive too, it looks like Strawberry clipart


Our final sandwich was the Nutty Nana. The children had started wandering back to join us at this point, so they helped. Bread cut to shape, spread with peanut butter and banana, and drizzled with a little honey.


These were very effective - although still couldn't convince my little boys to try peanut butter! 


Preparation done and picnics in hand, we all went down to the story tent to listen while we ate. 


The children had even practised acting out a story for us to watch!


I think it might have been a little embarrassing for my 14 year old, who is more than happy to join in when she's with the children, but wasn't expecting to have to repeat it in front of everyone! 


It was a really lovely day, and made my usual cheese and pickle sandwiches look very boring indeed. Delamere Forest is gorgeous and a picnic with friends was a perfect thing to do on a Friday in half term.



Country Kids from Coombe Mill Family Farm Holidays Cornwall
Huge thanks to Roberts Bakery for providing everything for our picnic, including Ian Douglas the Storyteller - who we all thought was brilliant!