Country Kids: St. Fagan's Natural History Museum

In the north-west corner of Cardiff there is a (not so little) treasure. Up until recently, we haven't been able to partake of its resources because The Boy has been a little bit too young, but now that he's becoming more and more curious it's ideal.

St. Fagan's Natural History Museum is an outdoor museum that houses a multitude of buildings from different times throughout history. It's also set in beautiful woodland with lots of areas to explore and a farmhouse with some animals in the yard. This was originally why we went, but we gained so much more! (We actually popped in on Saturday for an hour before closing, and decided to go back on Sunday as there was so much more to see. As it's free entry, it's a good day out)

It's called a museum but it's so much more than that. A museum is not traditionally somewhere children can immerse themselves in the past by being in the place, but at St. Fagan's that possible because of the reconstructed buildings. The newest addition is St. Teilo's church which was originally thought to be five hundred years old (until they found paintings in it that were three hundred years older than they first thought), and my favourite is the Rhyd-y-Car Ironworkers' houses, which is a row of six terraced houses and gardens, each decorated as they would have been at various points from 1805 to 1985. It makes Mr. TBaM and me chuckle to see the huge video players from our childhood.

The Rhyd-y-car houses were one of the things that The Boy found most interesting, the houses of 1955 (when nanny was a little girl) and 1985  had recognisable features to him: Did nanny have those lights?Is that what a tv was like when you were little mummy? It was an excellent way to introduce him to the concept of history in a way that he can equate to as most of the time he has difficulty remembering what he had for lunch! He was horrified at the concept of outdoor toilets!

We had great fun pretending to be chickens in the cockpit (we glossed over what the chickens would have been doing there), buying bread from the old bakery using flour ground on site, sitting in a Celtic roundhouse and pointing out he wouldn't like to live there because 'it's silly!' (which we went onto discuss meant different), and exploring the woods. The real gem was finding out there was a small, hundred year old, vintage, children's funfair there: his first go on the swingseats!

As it's a museum it's free, although parking is £3.50 a time. I actually bought a year parking permit for £17.50 because I can see us going there lots of times over the forthcoming year to explore the many different buildings, take part in the arts and crafts at different celebrations, explore the woodland, or just for a picnic and a play in the excellent playpark there.

Linking this up to the fantastic linky 'Country Kids' over at Coombe Mill. Fiona does an excellent job of promoting and encouraging us to get outside and play with our children, and her linky is one year old this week!

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Country Kids: Porthkerry Park

The azure sky and white-hot sun beckoned us out to play today, so we popped our welly-boots on and hot-tailed it down to Porthkerry Park for some fun and games. We'd tried to have fun with The Boy there last year when the new playpark has opened, but he was a little too young for it at the time. Now he's more physically confident, he adored the challenge.

After doing a fantastic impression of Spiderman on the climbing frame, we had a bear hunt through the woods looking for interesting shaped leaves for some art work, and ended up on the beach making pebble towers, plopping and skimming stones and riding fallen trees before squelching our way back through the mud to wrestle our boots off.

porthkerry park

Please excuse the rubbish quality on these images. Taken with my fantabulous dSLR but uploaded via wireless tethering on my phone due to Sky not getting their arses in gear and delivering our new router to us. I miss ADSL.

coombe mill

There's A Reason It's Called 'Premier' Inn (Review)

In the last year we've been more adventurous in our days out, extending the days to staying over in hotels and making weekends of our outings. As The Boy is getting older it's easier to do with less things to pack, particularly a travel cot!

Last Summer we ventured up to Manchester to see a recording of Justin's House for CBeebies, and a friend helped me to find accommodation as she knew the area well. She suggested Premier Inn and I initially turned my nose up, having a preconceived idea based on my inability to tell Travel Lodge and Premier Inn apart. However, I turned to my trusty Trip Advisor and was pleasantly surprised to find that the specific hotel has 5 stars on customer ratings. We checked in and discovered that the West Trafford hotel had two double beds in the room with plenty of space for The Boy's travel cot (which we still needed at the time). The room was spotless, the breakfast excellent and the housekeeping meticulous, with the lady who attended to our room making The Boy's travel cot up each day and arranging Oliver Monkey in different positions each day!

This was when my little 'love affair' with Premier Inns started. Since then we've stayed there to go to In The Night Garden in April, Silverstone, LolliBop and Thomas Days Out in August, and a fortnight ago on our way down to Coombe Mill. In between Thomas and Coombe Mill we ventured down to Southampton to see how Peppa Pig World is doing a year and a half after it first opened, and stayed in the Southampton West Quay hotel courtesy of Premier Inn.

We arrived at 11pm on a Thursday evening, having found the hotel very easily using sat-nav. Surprisingly there isn't a car park attached to the hotel, so in the interim while we checked in we left the car in the staff car park. I'm going to come back to the car park situation later.

Check in was via one of the new automated machines and incredibly simple: type in your last name, confirm your stay and it prints the receipt, encodes the room keys and pops them out for you to use. The whole thing took less than a minute, very efficient and easy to do, albeit lacking the personal touch I felt.

family hotel rooms
The family room is as comfortable and familiar as the spare room at your mum and dad's. I find the rooms reassuring in their facilities, layout and comfort. Every room is meticulously clean and tidy, beds are firm and comfortable, the bedding is thick cotton, the bathroom is spotless and the towels are fluffy. Add to that the bonus that the storage unit offers a place for luggage, shoes and hanging clothes, and also has a vanity mirror, hairdryer, kettle, and a flat-screen television.

family hotel rooms
In a family room, Premier Inn turn the sofa into a proper single divan bed by removing the backrest and making it up as normal. The Boy sleeps brilliantly on it, so much so that every time he's woken up in one of Premier Inn's beds, it's been later than at home (I have considered moving in permanently, but I'd still have to pay the mortgage here!). As an aside, when we stayed in the Slough hotel in April I wasn't sure if The Boy would need a travel cot or a bed so booked both; the travel cot was made up beautifully in the corner of the room and there was plenty of space for us.

We usually have the breakfasts in Premier Inn, and this stay was no exception. Often in the hotels there is the option for a continental breakfast for approximately £5.00 or a Premier breakfast (including the continental and hot breakfast buffet) for £8.25 per adult. Children eat free for every adult booking a premier breakfast. The continental breakfast range is excellent including approximately eight cereals, Yeo Valley yoghurts, fruit, croissants, crumpets, toast, preserves, hot drinks, juices and the full quota of milk. The hot buffet includes scrambled eggs, fried eggs, hash browns, bacon, sausages, tomatoes, mushrooms, baked beans and they can also prepare poached eggs, omlettes and vegetarian sausages to order.

family hotel rooms

Premier Inn stays are stress-free and enjoyable, we all like staying there which is why we keep going back. The prices of the rooms can vary depending upon the location but typically a family room costs between £55-75 which is excellent value for money.

When it comes to the Southampton West Quay hotel I have mixed feelings. It's a modern hotel with air conditioning and plenty of facilities. Central to the harbours for cruises, seven miles from Peppa Pig World and a few more from Marwell Zoo, it's a good place to stay if you're seeing sites in the area. Unfortunately, I can't get over the parking issue, especially as we have a young child.

The lack of car park for guests is a problem. Parking options in this specific hotel are two nearby multi-storey car parks. At the time of night that we arrived both had closed at 9-10pm. The nearest car park was an open-air one in a retail park, a ten minute walk away. I refused to park there and yes I admittedly pulled the review card to get us a space in the staff car park overnight. Had I not been reviewing, I probably would have demanded a parking space there anyway; I've got a young child and it is not practical to lug him and all his belongings from a multi-storey car park. I also resent paying for parking when staying in a hotel. The area of the car park is plenty big enough for around thirty-forty cars as there is a big grassy section doing nothing apart from looking green. This is the only negative about this hotel.

If anyone else is looking to book a Peppa Pig World short break then I would definitely recommend Premier Inn, but I would probably suggest Southampton West which is only one mile from the park and has on-site parking.

I was provided with two nights accommodation and breakfast for the purpose of this review. My opinion is honest and unbiased regardless of this fact, because I really do love Premier Inn.

Country Kids: All Creatures Great And Small

Last week was time for me to go back to school after a glorious six weeks off with my precious son. It's an incredibly difficult time of the year for me emotionally, with mother's guilt kicking in at its strongest, and takes until half-term to settle back down again into a routine where I don't cry every night. However last week we were lucky because I worked the first half of the week as opposed to the second half which left me with almost a week off before going back in. We decided to take advantage of this and headed off for a long weekend down to one of our favourite places; Peppa Pig World.Peppa Pig World is one of the best places to take a pre-schooler in the United Kingdom and as it's our third trip there, we now consider ourselves 'a bit of an expert'. And don't think we were fooled by the sunshine because we've also been there in the pouring rain as well! We arrived at 10.30am and were some of the last to leave at 6pm. In that time we went on every one of the seven rides, the tractor ride and The Boy and Mr. TBaM went on the waterslide three times with The Boy shouting, "Again, again!" every time they came off it.

The next day we met up with Mr. TBaM's parents in nearby Marwell Zoo which I'd been eager to show The Boy. It had a fantastic range of wildlife there, and we were fortunate enough to see the giraffes being brought in from the paddocks, albeit very slowly because they turned out to be stubborn animals! It was an incredibly hot day and The Boy found it a bit tricky to muster up the enthusiasm to enjoy seeing the animals. I suppose it's also very difficult for them to understand the significance of such a place, but he was enamoured with the play areas and the scooting facilities!

And then to Sunday when we headed home in the glorious sunshine. On the way back, we decided to detour to Beale Park in Reading and partake of the paddling pool to cool down.

The perfect end to a hot weekend!

A Day Out With Thomas At Dean Forest Railway (Review)

And so it came to pass that The Boy turned three years old and developed, as so many little boys before him, a fascination with a certain blue steam engine. Thomas the Tank Engine became a regular fixture in the household and the entire family could often be heard to sing, "They're 2, they're 4, they'r 6, they're 8; shunting trucks and hauling freight" amongst cries of, "Mummy, you got the words wrong again!"

Does that describe anyone else's house?

The Boy loves Thomas. There's something about the gentle stories, narrator's voice and animation (yes he prefers the newer version) that really gels with him.

Which is why I had to take him to see Thomas the Tank Engine when it recently came to Dean Forest Railway near Lydney, in the Forest of Dean.

We didn't tell him where we were going, but the minute we drove into the car park and he saw the sign for Thomas, he was jumping up and down in his car seat. The Dean Forest Railway is set in the middle of a wooded valley and it's quite sheltered from the wind with many trees around the area. It all adds to the vintage feel of the engines and carriages sat on the sidings, all hinting to a bygone era. In the reception courtyard there is a vintage ride-on merry-go-round, a small steam engine run by a group of enthusiasts from nearby Newport, and a view of the sidings. This leads onto a really comprehensive gift shop with everything you could ever want to buy branded with Thomas the Tank Engine (of varying prices) and a quiet room with puzzles, DVDs playing, Thomas construction, etc.

Crossing through this area onto the lower platform meant that we got to see Thomas chug in and excite many little boys and girls, before having an engineer's certificate from the Fat Controller himself, Sir Topham Hatt. We then had an hour or so in which to explore the rest of the platform, have faces painted, enjoy the cafe (in an old train!) or read the Thomas book that we'd been given.

Dean Forest Railway
There were two journeys that we could have gone on, one leading down to Lydney Junction or one up to Park End. We went on the one to Park End which actually started off by racing the steam train going to Lydney Junction. It got everyone excited and geared up for the ensuing journey which took forty minutes in total (round trip). I'd forgotten how hot it can get on the old trains!

Back at Norchard station we had the opportunity to go on a brake van pulled by Thomas, and watch Diesel and Thomas waiting in the station. It was a really good day and The Boy loved seeing the real Thomas, a must for every little fan.

There is currently a selection of dates left on the Thomas Days Out tour around Britain, prices vary depending upon the location. Dean Forest Railway have provisional dates for next year's tour in May and August 2013, it's possible to sign up for the newsletter to receive up-to-date information.

We received free entry into the event with complimentary tickets. My opinion is honest and unbiased.

Country Kids: In The City

The very title of this post is an oxymoron, but as I live on the outskirts of Cardiff it's very difficult to ignore all that it has to offer. I also know that Coombe Mill's intention with this linky is to encourage outdoor play away from electrical devices. So I'm going with it.

The weather's been relatively sunny this weekend but I can feel the turn in the air; it's been less of a t-shirts and shorts weekend, and more of a trousers and cardigan time. It also feels like we haven't done very much over the weekend, but having gallivanted around the country for the past few weeks it's been nice to just stop and relax.

On Saturday we took The Boy over to Roath Park so he could practise his scooting and bike-riding. Unforunately he was a lazy monkey and wouldn't ride properly which resulted in him being removed from said bike and mummy getting cross with him. He had a fantastic time on the longest slide in the city anyway, and while he started out cautiously he soon built up his confidence!

He was also fascinated by the listening funnels (don't know what they're really called) on the climbing frame, and the cargo net which six months ago would have given him a challenge proved too easy now.

On Sunday we popped over to Cardiff Bay to have dinner at Pizza Express and then give The Boy a chance to scoot around. He is so confident on it and really loves going as fast as he can. I know given time he'll be the same on his bike. We also taught him how to use the brake on his scooter because at the moment he does this funny little galloping hop to stop. It was fantastic to see the sheer exhilaration on The Boy's face as he steamed past the couples and families walking along, and a sense of pride came over me when I saw them smiling at his enjoyment.

And no trip to Cardiff Bay is complete without a turn on the carousel.

Country Kids: Country Wide

This weekend has seen us go from one side of England to the other and back again. Aside from the overnighters in hotels, we've been outside all the time and it's been brilliant to take advantage of the beautiful, albeit stiflingly hot, weather.

On Friday night we drove to Reading, where we stayed overnight before heading off to the LolliBop children's festival in Regent's Park, London. It was a blisteringly hot day, and someone decided that black would be a good colour to wear. I think at one point I actually almost passed out as my vision was swimming and my head was light. However, I'm made of sterner stuff and don't do fainting. All I needed was an Oreo cookie milkshake and the sight of Messers Maker and Winters entertaining my son to perk me up. (The pint of water and paracetomal may have helped!)

LolliBop is a great festival and I've never been in Regent's Park before so it was refreshingly beautiful when surrounded by the grey buildings of London. The festival is a riot of colour, sounds and entertainment, and we thoroughly enjoyed everything there. However, we were only too happy to be back on the train heading out of the smoke later that afternoon where we picked up the car and drove to Gloucester where we did another overnighter in a different Premier Inn. This one was fantastic and tranquil, in the middle of a lovely country village with a stereotypically quaint pub attached.

This morning we packed up early and headed off to the Forest of Dean to surprise The Boy with a Thomas Days Out trip. The Boy has recently started a fascination with the little blue engine and we regularly have to sing the theme music. Today was no different once he'd found out what was going on. Seeing his little face break out with sheer delight when Thomas chugged into the station made my heart burst, he had the best time riding on a vintage steam train and meeting Sir Topham Hatt.

To finish the weekend off, we drove up to Puzzlewood near Coleford. It's a stunning small forest that we've been to before and is such a gem to explore. At the time The Boy was only 20 months old and fell asleep while we were walking around, so this time I was very eager to show off the wonders of the mysterious woods (used in Merlin and Doctor Who). He didn't disappoint as he traipsed around the moss and mud-ladened tracks, exploring steep paths, stone steps and searching for The Gruffalo at any opportunity!

And of course the weekend wouldn't be complete without a splash in the paddling pool, right before turning his hand to his first ever spot of car cleaning!

LolliBop 2012

We were lucky enough to be invited to LolliBop 2012 at Regent's Park, London last weekend and happily went along on Saturday, the second day of the weekend long event. It was a beautifully hot and sunny day, perfect for lots of little ones to enjoy all the fun and games that had been created for them.

LolliBop 2012

The festival was held in a corner of the very large Regent's Park and was perfectly cordoned off keeping the children safe and secure. There were a huge range of activities for the children for all different ages (listed here) and there was definitely something for everyone from the under four year olds section through to the Halfords' race course (which got booked up well in advance!).

For such a large section of park, there was unfortunately not much natural shade, however the organisers had done an excellent job of creating several areas to provide an escape from the blistering heat; in the picture above you can see the coloured banners which were one of the areas. I'm grateful that they had also created a bloggers' lounge which was under the shade of some trees giving us an opportunity to cool off. (I later discovered that there was another section of the park which had a few trees and provided a relaxing area, but it wasn't obvious on the map or when walking around).

The refreshments were very good and it was nice to see a good range of family foods and drinks from Pizza Express, pie stalls, burgers and milkshake stands. The Oreo cookie milkshake was to die for! Unfortunately while the queues for these weren't long in length, they were in time, so next time I'll be taking a picnic. The toilets were portaloos and the least said about them the better. I'd envisaged the portacabin style facilities which I've seen at other children's events, where a sink with running water and soap are available.

These were some of our highlights of the day:

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  • Top left: Alex and Katy from CBeebies perform the I Can Cook song
  • Top right: watching Mister Maker in the LolliPalladium tent
  • Bottom right: being a shopkeeper in John Lewis Lane
  • Bottom right: creating a sandart picture with ScratchPatch

It's only when I look at the official higlights of the weekend that I realise how much else we missed, despite being there for most of the day. I can't wait to go again next year, when I definitely will not be wearing black!

We were provided with free tickets for the purpose of this review. My opinion is honest and unbiased.

Silverstone Classic & Roary The Racing Car

A few weeks ago we were invited to spend the day at the Silverstone Classic, a car rally for classic cars. Growing up as the daughter of a car mechanic who adores the classic cars of the '60s I knew this was going to be a tricky thing to tell my dad about without him crying with envy, and so I was fortunate that I was able to use the 'excuse' of going to see Roary the Racing Car.

The day dawned bright and sunny, the heat setting in already. Remember those days? It was only a week or so ago, I promise!

Parking at Silverstone was as easy as getting there, very! There are dedicated carparks surrounding the circuit and the roads around are carefully designed to keep the flow moving. We parked, visited the (clean) facilities and made our way into the grounds to be greeted with the roar of the engines from the '60s GT cars pounding the circuit. That roar is astounding, penetrating into your chest and amping up adrenaline. Now I understand why so many people love watching racing. The sight of the classic cars from fifty years ago zooming under the bridge was quite amazing and we spent about fifteen minutes trying to choose which one we thought was going to win.

The Silverstone Classic is a well thought out day, with plenty for all the family to do: different eras of cars and clubs, a vintage funfair, the AA World (which we completely missed and I kicked myself for!) and the food courts. The range of food was reasonable for non-vegetarians, but I was left with the choice of margharita pizza or cheese and tomato pizza, if you understand my meaning. At £8.50 for a ten inch pizza cooked several hours before, prices are vastly inflated and not justified. If I was intending to eat there again, I'd take a picnic.

The vintage funfair was excellent and perfectly pitched at the under 7 year olds who aren't interested in the cars; a helter-skelter, small and large carousel, a small rollercoaster and dodgems kept us entertained for about an hour and a half. And it was all free!

The main reason that we were attending the Silverstone Classic was to enjoy the Roary the Racing Car stageshow that was held on the main stage, alternated with various other stage acts and rock bands. It was a good show, lasting 25 minutes and featured Big Chris and Roary. Roary was very realistic, but it would have been better had he been capable of moving around the stage a little, but Big Chris and his narrating assistant did a good job of entertaining the children and telling the story.

We really enjoyed our day at Silverstone, the Classic is good fun for all those who have an interest in cars and racing, and the Roary Stageshow is just the thing for young racing enthusiasts.

We received free tickets to the Silverstone Classic in exchange for this post. My opinion is honest and unbiased.

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