Jump to content

Recommended Posts

We've just moved to East Dulwich and I've been happy to find EDtots for activities. I've taken my 3.5 year old daughter to a few of the drop-in groups, which were great, but most of the little attendees were 2 and under (though these were for 5 and under drop-in groups). I was wondering if anyone can offer suggestions for group activities for a 3-4 year old, where there are likely to be many others in that age group? We don't have a car, so I'd like to stay fairly close to East Dulwich. Thanks for any suggestions!
The library usually has a copy of Family Magazine, which lists lots of activities. The library also usually runs some sessions. Look into children's centre. Ivydale school has a children's centre which runs daily activities. Not sure what is close to you but most of the parks have a club (but you will need to check dates and opening times)

Hi! I've noticed the same. I have a son 3.5 too. I wonder if it is because many 3 year olds do the 1/2 day at nursery and then don't do activities in the other half of the day? My son does two days at pre-school so has 3 full days looking for things to do. I'm at work now, so it is our nanny that takes them to activities. I think she has found the soft play at the Herne has a mix of ages? On a Wed, think there is an AM and PM session (though they're on a break for a few weeks now).


We did the Chaos art club which was fab and he was the youngest at around age 3. But I'm not sure what times they're running this now. You could call Stephanie to ask: http://www.chaosartclub.co.uk/index2.htm


The Peckham one o'clock club also usually has a wide range of age groups.

We go to Dulwich Library on Thursdays quite a bit for the baby and toddler sessions they run 1.30 to 3pm and in the morning to but unsure of the time. There is normally a good range of babies and all ages upto around 4 some days. My daughter is 3.5 nearly, I struggle to find things to do with her too, local to Dulwich.
I was thinking, since others have found it hard to find activities specific to 3-4 year olds, I'd be happy to start a playgroup of some sort, maybe with some structured activities or a theme. And I'd be happy to host. Just let me know if anyone is interested :)

I love the idea of the outdoor playgroups (i.e. the forest one in Cox's walk and the wooden circle one) but they're all a bit far afield for our nanny to try to get there with two kids (I also have a 16 m.o.). My son loves looking for sticks and treasures in the woods in Peckham park, for example. I'm limited in how much I can contribute as I'm at work but happy to encourage my boys and our nanny to participate! They are free Wed-Fri as he is at pre-school Mon-Tue.


The other thing is whether Stephanie from Chaos Art Club would put on an extra class for 3-4 year olds if enough of us could commit to a term. I can't say enough about her classes - really far and above any of the other group activities we have joined in terms of the prep time she put into the classes, quality of materials, etc. My son loved it.


Are any of the other "at odds" 3-4 year olds likely/hopefully going to be starting reception at Goodrich in Sept 2013? I'd love to get my son to know a few people in advance as hopefully he will get in there.

Alieh, my daughter loves to look for bugs with her bug catcher so I'm sure she'd also like looking for sticks and treasures in the woods. Maybe we could meet up with your nanny and kids next week? Wednesday would be good for us, if the weather is nice. We could meet in the park. And we'd be happy to meet up with any other 3-4 year old kids as well to try to get a little activity playgroup going. And an art class for this age group would be great too. Our daughter will take Stephanie's summer camp class later this month, so maybe I'll ask her then.

Hello,


I'd love to join you if you are meeting. I have a 3.5 year old son who goes to nursery tues and weds, but monday or friday afternoons would be great if that is convenient for anyone else. Also a 4.5 month old baby, but he'll be happy to come along for the ride and watch the big kids!

I'd love to be involved. Have a 3.5 yr old who will be with me Mondays and Tuesdays from the beginning of August. I know those days don't fit with everyone else's but we could alternate. I'm finding it increasingly difficult to find things to do that work with toddler and v active 9 month old. Might start diddi dance but forsee problems with baby trying to escape etc. Daughter is shy initially but enjoys park visits etc so much more when it's not just me and her brother there.

Friday is good for us, but the weather forecast is not looking so great. Can anyone think of any indoor fun? Today we're going to the Dulwich Library "bear picnic." It's from 10:30-12 in the library garden (in the back). The leaflet says there will be singing, crafts, stories, and a bear hunt. It also says to bring a teddy bear and a food item. If anyone would like to try to meet up with us, send me a message :)

Leigh

I am only just now realising that this is the last week for my son's nursery for the summer and now we'll need to fill 5 days/week with a bored 3.5 year old. Help!


Is the Chaos Art Club summer camp on in East Dulwich do you know or just the Beckenham location?


Any other tips?


Can we get a little 3-5 year old playgroup going somehow? We can now do any day of the week though mornings are better as toddler younger brother naps 12:30-3:00.

I have a 3.5 yr old just about to break up for the hols plus an 8 month old. There seem to be quite a few playgroups going through the summer, see the summer let's go guide here http://www.southwark.gov.uk/downloads/200246/activities_and_things_to_do

We could just choose one/two of them and all go and meet there :)

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • But do you not understand how tough farming is, especially post-Brexit when some of the subsidies were lost and costs have increased massively yet the prices farmers can charge has not? On the BBC News tonight they said pig farming costs had gone up 54% since 2019, cow farming costs up 44% and cereal costs up 43%. The NFU said that the margins are on average 0.5% return on capital. Land and buildings are assets that don't make money until you sell them...it's what you do with them that makes money and farms are struggling to make money and so many farms are generational family businesses so never realise the assets (one farmers on the news said his farm had been in the family since 1822) but will have to to pay tax for continuing the family business. On another news item tonight there was a short piece saying the government has said that 50,000 more pensioners will be forced into relative poverty (60% of the average income) due to the Winter Fuel Allowance removal which will rise to 100,000 more by 2027. James Murray from the Treasury was rolled out on Newsnight to try and defend that and couldn't. You can't give doctors 20%+ and push more pensioners into poverty as a result.  The problem for Labour is the court of public opinion will judge them and right now the jury is out after a series of own-goals, really poor communication and ill-thought-out idealogical policies. And don't ever annoy the farmers.....;-)  
    • That % of “affected” doesn’t mean they are all in deep trouble.  It means this will touch on them in some small way mostly - apart from the biggest farms  it’s like high rate tax earners taking to the street when Osborne dragged child/benefit claimants into self assessment.  A mild pain  the more I read, the more obviously confected it is. Still - just as with farage and his banking “woes”, a social media campaign is no barrier to the gullible  what percentage of farms affected by Brexit and to what degree compared go IHT?  Or does that not matter? Thats different money is it? 
    • Farmers groups say 35% of farms will be affected while the Treasury reckons its 27% - neither figure is a tiny portion. The problem is farming is often asset rich but cash poor meaning that those who inherit farms and have to pay the tax will likely need to sell land to pay for it and could well further impact the cash poor nature and productivity of that farm. I would have thought those who align on the left would be welcoming farmers protesting on the streets against a government making their lives more difficult. Good on them. Makes a change from tube and rail strikes at least! I was shocked to read that the average weekly earnings for agricultural workers was significantly lower than the national average.  Clearly Labour doesn't consider these working people.
    • A tax change that affects a tiny portion of farmers livelihoods and income - mass protest and wild accusations on forums like this    Brexit which impacted farmers income and uk food security far far far more ? Crickets. Absolutely nothing. “Price worth paying mate “   Don’t  be fooled about what this is about - it’s isn’t IHT.  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...