Showing posts with label kids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kids. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Little Goodall Coats

photo from Little Goodall
Don't you love it when someone stops you in the street and asks you where you got something?

I do!  

I love to share my favorite sources but I have never owned anything that gets as much attention as my daughter's Luxe Bunny Coat from Little Goodall.  It is made right here in Texas by the talented perfectionist, Molly Goodall, and I'm seriously not kidding when I tell you that I have to add a few minutes on to our outings to allow time to answer questions about where the coat came from. 

The bunny ears are so precious and irresistible that it can make the naughtiest and loudest toddler look adorable white out and about - trust me, I know that part from experience.

So, if you want one, you need to reach out right away!  There is a linen version available by pre-order for spring that will melt your heart but they do sell out so hurry on over to LittleGoodall.com to get your paws on one now!

and p.s.  If bunnies aren't your thing, there are plenty of other darling creatures available too!

Friday, May 25, 2012

TODAY Show: Memorial Day Entertaining

Good Morning!  TGIF!  Are you excited about the long weekend?  If you have plans for entertaining this Memorial Weekend, I hope you had a chance to catch me this morning when I shared my tips with Savannah Guthrie on TODAY.

Keep it clean and put a small basket of Wheat Germ or Moss in a basket to catch the drippings from your drink dispenser.  We added flags to give it a patriotic look.  The Drink Dispenser is from Sur la Table and the Glass Dryer Rack is from Farm Housewares.

Invest in serving pieces that can go from the kitchen to the table.  I love the paddle from Chef Tim Love's collection for Sur la Table.  The rubs are amazing too!

Set the table using your favorite red, white and blue pieces.  I love John Robshaw's block print linens and this blue and white pattern took on a patriotic feel when we added a red plate.

The centerpieces were made by my talented and crafty friend Katherine.  She had them at her home and I asked her to loan them to me for the segment.  Aren't they brilliant!  They are simply old glass soda bottles and jam jars that she painted white. She had yellow flowers in them but I used red gerbera daisies to keep with our red, white and blue theme.

Set up a popcorn bar for your guests.  It is a fun treat for adults and kids alike!  Simply stack brown paper sacks full of plain popcorn and let your guests add condiments.  We had red and blue M&Ms, parmesan, bacon bits, various salts and pepper, and cranberries.  The three-tiered basket if from Southern Living's collection for Ballard Design and it can be used tiered or as separate baskets. Brilliant! I stamped the brown paper sacks to give them a bit of style and I labeled the condiments with ribbons and signs made by The Left Handed Calligrapher.


Add mood lighting in style with BHLDN's three blue and white lanterns.  I love the way they mix patterns!

Keep the kids entertained with a paper tablecloth and a centerpiece made with Crayola Colored Sand and red, white and blue crayons.  So easy!

Don't forget the music! I didn't get to the Rukus in the segment but I am crazy about it!  It is solar powered and you can connect your music to it by bluetooth or USB.  I think everyone needs one for summer!

Speaking of music, I snagged a picture with artist, Pitbull, before he performed his new song off of the Men in Black III soundtrack. 

New York looks wonderfully patriotic decked out with American flags to celebrate our veterans.

I hope you all have a wonderful Memorial Day!

Thursday, February 9, 2012

You need to know about this:

I am constantly looking for ways to save my precious four year old son's masterpieces of art.  He brings a new one home from school almost every day so I have to get creative!

When the amazing Sharyn Blond launched her new linen featuring your child's artwork appliquéd on to one of her fine linens, I about fainted because I adore her linens and I adore my son's art! This is the perfect gift for my mom, who is impossible to buy for, for Mother's Day!

Here's the deal:

There are three simples steps to make it happen but you must do it quickly!  The deadline for Mother's Day orders is Friday, Feb. 10th.

Three simple steps:

1. Email, Fax or Mail your child's artwork to
Sharyn Blond Linens
2718 W. 53rd Street
Fairway, Kansas  66205
913-362-4420
courtney@sharynblondlinens.com

2. Specify the product you want:
-cocktail napkins
-fingertip or guest towels
-bedding

3. Pick from your favorite linen color.  There are 40 colors to choose from!











Friday, January 6, 2012

25 Rules for Mothers of Sons

As the mom of a boy, I often marvel at the differences between the sexes!  Although I don't always understand him, I adore my son and wouldn't trade him for the world!  I was so touched by this amazing rules for any mom of a boy.  Please check it out and pass it on!  -KSW


25 Rules for Mothers of Sons



By Tab Studer

Inspired by a Pin I've recently seen about "rules for dads with daughters," I went searching for a similar list for moms with sons.  This search was mostly fruitless, so I was inspired to write my own Rules for Moms with Sons.  Granted, my list will not be conclusive and may not be entirely uncontroversial.  So agree, or disagree, or take with a grain of salt - but I hope to inspire other moms who are loving, and struggling, and tired, and proud, and eager to support the boys in their lives.  You are the most important woman in his life, his first teacher, and the one he will look to for permission for the rest of his life.  From "Can I go play with them?" to "Should I ask her to marry me?"  Its a big job, but as the mumma, we're up for it.


1. Teach him the words for how he feels.

Your son will scream out of frustration and hide out of embarrassment.  He'll cry from fear and bite out of excitement.  Let his body move by the emotion, but also explain to him what the emotion is and the appropriate response to that emotion for future reference.  Point out other people who are feeling the same thing and compare how they are showing that emotion.  Talk him through your emotions so that someday when he is grown, he will know the difference between angry and embarrassed; between disappointment and grief.

2. Be a cheerleader for his life

There is no doubt that you are the loudest person in the stands at his t-ball games.  There is no doubt that he will tell you to "stop, mom" when you sing along to his garage band's lyrics.  There is no doubt that he will get red-faced when you show his prom date his pictures from boy scouts.  There is no doubt that he is not telling his prom date about your blog where you've been bragging about his life from his first time on the potty to the citizenship award he won in ninth grade.  He will tell you to stop.  He will say he's embarrassed.  But he will know that there is at least one person that is always rooting for him.

3. Teach him how to do laundry

..and load the dishwasher, and iron a shirt.  He may not always choose to do it.  He may not ever have to do it.  But someday his wife will thank you.

4. Read to him and read with him.

Emilie Buchwald said, "Children become readers on the laps of their parents."  Offer your son the opportunity to learn new things, believe in pretend places, and imagine bigger possibilities through books.  Let him see you reading...reading the paper, reading novels, reading magazine articles.  Help him understand that writing words down is a way to be present forever.  Writers are the transcribers of history and memories.  They keep a record of how we lived at that time; what we thought was interesting; how we spoke to each other; what was important.  And Readers help preserve and pass along those memories.

5. Encourage him to dance.

Dance, rhythm, and music are cultural universals.  No matter where you go, no matter who you meet - they have some form of the three.  It doesn't have to be good.  Just encourage your son that when he feels it, it's perfectly fine to go ahead and bust a move. 

6. Make sure he has examples of good men who are powerful because of their brains, their determination, and their integrity.

The examples of men with big muscles and a uniform (like Batman and LaMarr Woodley) will surround your son from birth.  But make sure he also knows about men who kick a$s because of their brains (Albert Einstein), and their pen (Mark Twain), and their words (Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.), and their determination (Team Hoyt), and their ideas (The Wright Brothers), and their integrity (Officer Frank Shankwitz), and fearlessness (Neil Armstrong), and their ability to keep their mouths closed when everyone else is screaming (Jackie Robinson).

7. Make sure he has examples of women who are beautiful because of their brains, their determination, and their integrity

The examples of traditionally beautiful women (like Daphne BlakePrincess Jasmine, and Britney Spears) will surround your son from birth.  But make sure he knows about women who are beautiful from the inside out because of their brains (Madame Marie Curie), and their pen (Harper Lee), and their words (Eleanor Roosevelt), and their determination (Anne Sullivan), and their ideas (Oprah Winfrey), and their integrity (Miep Gies), and fearlessness (Ameila Earhart), and their ability to open their mouths and take a stand when everyone else is silent (Aung San Suu Kyi).

8. Be an example of a beautiful woman with brains, determination, and integrity.

You already are all of those things.  If you ever fear that you are somehow incapable of doing anything - remember this:  If you have done any of the following:  a) grew life b) impossibly and inconceivably got it out of your body c) taken care of a newborn d) made a pain go away with a kiss e) taught someone to read f) taught a toddler to eat with a utensil g) cleaned up diarrhea without gagging h) loved a child enough to be willing to give your life for them (regardless if they are your own) or i) found a way to be strong when that child is suffering...you are a superhero.  do not doubt yourself for one second.  Seriously.

9. Teach him to have manners

because its nice.  and it will make the world a little better of a place.

10. Give him something to believe in

Because someday he will be afraid, or nervous, or heartbroken, or lost, or just need you, and you won't be able to be there.  Give him something to turn to when it feels like he is alone, so that he knows that he will never be alone; never, never, never.

11. Teach him that there are times when you need to be gentle

like with babies, and flowers, and animals, and other people's feelings.

12. Let him ruin his clothes

Resolve to be cool about dirty and ruined clothes.  You'll be fighting a losing battle if you get upset every time he ruins another piece of clothing. Don't waste your energy being angry about something inevitable.  Boys tend to learn by destroying, jumping, spilling, falling, and making impossible messes.  Dirty, ruined clothes are just par for the course.

13. Learn how to throw a football

or how to use a hockey stick, or read music, or draw panda bears (or in my case alpacas), or the names of different train engines, or learn to speak Elvish, or recognize the difference betweeGryffindor and Slytherin, or the lyrics to his favorite song.  Be in his life, not as an observer but as an active participant.

14. Go outside with him

turn off the television, unplug the video games, put your cellphone on the charger, even put your camera away.  Just go outside and follow him around.  Watch his face, explore his world, and let him ask questions.  It's like magic.

15. Let him lose

Losing sucks.  Everybody isn't always a winner.  Even if you want to say, "You're a winner because you tried," don't.  He doesn't feel like a winner, he feels sad and crappy and disappointed.  And that's a good thing, because sometimes life also sucks, no matter how hard (as moms) we try to make it not suck for our kids.  This practice will do him good later when he loses again (and again, and again, and again, and again.....)  Instead make sure he understands that - sometimes you win - sometimes you lose.  But that doesn't mean you ever give up.

16. Give him opportunities to help others

There is a big difference in giving someone the opportunity to help and forcing someone to help.  Giving the opportunity lights a flame in the heart and once the help is done the flame shines brighter and asks for more opportunities.  Be an example of helping others in your own actions and the way your family helps each other and helps others together. 

17. Remind him that practice makes perfect.

This doesn't just apply to performance-based activities (like sports and music) but also applies to everything in life.  You become a better writer by writing.  You become a better listener by listening.  You become better speaker by speaking.  Show your son this when he is just young enough to understand (that means from birth, folks - they are making sense of the world as soon as they arrive), practice trick-or-treating at your own front door before the real thing.  Practice how you will walk through airport security before a trip.  Practice how you order your own food from the fast food cashier.  Practice, practice, practice.

18. Answer him when he asks, "Why?"

Answer him, or search for the answer together.  Show him the places to look for the answers (like his dad, or grandparents, or his aunts/uncles, or his books, or valid internet searches).  Pose the question to him so he can begin thinking about answers himself.  Someday, when he needs to ask questions he's too embarrassed to ask you - he'll know where to go to find the right answers.


19. Always carry band-aids and wipes on you.

especially the wipes.

20. Let his dad teach him how to do things

...without interrupting about how to do it the 'right way.'  If you let his dad show and teach and discover with your son while he is growing up, some day down the road (after a short period of your son believing his dad knows nothing), he will come to the realization that his dad knows everything.  You will always be his mother, but in his grown-up man heart and mind, his dad will know the answers.  And this will be how, when your son is too busy with life to call and chat with his mom,  you will stay connected to what is happening in his life.  Because he will call his dad for answers, and his dad will secretly come and ask you.


21. Give him something to release his energy

drums, a pen, a punching bag, wide open space, water, a dog.  Give him something to go crazy with - or he will use your stuff.  and then you'll be sorry.

22. Build him forts

Forts have the ability to make everyday normal stuff into magic.  Throw the couch cushions, a couple blankets, and some clothespins and you can transform your living room into the cave of wonders.  For the rest of his life, he'll be grateful to know that everyday normal stuff has the potential to be magical.

23. Take him to new places

Because it will make his brain and his heart open up wider, and the ideas and questions and memories will rush in.

24. Kiss him

Any mother of sons will tell you that little boys are so loving and sweet.  They can be harsh and wild and destructive during most of the day.  But there are these moments when they are so kind and sensitive and tender.  So much so that it can cause you to look around at the inward, reserved grown men in your life and think, 'what happens in between that made you lose that?'  Let's try to stop the cycle by kissing them when they're loving and kissing them even more when they're wild.  Kissing them when they're 2 months and kissing them when they're 16 years old.  You're the mom - you can go ahead and kiss him no matter how big he gets - and make sure he knows it.   p.s. (this one is just as important for dad's too). 

25. Be home base

You are home to him.  When he learns to walk, he will wobble a few feet away from you and then come back, then wobble away a little farther and then come back.  When he tries something new, he will look for your proud smile.  When he learns to read, he will repeat the same book to you twenty times in a row, because you're the only one who will listen that many times.  When he plays his sport, he will search for your face in the stands.  When he is sick, he will call you.  When he really messes up, he will call you.  When he is grown and strong and tough and big and he feels like crying, he will come to you; because a man can cry in front of his mother without feeling self-conscious.  Even when he grows up and has a new woman in his life and gets a new home, you are still his mother; home base, the ever constant, like the sun.  Know that in your heart and everything else will fall into place.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Monday, May 23, 2011

Your little Picasso

I have such a hard time getting rid of any of my child's artwork. To me, every single work of his art is a masterpiece!  They tend to pile up on the table or overlap on the fridge in our house!  I think I have now found two solutions that might allow you to give each and every masterpiece it's proper respect!

Cuco Books are the perfect solution when you are trying to make space.  Lyssa Orchid takes your selected art works, has them professionally photographed and sends the images back to you in a beautifully bound book.  It is the perfect way to preserve and celebrate the art with out taking up any wall space!

The Great Remember offers another artistic solution.  You can send them the artwork, outgrown clothing,  or photographs and they will create an applique or mosaic suitable for framing!  Of course, if you are crafty, you could try your hand it and make it a family summer project!

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Turkey Time for the Tots!

My crafty and talented friend Heather Centurioni just invited my son, JR, and I over for a play date that promises to knock the task of finding a meaningful gift for my Thanksgiving Hosts off of my list.  I absolutely love her party concept so just had to share it with you!  Heather is inviting a group of friends over to make Turkey Aprons with our little ones!  Here are her steps and suggestions:
1. Invite your friends for a playdate and ask each to bring an apron or two.  She suggests shopping for light colored aprons in both adult and child sizes at craft stores.  In other words, the party is BYOA!
2. Ask each person to sign up to bring a color of fabric craft paint.  Heather is going to provide the brown paint for the "turkey" but the feather colors will be brought by each of the guests.  Her guests will bring red, yellow, orange or any other colors that they feel should be added to the turkey!
3.  Heather has a "craft room" at her home so her party will take place there but you might want to clear a spot in your kitchen or rec-room to host your friends. Heather is also going to provide the "puffy paints" needed to accent the apron.
4. Here are the steps to make the apron:
-Lay out the aprons
-paint the palm and thumb of your tot with brown paint using a sponge or paint brush (this will be the body, head and neck of the turkey).
- paint each finger a different color (these will be the feathers!)
-press your childs hand down on the apron so that it "stamps" the apron.
-using puff paint, draw stick legs, beak, and wattle on the turkey.
-glue a "googly eye" onto the turkey.
-using puff paint, write the name of the "artist" and the date and any other you might want to include such as the recipient of your wonderful gift!

While the aprons are drying, you can have a cookie decorating party too!  Check out these amazing cookies that Heather shared with me.  She came up with the idea because she had so many candy corns left over from Halloween! For more of Heather's ideas and inspirations, check out her blog.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Hallo-teen Costumes

Halloween is generally a fun time for all of us! But after scanning the selection of Halloween costumes for teenage girls, I found that it's nearly impossible to find an appropriate costume!  They seem to be too childish or simply too sexy. 

Jennifer, the mother to a 15 year old girl, wrote to me asking if I had any suggestions for her daughter's Halloween costume. The costume should be something much less than revealing but at the same time will allow her to avoid looking like a child. Here are some solutions that I came up with:


-Check online websites. Although these costumes look a bit risque in the pictured examples, if you try a size larger than your usual fit then the ensemble will stay appropriate and cute!  You could also put black leggings or a tee shirt underneath them if they are too short or low cut. www.BuyCostumes.com has an entire section devoted to Teens!  I like this sailor costume!

-It is always fun to dress-up with a friend or a whole group of people. If you can't find a costume in the store or online, think of a celebrity duo or the cast of your favorite show, then shop around and pull together your own costumes!

-Channel a fun-fashion era such as the 70's or 80's and find a costume using cool vintage finds.

-Humor is usually a good way to divert from all negativity. Be something silly or quirky and you're bound to get tons of positive attention. I found one high school sophomore who was Abigail Breslin's character from Little Miss Sunshine and another girl who was Madeline. These costume ideas were just so creative! Don't they inspire you to think out-of-the-box? Dressing as something silly instead of sexy will also exemplify confidence. A girl who is comfortable in her own skin doesn't need to be scantily clad to stand out!

-If you are crafty, check out Martha Stewart's Halloween Special Edition Magazine.  She has costume ideas for a Jelly Fish, a Mummy and a Leafy Sea Creature that are great inspirations.
Family Fun's Halloween Special Magazine also has great do-it-yourself ideas including an iPod Costume, a deck of cards costume or a spilt bowl of spaghetti.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Plum Life




If you are one of those people who leads a hectic lifestyle that includes needing to manage a family full of schedules, you are probably feeling the heat right about now!  School has started.  Homework is hectic.  Soccer Games, Ballet Class and Back to School Parties are all being juggled.    It is crazy hard to keep it all straight!  
Well....you are in luck because Dallasite Regen Fearon has developed a software that might just make you sane again!  No more placing your mobile phone down in the fridge while you reach in a rush for a juice box before school and not finding it again until dinner time (yes....I actually did that).  No more miscommunications with the hubby about who was scheduled to pick up your children from school.  This is the perfect calendar software for anyone on the go who needs to grab on to their last shred of sanity!
They have a wonderful video on their website, www.plumlife.com that explains many of the benefits of the software and they are giving free six-month subscriptions to our listeners and readers if you sign up for one month at $9.99. Simply use the code KIM06.  That is so nice!  
Want to hear something even nicer?  Founder, Regen Fearon, is personally willing to chat with any one of you who wants to know more about the software and how it can help you! She is happy to talk/email with any of you to help you set up PlumLife so it best fits your particular situation.  You can reach her by using the Give Feedback or Contact Us buttons on the site.

Friday, August 27, 2010

Mommy Mixer!

Share This: 
http://www.mommymixer.com
Don't miss out . . .
On the First Fall Dallas Mixer!
  Dallas MommyMixer
Great sitters.  Great families.  Great connections.
Come to MommyMixer, the only local service that connects college students looking for fun babysitting jobs with busy families that need occasional help.  There's no better way to get hooked up with the family  of your dreams!



August 31st - Tuesday
7:00 - 8:30pm
Merge
Preston Royal Shopping Center, 5959 Royal Lane



Please follow ALL of these NEW instructions...in order to secure your spot!

FIRST, fill out your MM resume! 
We need for you to submit a new MM resume with your updated availability!!!
Act quickly, space is limited! 
THEN, send us an RSVP email to SitterRSVP@mommymixer.com
Please note the NEW email address to send RSVP's to.  Important... Please include your city's name and date of Mixer you plan on attending. 

Finally, show up 15 minutes early to the event with a smile!

Be prepared to meet great moms & find great jobs!
Please feel free to forward this email/invite to any of your friends!
Please use the SHARE THIS tab in the right hand corner of this invite.



Good Morning America


www.mommymixer.com • 816 West 10th Street • Austin, TX 78701

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Selling has never been easier!

Being a mom is wonderful but there is a lot of gear that goes with it!  There are so many baby stages that go by so quickly and they each require a new set of equipment!
Now there is a great new outlet for buying and selling all of the outgrown baby gear that is taking up all of the room in your home!  TradingCradles.com is an on-line marketplace specifically for moms with needs...either needing to get rid of things or needing to purchase things!
Moms out there are probably thinking they don't have the time to take a shower much less sell their extra baby stuff but TradingCradles.com gets that and has made it super simple and crazy quick!  Categories such as cribs, strollers, and clothing make the search easy and posting your own items is as simple as filling out a form and uploading an image.  TradingCradles.com crew claims that it takes less than 30 seconds!

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Baby Memories

Yesterday I told you about one of my most treasured possessions, my ten year journal.  it is the perfect way for me to record my memories but I wanted to get something with more space for my son's comical stories and actions that I did not want to forget.  I invested in a lovely leather bound book with blank lined pages.  It is beautiful but has basically remained on the shelf since we got it!  I realized one day that if I did not write down his funny action right as it happened, then I would forget to do it later.  It is just too hard to keep his journal up and take care of him at the same time!  I love keeping it but I must admit I am not always diligent enough about writing things down. It is too much of a juggling act and I can't throw another ball in the air!
My husband came up with a great idea one day.  He set up an email address for our 15 month old.  It sounds crazy, right!  It is genius and works well for us!  We simply email our son his funny story or sweet memory or sometimes just a cute photo.  Sometimes I sit at the computer and write out a long note but other times I just shoot him a quick email from my phone about a funny word he just said or a "first."On the first of every month, I go in and print out each of the emails and stick it into a binder for him to enjoy someday.  The other great part is that he gets emails from other family members and friends.  My dad, his grandfather, will send him cute email notes and my brother always sends him photographs.  It is a great way for everyone to feel they are chronicling his childhood along with us.  I hope you will do the same for your little ones!

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Movie time for Mommy!

I love going to the movies but I have to be honest, since we had our son, we rarely make it out to the theatre!  There are so many films in the theatre that I would love to see but by the time we pay a baby sitter, the movie ends up costing a lot of money!
This is why I was so excited to learn about the Crybaby Matinee!  The Angelica theatre offers moms and dads a chance to bring their tots to the theatre with them!  They leave the lights up and keep the sounds fairly low so that the children are comfortable and the parents can keep on eye on the little one!
Crybaby Matinees are Tuesdays and Wednesdays at 1.30.    Adult tickets are $8 and kids under 12 are $7.  Children under 5 are free!  Call (214) 826-3300 for details.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Green is one of my favorite colors!


I love love love children's toys that are "green."  These two items completely fit the bill!  
These Eco Stars crayons are adorable and easy for little hands to hold, they are also made from crayons collected from the National Crayon Recycle Program!  They are made in the USA, nontoxic and even the packaging is made from 100% recycled materials.  The boxes contain 20 crayons for $8.95 so they make a great gift too!
The same site also sells Miss Brittany's Organic Preschool Fun Dough.  Miss Brittany is a teacher living in New York who was alarmed by all of the toy recalls and dangers that she continued to hear about so she set out to create an organic toy that would encourage playtime and great learning experiences!  
Here are three of her creative Fun Dough activities from her website that you can do with your kid-os:
*For the child with the sweet tooth:organic play dough ice cream cone Throw on a Miss Brittany’s “Organically Awesome” eco-friendly apron and make your own Fun Dough bakery. Take small cups, fill them up with Fun Dough and invite Mom, Dad, and play dates to “sample” your yummy Fun Dough treats.
*For the child who loves sportsFun Dough easily rolls into balls. Set up a little basketball hoop and practice making three pointers. The sky is the limit and just about any sport can be creatively interpreted with Fun Dough.
*For your Restaurant Savvy TotRoll up your child’s sleeves and let them get to work. Put out a cash register, kid friendly plates, and some crayons with notepads. Let your child open up their very own Fun Dough Café now serving interpretations of pizza, pasta, and sandwiches.

Friday, June 25, 2010

Summer Safety!

It is so important to make sure your kids are safe when they are playing outside and goofing around this summer.  Helmets, sunscreen and bug spray are on my list!
-These adorable helmets from Little Nutty's are just precious and will make safety fun!  At $45 they are a great way to provide protection for your little cyclers, scooter racers and mischiefs!
-Sunscreen is so important!  Protect your children with Little Twig Non Chemical Sunscreen in SPF 30+. They skipped out on the chemicals and mineral oil and added antioxidents and made it water resistant.  It is alsoparaben,  nut, soy and wheat free and Pediatrician and Dermatologist reviewed.  Its great for the whole family, from newborn to adult.
-When you are trying to keep those mosquitos away, opt for a natural Deet Free bug spray like All Terrain's Herbal Armor Deet-Free Pump Spray.    It is a time release formula so it will protect your tots for hours.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Spray Grounds!


Spray Grounds are all the rage.  They are the perfect summer fun because the parents can let their kids stay cool by getting wet and they don't need to worry about them going under!  Kids love it because they can get completely wet or just a little bit wet as they choose!  
Here is a partial list of Spraygrounds in the Metroplex:
ALLEN Open through Oct. 31. 214-509-4700. www.allenparks.org.
• Celebration Park, 701 Angel Parkway. Closed Wednesdays; open all other days 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
ARLINGTON Open through Sept. 7. 817-459-5473. www.naturallyfun.org.
• Don Misenhimer Park, 201 E. Lonesome Dove Trail. Daily 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
DALLAS Open through Sept. 7. 214-670-4100. www.dallasparks.org.
• Campbell Green, 6600 Parkhill Drive. Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays and Sundays 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Tuesdays and Fridays 2 to 8 p.m.
• Danieldale, 300 W. Wheatland Road. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays through Sundays 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Mondays and Thursdays 2 to 8 p.m.
• Ferguson, 1919 Gross Road. Daily 10 a.m. to
8 p.m.
• Lake Highlands North, 9940 White Rock Trail. Daily 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
• Mildred Dunn, 3322 Reed Lane. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays through Sundays
10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Mondays and Thursdays 2 to
8 p.m.
• Pemberton Hill, 6424 Elam Road. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays through Sundays
10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Mondays and Thursdays 2 to
8 p.m.
• Ridgewood, 6818 Fisher Road. Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays and Sundays 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Tuesdays and Fridays 2 to 8 p.m.
• Umphress, 7616 Umphress Road. Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays through Sundays
10 a.m. to 8 p.m.; Wednesdays 2 to 8 p.m.
FORT WORTH  Sycamore Park
FRISCO Open through Sept. 7. 972-292-6500. www.friscofun.org.
• Bicentennial Park, 9349 Sunset Drive. Scheduled to open Wednesday. Daily 10 a.m. to
8 p.m.
• J.R. Newman Park, 8211 Twin Falls Drive. Daily 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
• Shepherds Glen Park, 12012 Shepherds Hill Drive, near Rolater and Coit roads. Daily 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
HALTOM CITY  Broadway Park
McKINNEY Open at least through Labor Day (Sept. 7), closing when the weather changes. 972-547-7480. www.mckinneytexas.org.
• Finch Park: 301 W. Standifer. Daily 8 a.m. to
8 p.m.; will switch to after-school hours after McKinney schools are back in session.
ROCKWALL Open at least through Labor Day (Sept. 7), closing when the weather changes. 972-771-7740. www.rockwall.com/parks.
• Harry Myers Park, 815 E. Washington. Daily
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
• The Park at Fox Chase, 4475 Tubbs, near Tubbs and Summer Lee. Daily 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
• The Park at Hickory Ridge, 1910 Hickory Ridge. Daily 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Here is what you should take with you:
-Waterproof sunscreen
-Plenty of snacks and drinking water
-Beach type toys so that your kids can make the most of the fun fountains.
-A dry change to clothes and towels
and dress your kids in brightly colored swim suits so that they can be easily spotted!

 

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