Swimming at Brentford Fountain Leisure Centre – 3.5 stars


Brentford
TW8 0HJ
Opening hours:
Mon, Tues and Thurs: 9am to 10pm
Weds and Fri: 9am to midday (excluding pools and health suite)
Midday to 10pm
Sat and Sun: 9am to 6pm
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Swimming at Brentford Fountain Leisure Centre – 3.5 stars


Opening hours:
Mon, Tues and Thurs: 9am to 10pm
Weds and Fri: 9am to midday (excluding pools and health suite)
Midday to 10pm
Sat and Sun: 9am to 6pm
Natural History Museum, South Kensington, 4 stars


Pram Access: Excellent. Ramps and Lifts throughout the museum. Coat room that doesn’t cost for any children’s items. Costs for adult coats and bags.
Cost: it’s FREE
Cafes: there are a few dotted throughout the museum. They do have a funny policy of not being able to mix and match – eg at the picnic area you wont be able to have your own sandwich supplemented with the restaurant soup’. The food is pretty pricey but remember that the museum is free, so it is somewhat justified. I also MUST mention how great the restaurant staff were with kids. My daughter was having a particularly clingy moment and the guy serving the food carried my tray around, took it to a spare till, and then carried it to a table.
The Science Museum – 4 stars

It’s free, it’s fun, it’s BIG and it’s got something different each time you visit.
For those still traumatised by school trips or learning, or simply think that their child is too young for museums… time to push those thoughts away and head for the Science Museum in South Kensington.
For your baby or toddler, get yourselves to the basement for ‘The Garden’ and the 3rd floor for ‘the launchpad’.
The Garden is specifically aimed at the under 5′s. There’s areas with different textured items to play with, lots of funny sounds, places to climb in, a mini water rapid (with raincoats provided – okay they just put their hands in, but we all know this means that the whole body can still get wet), and an area with big soft blocks, mini hard hats and wheelbarrows (a firm favourite with Lily).
It’s a nice fairly enclosed area, with brilliant staff on-hand to monitor/help the children.
The launchpad is aimed at older children, but this is really an area for all ages (parents – this is great for us too!). There are big bubble blowers, pumps that push balls through tubes, the ‘big machine’ that is too hard to describe – try and imagine a mix of pulleys, buckets, levers, slides, plus a hell of a lot of confetti! It’s mesmerising! There’s so much more too – lots of the littlies love the magnet block – it’s just a few big magnets with teaspoons. What more could you need?
The surprising thing about the museum is its practicalities. They make it easy for you. Ramps, lifts, pram parks & babychange. Music to one’s ears.
And… it’s in a big building with lots of open space. If it’s a wet weather day, this is a great location just to let your toddler have a run around the long hallways, and play peekaboo in the exhibition areas that erm… well that no-one tends to go into.
One last tip – avoid the weekend rush and go during the week if possible or early on a weekend. Otherwise… let’s just say that the ‘big machine’ gets the kids pretty excited.. and we know how loud a room of excited kids can be!!
Practicalities -
Pram Access: Excellent. Ramps and Lifts throughout the museum. Secure pram park on ground floor (costs). Non secure on all floors.
Cost: it’s FREE
Cafes: there are a few dotted throughout the museum. The ground floor one is the best (and has high chairs). The prices ARE a bit steep (the no-cost entry justifies this to me though), but ‘picnic’ areas are also throughout the museum if you want to BYO.
Babychange: yes. on all floors
Where: Exhibition Road in South Kensington, London, SW7 2DD.
How to get there: South Kensington tube has a lift (from piccadilly line only) and a few stairs. Plenty of buses run nearby.
Enjoy!
Bookstart 4 stars (would be 5 stars if they told more people about it!)
Okay, this isn’t really something ‘to do’ as such, but it is such a great initiative and no-one seems to tell anyone about it!
The Bookstart programme gives a FREE pack of books to EVERY baby. It’s as simple as that. And when your child is 18 months old, they get another FREE pack. AND, when they are 3 years old, they get another FREE pack.
Why isn’t there more education and knowledge about this? I knew about it through a friend who had a baby, who found out through their friend. It drives me crazy that not more people know about it. When my daughter was having her 9 month check up (which seems to be an Ealing thing, not an ‘everywhere’ thing?) I was given a pack, but, not everyone at the same clinic was even informed of Bookstart. It seemed to depend on which health visitor saw your baby. Aargh!
Enough ranting and raving, and soapbox building… more about Bookstart.
It’s coordinated by the charity Booktrust and receives government funding and heavy donatio
ns from children’s booksellers and publishers.
In the first pack we received two books which my daughter LOVED. I can highly recommend ‘Happy Dog, Sad Dog‘ by Sam Lloyd. We also received a Rhymetime Song sheet which we still sing from. There are also lists of great books to buy.
The 18 month old pack contained more books (a shame we’d already bought Dear Zoo – another must have for ALL children) and some colouring in pencils and more literature for parents.
How do you get it? Ask at your local library (you don’t have to join, you may however have to bring in your child’s red book), or ask your local health visitor.
A wonderful programme which should be commended… now spread the word!
Bookstart 4 stars (would be 5 stars if they told more people about it!)

Okay, this isn’t really something ‘to do’ as such, but it is such a great initiative and no-one seems to tell anyone about it!
The Bookstart programme gives a FREE pack of books to EVERY baby. It’s as simple as that. And when your child is 18 months old, they get another FREE pack. AND, when they are 3 years old, they get another FREE pack.
Why isn’t there more education and knowledge about this? I knew about it through a friend who had a baby, who found out through their friend. It drives me crazy that not more people know about it. When my daughter was having her 9 month check up (which seems to be an Ealing thing, not an ‘everywhere’ thing?) I was given a pack, but, not everyone at the same clinic was even informed of Bookstart. It seemed to depend on which health visitor saw your baby. Aargh!
Enough ranting and raving, and soapbox building… more about Bookstart.
It’s coordinated by the charity Booktrust and receives government funding and heavy donatio
ns from children’s booksellers and publishers.
In the first pack we received two books which my daughter LOVED. I can highly recommend ‘Happy Dog, Sad Dog‘ by Sam Lloyd. We also received a Rhymetime Song sheet which we still sing from. There are also lists of great books to buy.
The 18 month old pack contained more books (a shame we’d already bought Dear Zoo – another must have for ALL children) and some colouring in pencils and more literature for parents.
How do you get it? Ask at your local library (you don’t have to join, you may however have to bring in your child’s red book), or ask your local health visitor.
A wonderful programme which should be commended… now spread the word!