Toddler Travels: Mt. Floyen’s Playground in Bergen, Norway

In light of yesterday’s post about the Norway articles, I thought I’d follow up with a share of our tot’s favorite playgrounds in Bergen, Norway!Exploring playgrounds, trolls, and a forest hike with toddlers and children in Bergen, Norway

One of the top things to do in Bergen is of course, the funicular ride up to the top of Mt. Floyen, where you can then choose to either ride the car back or you can walk down which is an easy hike down and completely doable with kids (as in our Troll Forest article over on Outdoor Families Magazine!).  But the best part is that before you get going on the actual hike part, you can get the kids warmed up a bit with the mountain top playground. As a side note, I’m not sure if you can tell in this pic, but it was raining pretty hard – didn’t much stop these kids though!Exploring playgrounds, trolls, and a forest hike with toddlers and children in Bergen, NorwayExploring playgrounds, trolls, and a forest hike with toddlers and children in Bergen, Norway

If you have a younger set in tow, there’s a smaller scale playground right next too it with many of the same structures but in a “mini” format…

Exploring playgrounds, trolls, and a forest hike with toddlers and children in Bergen, Norway

For the older set, climbing structures are the name of the game…ropes, poles and walls with punch outs.  I have to say, I really do commend how quickly children are able to find their way up and down things.  Even in places where I thought surely they would never reach that pole or that rope or anything, they find a way to make it work.  It’s something quite common to most Scandinavian playgrounds, and I wonder whether we’ll see as much of it when we return home to the US.

Exploring playgrounds, trolls, and a forest hike with toddlers and children in Bergen, Norway Exploring playgrounds, trolls, and a forest hike with toddlers and children in Bergen, Norway

The slide looks pretty standard…but then you realize that the plastic rain suits, plus the water coated metal, and the colossal puddle at the end of it practically turns this whole think into a makeshift high speed bobsled track that can only end in soaked clothes and shoes…fantastic when you haven’t even started your hike yet.  But forest school has made our daughter kind of oblivious to these things anyway and has taught me not to leave home without a change of clothes !  As my mother likes to say, we’re not made of sugar and we won’t melt.  Of all the things that have changed after our time in Scandinavia, I’d say complete disregard for whether is raining or not is high on that list.

Exploring playgrounds, trolls, and a forest hike with toddlers and children in Bergen, Norway

All in all, a playground is a great way to start a day when you’ll be asking a lot of your children  – kind of makes me think that there should be more of them anywhere!

Exploring playgrounds, trolls, and a forest hike with toddlers and children in Bergen, Norway

Toddler Travels: A Few Articles on Bergen!

While I still have to get a proper write-up about our toddler travels to Bergen, Norway, I thought I’d share a few pieces that I’ve contributed elsewhere around the web that could help those looking to do a trip to Norway with littles in tow!

A few articles around the web about traveling and hiking with small children and toddlers to Bergen, Norway,

The first was a piece for Outdoor Families Magazine about Bergen’s Whimsical Troll Forest and why you shouldn’t miss the hike.  It’s a perfect outdoors activity, even with little ones in tow (plus, they’ll get a huge kick of both the hike AND the trolls!).

The second was a piece for Travelettes about traveling to Bergen in the Off-Season.  We ended up going last year both in the peak of peak season in August as well as in the low of low season in December.  Both were great trips but if I had to do it again, I’d give off-season travel another try – especially with little ones in tow!

Is there Room on the Broom…?

“Is there room on the broom for someone like me?” That’s a question that’s been circulating around our house a lot lately.

Room on the broom, by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler. and now a movie by Magic Light Pictures, helps our third culture kids work through the question of where they fit in.

A few weeks ago, we had a couple of days where the children all caught some serious stomach bugs, and combined with the completely atrocious weather we were having meant that we didn’t have much for weekend adventures, but we did have some quality time on the couch. We’re usually out and about so much that we don’t want tons of TV, but I confess I really do love a beautifully animated film or show.  My daughter has her favorites and I have mine, but every once in a while we love something equally together.

Last year, we discovered the animated versions of The Gruffalo and The Gruffalo’s Child by Magic Light Pictures, which are done so beautifully both in animation and story and music that it will bring a tear to your eyes.  I rarely think a movie adaptation of a book is any good but Magic Light truly went above and beyond.  So when I saw that they also did Room on the Broom, which had been an unknown book to me until now, we downloaded it immediately.

Room on the broom, by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler. and now a movie by Magic Light Pictures, helps our third culture kids work through the question of where they fit in.

The story tells the tale of a witch and her cat, as they slowly grow their band of travelers one by one, always making a little more room on the broom.  The cat is grumpy about it, but ultimately sees how different kinds of friends and working together with others pays off in the end.  All of the characters that come to the witch all somehow don’t fit in their home environment, yet they find a place for themselves with her.

It’s not a far stretch then to see how the story parallels may the feelings that many children might have about being a little different or about finding just the right place for themselves. Our daughter has already started asking how she will fit in when we arrive in Washington, what it will be like, how she’ll make friends  (and also, most pressingly, which letters, specifically, will they learn at school?).  The story opened up an opportunity to have some good conversations at an age appropriate level about how our experience has been a little bit different but there is still room for us, and important for us to make room for others, all the same.  She’s starting to process the fact that the day will soon be coming when we close up here, with our makeshift life that fits us just so, on to the next adventure with an “and whoosh! they were gone!”.

PS – I just saw that Magic Light released an animated version of the story “Stick Man“, I haven’t seen it yet but if it’s anything like the others, it should be excellent.  Putting it on our list of things to do if it doesn’t stop raining and snowing here!

Room on the broom, by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler. and now a movie by Magic Light Pictures, helps our third culture kids work through the question of where they fit in. Room on the broom, by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler. and now a movie by Magic Light Pictures, helps our third culture kids work through the question of where they fit in.

Out + About: Copenhagen’s Best Cherry Blossoms

It’s cherry blossom season again! Always a hit here at our house and feeling a little sentimental about it actually.  Roughly about a year ago, I really started to give this blog some time and attention and the cherry blossoms at Bispebjerg were the subject of our very first Out + About post! A little break for this forest school tot to check out Copenhagen's best cherry blossoms at the Bispebjerg Cemetery.So we’re back, almost exactly a year later…There’s been something sentimental about this spring in general.  Both because of the “a year ago” hat that we can put on, now looking over how much our daughter has grown in the forest school system that we’ve documented here on the blog, but also, because we’re soon coming up on the end of things.  At least, the end as it relates to our time here in Copenhagen.A little break for this forest school tot to check out Copenhagen's best cherry blossoms at the Bispebjerg Cemetery.A little break for this forest school tot to check out Copenhagen's best cherry blossoms at the Bispebjerg Cemetery.The months are flying back, and ironically, as the days are getting longer with more and more sunlight flooding the hours, they are also going by much faster.  The month of April nearly flew by in the blink of an eye.  So while we’re so happy to that spring is finally here (finally? although who knows, if you look closely at these pics you’ll be able to see it ended up snowing in most of them – how’s that for spring?), it has a slight tinge of bittersweet to it, as we’re starting to see the cycle of things for the last time, the beautiful cherry blossoms being among them.A little break for this forest school tot to check out Copenhagen's best cherry blossoms at the Bispebjerg Cemetery.I know that our time in the US will be a whole new adventure for our daughter and she alternates between nerves and excitement for the great unknown.  But until that unknown comes, we’ll be enjoying the seasons and rituals and treats that we’ve come to know in this great city!A little break for this forest school tot to check out Copenhagen's best cherry blossoms at the Bispebjerg Cemetery.PS – Love cherry blossoms? We’ve become pros at finding them in Copenhagen – see the round-up of 4 great places to spot them in Copenhagen.

PPS – I mentioned in the iPad post that our tot loves the camera on it, but I neglected to mention that she’s learning her way around a real camera too! And yes, that is snow in my hair.A little break for this forest school tot to check out Copenhagen's best cherry blossoms at the Bispebjerg Cemetery.