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#1
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Easter alternatives
Can someone offer up some suggestions on an alternative to an Easter basket
filled with candy? I don't want to do that tradition w/ my 11 MO DD. I think a *few* pieces is fine, but don't want to load her up on sugar and chocolate every Easter. I thought about filling a basket w/ little toys and knick knacks, but don't want it to seem like pre-Christmas to her. Thanks all! |
#2
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"ChitaShines" wrote in message . com... Can someone offer up some suggestions on an alternative to an Easter basket filled with candy? I don't want to do that tradition w/ my 11 MO DD. I think a *few* pieces is fine, but don't want to load her up on sugar and chocolate every Easter. I thought about filling a basket w/ little toys and knick knacks, but don't want it to seem like pre-Christmas to her. Thanks all! You can get her some Legos, books or other small gifts. Take her to a play or other cultural thing. If you are religious, a lot of churches have special services on the Thursday before Easter, which is called the Feast of the Last Supper. And the Last Supper, His death on Good Friday and Easter is what Christ was all about. I mean, what seperates Christ from the rest of us is that He died and was raised again. Christmas is no big deal: I mean everyone was born. Easter is also a spring thing, with planting of crops and regrowth playing a role (you know, like lots of bunnies). Why not get her a tree or some plants and plant them together? Don;t get her a bunny, though. Not a good idea. On the other hand, personally, I don't see what is wrong with just getting her a few peices of candy in her Easter basket, and leaving it at that. I don't see why you need to make a big deal out of it. Jeff |
#3
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ChitaShines wrote: Can someone offer up some suggestions on an alternative to an Easter basket filled with candy? I don't want to do that tradition w/ my 11 MO DD. I think a *few* pieces is fine, but don't want to load her up on sugar and chocolate every Easter. I thought about filling a basket w/ little toys and knick knacks, but don't want it to seem like pre-Christmas to her. Thanks all! Our kids find a basket with a chocolate bunny, a few other small pieces of candy and maybe one small toy. Also we let them do an easter egg hunt with plastic eggs and put candy or coins inside of them. They like the egg hunt more than the candy. |
#4
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Jeff wrote: "ChitaShines" wrote in message . com... Can someone offer up some suggestions on an alternative to an Easter basket filled with candy? I don't want to do that tradition w/ my 11 MO DD. I think a *few* pieces is fine, but don't want to load her up on sugar and chocolate every Easter. I thought about filling a basket w/ little toys and knick knacks, but don't want it to seem like pre-Christmas to her. Thanks all! You can get her some Legos, books or other small gifts. Take her to a play or other cultural thing. If you are religious, a lot of churches have special services on the Thursday before Easter, which is called the Feast of the Last Supper. And the Last Supper, His death on Good Friday and Easter is what Christ was all about. I mean, what seperates Christ from the rest of us is that He died and was raised again. Christmas is no big deal: I mean everyone was born. I never thought of it in those terms, but of course you're right . . . I guess everyone just really loves a baby story! FWIW, we didn't do anything for ds's first two Easters, at 3 and 15 months. He wasn't exposed to anything that would cue him to the idea that something *should* be done. A relative bought him a set of plastic rabbits that stacked up, which he promptly put in a saucepan and stirred with a wooden spoon. Mmm, rabbit stew! Do you live anywhere near a petting zoo or hobby farm? They might have baby bunnies and chicks for kids to see and play with, which would be lots of fun (and wouldn't involve you having to look after a rabbit or chicken later). Actually, I think I've given myself an idea . . . Melania Mom to Joffre (Jan 11, 2003) and #2 (edd May 21, 2005) |
#5
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In article ,
"ChitaShines" wrote: Can someone offer up some suggestions on an alternative to an Easter basket filled with candy? I don't want to do that tradition w/ my 11 MO DD. I think a *few* pieces is fine, but don't want to load her up on sugar and chocolate every Easter. I thought about filling a basket w/ little toys and knick knacks, but don't want it to seem like pre-Christmas to her. Thanks all! I used to buy a toy that's fillable (dump truck, pail and shovel) -- something inexpensive -- put grass in it, and put a few pieces of candy and some Easter eggs, and maybe an "Easterly" small gift: a stuffed rabbit or chicken, for example. My kids are too old for "Easter baskets", but they want them anyway. Last year I got each of them a bowl. I think this year it will be coffee mugs... -- Children won't care how much you know until they know how much you care |
#6
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When DD1 was your daughter's age, I bought her first pair of shoes and put
in the basket, with a stuffed bunny and a small chocolate bunny. Give her anything you would like, they don't know the difference at this age. -- Sue (mom to three girls) "ChitaShines" wrote in message . com... Can someone offer up some suggestions on an alternative to an Easter basket filled with candy? I don't want to do that tradition w/ my 11 MO DD. I think a *few* pieces is fine, but don't want to load her up on sugar and chocolate every Easter. I thought about filling a basket w/ little toys and knick knacks, but don't want it to seem like pre-Christmas to her. Thanks all! |
#7
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I'm running into the same problem as you, except DS absolutely will not eat
candy. He refuses to try anything he's never had before. The first year he got a wind-up duck for the bathtub and some rhythm eggs to play with. Last year I got him a book, a stuffed chick that "peeps" when you shake it and some plastic eggs for his basket. I put candy in the plastic eggs, but his father ate it all. This year he's getting some more books and I'll probably fill the plastic eggs with stickers and a variety of toys. It's hard to come up with Easter-themed basket items when you leave out the candy! We're also taking him on an Easter egg hunt this year. :-) -- lisa micksmom mick: 7-12-02 noah: 1-24-05 |
#8
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ChitaShines wrote: Can someone offer up some suggestions on an alternative to an Easter basket filled with candy? I don't want to do that tradition w/ my 11 MO DD. I think a *few* pieces is fine, but don't want to load her up on sugar and chocolate every Easter. I thought about filling a basket w/ little toys and knick knacks, but don't want it to seem like pre-Christmas to her. Thanks all! Start a tradition in which she gets an empty basket on Easter morning. She uses the basket to go run around the house/yard collecting plastic easter eggs you've hidden the night before. It's fun to make bunny-shaped footprints out of baby powder all over the floor, from her easter basket down the stairs and out the front door. When my kids were that age, I simply filled the eggs with cheerios and the kids were happy. At this age, she probably won't care if the eggs are empty - the hunt itself will be the fun part. Make sure you make the eggs really simple to find. When she's a little older, you can fill the plastic eggs with coins and a small amount of jelly beans. Little stuff. Or, in past years when we've done a combined hunt for 5 kids with our neighbors, we filled the eggs with slips of paper with numbers on it. At the end of the hunt, you add up all the numbers. The kid with the highest number gets the first pick of 5 prizes. The prizes are just something simple - like a book. The person who has the lowest number gets as a consolation prize the first pick of the decorated easter eggs for her breakfast. Oh - one important tip: don't ever hide an egg inside the exhaust pipe of the car! The kids did this one year - when they got the role of re-hiding the eggs for the next round of hunting. It got stuck, and the only way we could get it out was to start the car. The egg flew out of the pipe 50 feet at high velocity - thank goodness nobody got hurt! Another good tradition is to give her a new Easter bonnet every year. Does anyone remember decorating your own bonnet in art class every year? This could be a fun project you do together. You could fill her basket with all the art supplies (new crayons, markers, glitter, ribbons, etc) to create her bonnet for the year, then spend the morning working on it together. She can then wear it to church! jen |
#9
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"ChitaShines" wrote in
. com: Can someone offer up some suggestions on an alternative to an Easter basket filled with candy? I don't want to do that tradition w/ my 11 MO DD. I think a *few* pieces is fine, but don't want to load her up on sugar and chocolate every Easter. I thought about filling a basket w/ little toys and knick knacks, but don't want it to seem like pre-Christmas to her. Thanks all! no one ever said the basket has to be loaded with anything one or two pieces of candy, a small stuffed bunny or chick & maybe an Easter collectable type thing that you can add to each year & she can have for her own home someday. my 4.5 year old loves the idea of candy, but he really doesn't eat much of it (i still have a chocolate chicken left from last easter). i buy a couple *good quality* chocolates & some jelly beans from a local candy store (Granite State Candy). oh, and Peeps but i never buy cheap chocolate candy at the grocery. it's just yucky & if i have to eat it, i want good stuff. lee |
#10
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In article ,
"ChitaShines" wrote: Can someone offer up some suggestions on an alternative to an Easter basket filled with candy? I don't want to do that tradition w/ my 11 MO DD. I think a *few* pieces is fine, but don't want to load her up on sugar and chocolate every Easter. (a) Who says you have to give her a lot? Why don't you just give her a few pieces? (b) Originally, the eggs weren't chocoloate; they were decorated hard-boiled eggs. You could decorate them as a family activity (assuming you can get hold of white eggs easily -- ours seem to all be brown). -- Chookie -- Sydney, Australia (Replace "foulspambegone" with "optushome" to reply) "In Melbourne there is plenty of vigour and eagerness, but there is nothing worth being eager or vigorous about." Francis Adams, The Australians, 1893. |
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