This week we added two new songs:
The classic Itsy Bitsy Spider. Lyrics and mp3 available here. Video.
And A Ram Sam Sam, which is a Moroccan folk song. Lyrics and hand motions are here.

I have a whole collection of “toddler date” ideas for something fun, simple, and cheap to do with your toddler. While the specific examples will be Seattle-centric, big picture ideas apply to any locale.
East King County offers lots of great options for harvest-time fun like hay rides, corn mazes, and pumpkin patches. On a sunny day in fall, it’s a great chance to get your child outdoors to explore fun new environments.
Here’s a list of ideas…. http://www.parentmap.com/article/places-to-get-your-fill-of-harvest-fun
Remlinger Farms is $30+ for admission, so doesn’t fit my rules for a “cheap date” but they do put on a great show.
Once you bring a pumpkin home, here are some great no-carve ideas for how your toddler could decorate their pumpkin.

Here are some rhymes and songs we’ve done in class in the past few weeks:
Ring Around the Rosie. lyrics and motions
Humpty Dumpty. words and variations; video
Round and Round the Garden (rhyme) words and motions – we use variation 3
A welcome song: “I roll the ball to _____, s/he rolls it back to me.”
Are You Hiding? Done to the tune of Frere Jacques: “Are you hiding? Are you hiding? Yes I am. Yes I am. Now it’s time to come out, now it’s time to come out. Peek-a-boo! Peek-a-boo!”
And the peekaboo puppet song, also to Frere Jacque: “Someone is hiding, someone is hiding, who can it be? Who can it be? Now it’s time to come out….”
Check out lots more rhymes and songs here. And learn about the benefits of singing with your child here.

[This is part of a series of “toddler date” ideas for something fun, simple, and cheap to do with your toddler. The big picture ideas apply to any locale. Specific examples are on the Eastside of Seattle.]
Toddlers are easily mesmerized by watching fish swim by. The Seattle Aquarium is fabulous, as is Point Defiance Zoo and Aquarium, but you can also find fish tanks at pet stores, and there are great aquariums all over town in hospital lobbies, doctors’ offices, Chinese restaurants, and more. One mom told me her kids love the fish tanks at the Nordstrom’s, where they play hide and seek around the round tanks. Sometimes as adults, we don’t even notice an fish tank and will walk right by. Instead, take advantage of these as a moment for your child to be entertained while you have just a few minutes of down time.
If you’re feeling a little more adventurous, late September to early October is a good time to watch salmon swimming upstream. Two places I’ve had good luck:
The Salmon Hatchery in Issaquah is open daily 8 – 4, and has fish ladders outdoors and indoor viewing windows. Note: don’t try to take a toddler to see fish during Salmon Days. It’s too crowded to get a good look.
Or, another place I’ve had good success is in downtown Redmond. There’s Bear Creek shopping center (where Safeway and Panera are) – if you walk behind the Safeway building, you’ll find Bear Creek and can often see salmon there in season.
Here’s a Parent Map article with more salmon viewing options: http://www.parentmap.com/article/see-salmon-run
Back in 2002, the U.S. Departments of Agriculture, Education, and Health & Human Services put together some nice booklets – one for each month from birth to twelve months. Here’s the 12 month guide: http://www2.ed.gov/parents/earlychild/ready/healthystart/twelvemonth.pdf
It’s an overview of all the basic info parents of toddlers need: nutrition, health and safety, baby games, routines, developmental stages, guidance, and parenting styles. Check it out.