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Description:This smooth wooden crate holds four soft, 100% organic cotton stuffed toy vegetables. Eco-friendly and inviting, these toys encourage children to develop a positive attitude towards veggies! Sure to become your child's favorite toy, this set includes: a carrot, mushroom, green bean and tomato. Product Features:
Stuffed Vegetable and Fruit toys Getting children to eat their vegetables rivals teething and potty-training on the list of 'least fun' parental experiences. But Under the Nile believes that children are more likely to eat healthy foods if they have an opportunity to learn and play with them throughout the day. The company encourages parents to use a process they call, 'show, tell, and taste'. For example, keep a colander full of the brightly-colored Veggie Toys on the kitchen counter so they are always accessible for an impromptu chat on colors and shapes or to let the kids use the smiley-faced characters for imaginative play. Once the children are enjoying the activity, capitalize on the fun times by serving carrot sticks, broccoli trees, or other kid-friendly 'green' snacks to reinforce the notion that eating vegetables doesn't have to be a chore. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, parents can introduce fruits and vegetables into a baby's diet as early as six months of age working up to three-to-five vegetable servings a day for a toddler-age child. Since getting toddlers to do anything against their will can be a daunting task, parents who help children establish a positive connection to vegetables early will likely fare better than those who wait until the power struggle begins. Under the Nile's Veggin' Out collection is non-toxic and stuffed with 100% organic, Egyptian cotton, so it is safe for infants to play with (and chew on!) How Veggies Are Helping Villages: Under the Nile, manufacturer of organic toys and apparel, is doing more than just helping kids make a positive association with healthy foods. They are also proud participants of the 13-Villages-Project -- a SEKEM initiative to fight against poverty and its causes in rural Egypt. Under the Nile's "Veggin' Out" collection of stuffed fruits and vegetables are made exclusively through this program. Janice Masoud, President of Under the Nile, joined the 13-Villages-Project because she believes, as they do, that poverty cannot be addressed solely through financial aid. So while many manufacturers choose to give a portion of their proceeds to underprivileged countries, charities, Masoud wanted to do more than just donate. She wanted to part of the solution. Here is what she's done:
The results of this project are incredible. Masoud says, "The women feel a sense of self-worth and empowerment. Learning a trade is inspiring them to try other things they would not normally have attempted. When I visited the villages a few months ago, not only were the women happy, but the entire village was proud of what they had accomplished." Under the Nile has enough work to keep all 13 villages busy manufacturing fruit and vegetable toys for the remainder of 2008 and is looking to continue outsourcing projects to these communities long-term. Products manufactured through this program will begin bearing a 13-Villages-Project hang tag starting in the fall. |
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