Recycled Toys Advice – Two Secrets Learned From a Children’s Book

 
Chat with your kids about giving their unused toys that they’ve outgrown, especially those still in good condition, to charity. Sympathy for the troubles of others and their feelings is an important trait to encourage in children from an early age. However, before you launch a campaign for all the donated or recycled toys you know you can find in your home, keep in mind that you must consider their feelings and how fond of certain toys they may be at this stage in their life.
 
Kathy Ross wrote a book called Earth-Friendly Crafts: Clever Ways to Reuse Everyday Items. This is a great book that shows you how to recycle: making artwork out of old playing cards, marker caps, toy cars, neckties, hairbrushes and more. I liked it so much that it motivated me to write this article on recycled toys and their uses.
 
Here are Two Secrets of Recycled Toys Learned From Children’s Books
 
  1. Your kids will buy into the recycling idea if you sell it to them right
 
Have your children put the toys they no longer want into a cardboard box. If you’ve just bought them five new toys, suggest that they put five of their old ones into the box. The toys in this box can be used for artwork projects involving recycled toys, especially if they are broken and not repairable.
 
  1. Weed out your child’s toy box at least twice a year
 
In the spring and before or after the holidays are excellent times, with the amount of toys children acquire these days. Who provides childcare during the day? Does your child go to Grandma’s house, or is he dropped off to daycare? You can send a set of toys to the caregiver’s place, so your child always has enough to play with.
 

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