



There is space for sketching, writing and pasting in souvenirs, as well as a handy elastic close to keep your place.

The Explorer’s Journal is the perfect accompaniment as a keepsake record of your fun adventures, but also ‘bears’ it’s own weight as a stand-alone resource. With adorable illustrations and liveliness in essence of the original story, plus a comprehensive glossary, the Field Guide exudes a glorious sense of wonderment, excitement and acumen for your brave expedition. Chapters include facts, questions and experiments about the Sky, Down in the Ground, the Field, Plants and Trees, Creepy-Crawlies, Extraordinary Creatures, Tracks and our climate. Complete with planning and safety tips, the guide sets out to encourage a field of fun activities for children and adults to delight in together. Whether rain, hail or shine, a rainforest, caves, mountains or your backyard, there’s plenty to explore. The latter includes the most fascinating contents that will keep you in good stead as you embark on your outdoor nature journey. Just look at these new titles that inspire a range of learning adventures.įrom Michael Rosen and Helen Oxenbury‘s classic quest, ‘We’re Going on a Bear Hunt’ comes the must-haves My Explorer’s Journal and My Adventure Field Guide. Making discoveries through play and contextual language opens up a whole new way of perceiving the world. Whether relaying conceptual understandings, or understanding the minds of young explorers, picture books can take their readers on imaginative, sensory and mind-boggling journeys. Review: The Vanishing Throne by Elizabeth May January 17, 2019.Flames by Robbie Arnott January 21, 2019.A Little Taste of Australiana – Picture Books to Whet Your Aussie Appetite January 23, 2019.Hadamar: The House of Shudders – Inspirational Beginnings by Jason K Foster August 21, 2019.Guest Review: Wilam: A Birrarung Story August 25, 2019.
