Synopsis
Just Imagine & Play! On the Farm is an activity book set in a busy barnyard! Kids will love the facts, games, and fold-out farm scene to play with.
Have you ever wondered what life is like on the farm? Find out with this fun and sunny interactive activity book! Inside the activity book, you can:
Learn fun facts about farms
Color some farm scenes
Complete mazes
Finish dot-to-dots to reveal the farm animals
Play tic-tac-toe
Spot the difference between the scarecrows
Play a memory game
Play a board game
Learn to draw a sunflower, sheep, barn, and more
In addition to the fun activities, use your imagination to play on the farm! Unfold this book, and there's the stand-up play scene. Customize your farm with the reusable stickers and punch-out, stand-up characters, and you're ready for action. With your fun scene, you can play with the farmers, horses, cows, sheep, pigs goats, ducks, chickens, cats, and dogs!
What kinds of animals you have on your farm and what you grow is up to you! Gather eggs, feed the pigs, milk the cows, plant the crops; it's never a dull day on the farm! Just Imagine & Play! On the Farm includes a 48-page activity book with cool facts about farm vehicles and animals, puzzles, and games, plus punch-out characters, reusable stickers, and a fold-out barnyard scene.
"When they say activity book, they aren't kidding. This book includes exactly what is says on the cover: stickers, press-outs, and puzzles and games. Specifically this means there is a farm background attached to the end of the book (which can be detached), several pages of character press-outs (farmer, children, and animals) that can be used to play with the background or the board game on the back of the background. In addition there are a bunch of pages with mazes, dot-to-dot activities, tic-tac-toe, how to draw pages, and coloring pages. The stickers can of course be used for whatever, but they are intended to decorate the 'stage' background. There is a great deal of fun here contained in this $10.00 package." - Heidi Grange, Geo Librarian blog