Gift ideas for when you are stuck on what to buy

If you are like me, you always try and buy people interesting and thoughtful gifts as opposed to cold generic presents that they could get off anyone. If you have some kind of artistic talent then you probably like to make them something but if not then you might struggle to get good gifts every birthday and Christmas. You like the recipient to know that you have put some thought into their present, that you took time to consider what they would like and what would put a smile on their face. Here are a few suggestions for gifts tailored just for them.

  1.   For anyone – photos – you can print a huge family portrait, an image of their pet and or travelling photos or photos of friends. Anyone would appreciate that you have picked out a special picture just for them but it is still relatively easy to frame a photo print or get a canvas print from a site like hellocanvas so you do not even need to leave your house. There are a huge variety of options available so you tailor it to their own personal style and find something that will fit in with their other home décor items.
  2.   For the creative one – make your own lip balm kit – a lip balm kit is one suggestion but it could be anything, candle making or jewellery making. If they already like to make things then a beginners kit could be a great way to get them started on a new hobby. Or maybe you just think they would be good at it, perhaps they like a new challenge. The added bonus with this gift is that they might well gift their first creation to you!
  3.   For the foodie – personalised kitchenware – you can get anything personalised or engraved these days and that applies to kitchenware. Get them a set of wooden spoons or a chopping board with their name carved on it. If they are partial to a drink then get them a wine carafe or personalised beer glass. There is always the classic novelty apron that your resident barbeque lover would enjoy. There is no end to possibilities!
  4.   For pet lovers – custom dog lead holder or custom cat bowl – most pet owners absolutely dote on their furry companions and would likely love a gift that both of them can appreciate. Get a personalise dog leash hook with their puppy’s name on it or a personalised cat bowl for their feline friend. I can guarantee these kinds of presents will bring a smile to the face of any pet owner and they will probably appreciate that you remember their pet’s name!
  5.   For the frequent traveller – a scratch map – this is perfect because it lets them show off all the places they have been to and show visitors just how well-travelled they are without it being too obvious. And it is something they can keep on using, scratching off every new place they go to throughout the years.

 

Books2Door offer HUGE discounts on Back2School Booksets

Online book retailer Books2Door who are committed to encouraging a love of reading in all children are launching their Back2School campaign, offering exceptional book sets at affordable prices from treasured classics to the latest must-have series. We are fully behind them and cannot recommend them enough. Head onto their website now and grab some books for your little ones.

ks2, teaching children to read, books,

 

 

Reading Champions Developing Readers 30 Book Collection Level 6 to 10 (Series 2) – Ages 5-7 – Paperback

 

In this Reading Champions series, every book was carefully constructed to make for an effective means in helping kids develop important reading skills. Each book was designed to help kids mature in their reading journey step by step from the age of 5. Each book was not only designed to be informative and educational but also fun and engaging at the same time too! The themes and topics are very interesting with each book focussed on a different story making this collection always keeping kids wanting for more due to the new and unexpected storyline.

The books are colour banded, this makes sorting the level of difficulty much easier to organise. At the same time, this helps tutors and parents to monitor the progress of reading development, at the same time children will feel a sense of accomplishment as they level up. Reading Champions is one of the most effective reading series and has remained our bestselling collection on our entire website for many months, the Reading Champion series is a modern masterpiece for aiding kids readingdevelopment. Each book was designed by literacy experts to balance the books with enjoyment and education. The setting and characters are diverse, meaning readers are able to not only learn about reading grammar and language skills but also broaden their horizons in different contemporary topics to further increase the pleasure of reading. This series is a wonderful choice for the classroom and for additional homework at home, the amazing series is so well done and neatly organised together that it can make for a perfect gift for children. We have heard so many great stories and feedback from our customers and parents who noticed a massive improvement in their children’s reading skills. Reading Champion is published by Franklin Watts and will continually to remain an all time favourite for us and our customers. Be sure to check out our Home Learning and Featured category for more fantastic and useful learning tools.

Teach children to read.

Frost Loves Sea Change Wines

We love Sea Change wine. They are environmentally-friendly and have an organic range. We tried their Prosecco and it is to-die-for. Get your hands on some now. 
Sea Change are passionate about two things: protecting our oceans from plastic pollution and great tasting wine. Every bottle of Sea Change helps fund ocean conservation projects across the globe and our minimal packaging reduces waste and environmental impact.

They have an organic range available, the perfect accompaniment for your cosy fireside evenings or candle-lit dinner dates. Available in a lesser-known red varietal, Bobal (RRP £13.99), and a classic white Chardonnay (RRP, £13.99), the production process of these wines means only naturally occurring sulfites are present. So, every sip is gentler on the head and stomach than regular wine – excellent for a more relaxed evening.

As with all Sea Change Wines, both have minimal packaging, with the unnecessary plastic wrap covering removed from the neck of the bottle, and labels.


For Christmas, Sea Change’s Christmas Day Pack (£35 RRP) has got you sorted. The pack includes a bottle of their fruity, soft Prosecco, zesty Sauvignon Blanc and rich Malbec wines. Whatever your guests choose to drink, Sea Change is suited to everyone’s taste!
 
Amongst the excitement, Sea Change are committed to giving back this Christmas. With each bottle sold, a donation will be made to marine conservation charities fighting plastic pollution – ideal for those who want to do their bit for the environment.
 
The Sea Change wine collection is available to buy online at www.seachangewine.com. Free delivery is available for orders over £100.    

Have You Considered Downsizing As Part Of Your Retirement Planning? Here’s Why Going Small Could Benefit You

For many people planning their retirement, downsizing is becoming a popular option for amassing retirement funds. However, having lived a life where bigger is often viewed as best, the idea of downsizing can seem slightly counter-intuitive. 

This article aims to alleviate any concerns you might have about downsizing and highlight its social and financial benefits.

What is Downsizing?

The enduring goal throughout your life has likely been aiming for something bigger and better. After all, it is this principle that tends to give people status in Western society. 

More essential than status is practicality. As you age, you tend to need more space for children, a bigger vehicle to transport the family, and more stuff for everyone to use. 

However, your family might have left home when you reach middle-age, and your interests may have changed. Perhaps you’ve had your fill of the latest gadget and sporty cars. Maybe you’re finding your large family home is a little too spacious for just the two of you. It is at this point that downsizing becomes a viable lifestyle choice.

Now is the time to consider focusing on more minor things rather than larger ones, and this is the principle behind downsizing. Downsizing offers you the opportunity to realise a lifestyle that you and your partner, reduces stress in your life, and is financially rewarding. 

Therefore, downsizing is not so much about cutting costs but about adjusting your lifestyle. Re-evaluating your spending and the resources you need will allow you to match these to your streamlined lifestyle. 

Benefits of Downsizing

  1. Assessing Your Lifestyle

The initial benefit of downsizing is that you’ll conduct an inspection of your lifestyle and assess what things are crucial. It’s too easy to drift through life, simply enjoying the same creature comforts that everyone else craves, often striving to go bigger and better. Conducting a lifestyle assessment is enlightening and is the first benefit of downsizing.

  1. Financial Rewards of Downsizing 

If you’ve owned your home for some time, it is likely to have increased in value by a considerable amount. Therefore trading in your property for something smaller could leave you with a significant amount of cash. 

This boost of money can enable you to live mortgage-free, pay off other loans, or pay for some substantial capital purchases. 

The same applies to cars and other large items. Downsizing to a smaller vehicle might not only allow you to get some capital return but could also save you a considerable amount of money on running costs each month. The accumulated money you release from your downsizing will not only give you financial benefits but will enable you to enjoy a more stress-free life. 

  1. Long-Term Benefits 

Although society is enjoying modern advancements in medicine, healthcare, and lifespan, it’s still likely that you’ll suffer from an illness or restriction at some stage of your life. As you age, your health and home environment become much more of a priority. 

Downsizing is a way of meeting these needs and providing you with long-term benefits. For instance, you might find downsizing from a three-story townhouse in the city centre to a bungalow in the suburbs more suitable as you get older. 

Considerations When Downsizing 

By now, you might think that downsizing is a good idea. However, there are several things to consider before making any hasty decision.

  • Practicality. Although your downsizing venture might be to boost your finances, you should also consider the practical aspects. Moving home is stressful at the best of times, and you should ask yourself if the hassle is worth it.
  • Adapting to a Smaller Space. Having lived in a large space for some time, you might find it challenging to adapt to a smaller space. You may have become too used to extra bedrooms, bathrooms, or TV rooms.
  • Emotional Ties. You are bound to have plenty of memories and emotions associated with your family home. Consider how you’ll feel about severing these emotional ties with your home.
  • New Area. If you are moving into a smaller home, chances are you’ll be moving to a new area. You’ll be leaving behind neighbours you may have known for many years. Will you be able to maintain these relationships?
  • Shedding Possessions. Moving to a smaller home means you’ll likely have to get rid of some of your possessions. Before downsizing, consider which of your prized possessions you can shed and those you can’t live without.
  • Paying a Premium. Bungalows are a popular choice for downsizing. However, these properties are rare, so you’ll likely have to pay a premium to secure a purchase. 

Using Your Freed-Up Capital For Your Retirement

Downsizing is a considerable undertaking, so you should ensure you put the money from it to good use. Of course, you might have downsized as a lifestyle choice, but many people also have financial goals for the process. Therefore, you should clearly understand what you will do with the money you release from downsizing.

You’ll notice the most immediate impact of downsizing on the reduced cost of your lifestyle. You can release yourself from the burden of some debts or even clear your mortgage. Doing so will give you substantially more disposable income every month. 

However, you mustn’t use all of this additional money for short-term spending. You should also consider the longer term and your retirement years. If you regularly check your pension, you’ll understand what you might need to do to improve your pension’s performance.

An excellent option for boosting your retirement savings is to make top-up payments into your pension. Also, if you have any gaps in your National Insurance contributions, you might be able to use some of your spare money to fill these.

Conclusion

Downsizing is a natural process as you age and your lifestyle priorities shift. However, it often goes against everything you may have strived for previously. Before you make the leap and start shedding a large property for a smaller one, a more modest vehicle, and fewer possessions, consider the practical aspects of giving such things up. 

The financial benefits of downsizing are probably the most significant. These include the opportunity to clear your mortgage, other debts or make substantial top-up payments to your pension pot. Regardless of the amount of money you free up from downsizing, being more comfortable in your retirement should be one of your primary considerations for doing so. 

If you are thinking about your pension, consider using a regulated pensions specialist such as Portafina or, view the advice at Pension Wise.

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Packing Your Hospital Bag with the Natural Birthing Company

Did you know that September and early October are the most popular months for births?

 

With more mums-to-be going into labour this month than any other time of the year, Natural Birthing Company have put together a Birthing Essentials Kit to help these new mums prepare for the day. We love the Natural Birthing Company and think their products are fab.

Natural Birthing Company, pregnancy, birth, labour

Packing a hospital bag can feel like an impossible task, so to make it just that little bit easier the Birthing Essentials Kit contains everything that they may need when they go into labour.

The Natural Birthing Company Mama’s Moments Birthing Essentials Kit, £20, naturalbirthingcompany.com, boots.com, next.co.uk, feelunique.com

All designed to relax your body and soothe any soreness, they’re the perfect products to keep handy. Relax and Breathe, and Sleepy Mama have been designed to soothe your body and mind. Along with Bottoms Up which is formulated to provide relief to any soreness down below. Finally, Cool it Mama will be their labour companion, providing coolness whenever they feel they need it.

 

Snow Country by Sebastian Faulks Book Review

How to review Sebastian Faulks’ new novel? That is the question. Sebastian Faulk is one of the best novelists writing today and his books are eagerly awaited. Snow County is a sublime novel. Full of poetry and intelligence. I found myself re-reading pages and paragraphs as I fell in love with the book. Snow Country is the novel that Sebastian has wanted to write for ten years and I am glad he has. It is an epic, wistful,  love story, full of yearning and gorgeous atmosphere. I really felt that I was transported to 1910/20s Vienna.

Sebastian Faulk is a master storyteller and this is the perfect book to curl up with this Autumn. It is definitely one of my favourite books. Snow Country is the second book in a planned trilogy. The first was Human Traces. It can be read as a standalone novel. Get your hands on a copy now.  I will definitely be reading this again.

snow country, sebastian faulks, book review, catherine balavage

1914: Young Anton Heideck has arrived in Vienna, eager to make his name as a journalist. While working part-time as a private tutor, he encounters Delphine, a woman who mixes startling candour with deep reserve. Entranced by the light of first love, Anton feels himself blessed. Until his country declares war on hers.

 

1927: For Lena, life with a drunken mother in a small town has been impoverished and cold. She is convinced she can amount to nothing until a young lawyer, Rudolf Plischke, spirits her away to Vienna. But the capital proves unforgiving. Lena leaves her metropolitan dream behind to take a menial job at the snow-bound sanatorium, the Schloss Seeblick.

 

1933: Still struggling to come terms with the loss of so many friends on the Eastern Front, Anton, now an established writer, is commissioned by a magazine to visit the mysterious Schloss Seeblick. In this place of healing, on the banks of a silvery lake, where the depths of human suffering and the chances of redemption are explored, two people will see each other as if for the first time.

 

Sweeping across Europe as it recovers from one war and hides its face from the coming of another, SNOW COUNTRY is a landmark novel of exquisite yearnings, dreams of youth and the sanctity of hope. In elegant, shimmering prose, SebastianFaulks has produced a work of timeless resonance.

Snow Country is available here.

Just Haven’t Met You Yet By Sophie Cousens Book Review

Sophie Cousens’s debut novel This Time Next Year was one of 2020’s standout novels. It was a well-deserved runaway success and gave Sophie Cousens her rightful place as a writer to watch. Yes, she has done it again with Just Haven’t Met You Yet. Another blinder of a novel, it tells the story of romance-obsessed Laura and her quest to meet The One. I saw one reviewer call it “rom-com perfection” and it is hard to think of a more fitting description.

Just Haven’t Met You Yet is another corker from Cousens, you will love the characters just as much as I did. I love the Jersey setting, you really get immersed in the island. I learned so much and want to go now. Just Haven’t Met You Yet is a wonderful, clever novel. You will read it with a smile on your face. Brilliant.

just haven't met you yet, sophie cousens

Tell me the story of how you two met…

Laura has built a career out of interviewing people about their epic real life love stories.

When she picks up the wrong suitcase at the airport, Laura wonders if this could be the start of something that’s written in the stars.

From piano sheet-music to a battered copy of her favourite book, Laura finds in the bag evidence of everything she could hope for in a partner.

If Laura’s job has taught her anything it’s that when it comes to love, you can’t let opportunity pass you by. Now Laura is determined to track down the owner of the suitcase, and her own happy ending.

But what if fate has other ideas?
Just Haven’t Met You Yet is available here.

How I Got Published By Alec Marsh

Alec Marsh, writer, authorWhen I was 21 I started to write a novel. It wasn’t very good. I was working as a reporter for a local paper in Cornwall and my book… was about a reporter working for a local paper in Cornwall. 

Soon I moved to London to work for the Daily Telegraph and started writing a second novel. It was about a young journalist working for a newspaper in London. 

It wasn’t very good either. 

I met a top agent at a function and asked him if he’d see it. 

‘What’s it about?’ he asked.

After several seconds of flannelling he cut in: ‘If you can’t tell me in under 11 seconds then I’m not interested.’ 

I’d been introduced to the idea of the elevator pitch. If you can’t encapsulate your idea in a nutshell, you’ve had it.

I kept writing and the rejection slips (paper in those days) kept piling up.

Then one day a friend suggested I try my hand at historical fiction. ‘You’re obsessed about the past,’ he said. And it was true.

About a year later I read The Da Vinci Code, and was hooked. 

And I thought, “I can do that.”

So I started thinking about a historical mystery that could sit at the heart of a story, and some characters that would have sticking power.

That was around 2004. Before I knew it, I had started writing what would become my first novel, Rule Britannia. And I knew I was onto something, I could feel it in my fingertips. My characters – a historian and mountaineer Ernest Drabble and his pal, a journalist named Harris – were alive. And so was the story.

With a half-written book, I started polishing and went looking for an agent. Again the rejection slips piled up (still paper).

Then one day in 2008 an email landed at about 6pm on Saturday evening from an agent. Do you have any more, he asked?

I didn’t sleep that night. Soon I’d emailed the next three chapters, then we had a meeting. After that, I had an agent and went off to finish the book – armed with the self-confidence to finish it properly, to believe in myself and the benefits of his insights.

The agent then took it to market. But it was 2009 and e-readers, Amazon and the global financial crisis was hitting hard, and – for whatever reason – my book didn’t sell. After a dozen very polite rejections from major publishers, my agent suggested I try writing a different book. Which I did. 

For five years I wrote a book set in the First World War, but Drabble and Harris were still in the back of my mind, calling to me from the binary prison of a hard drive. 

By 2015 the First World War book was finished – but so was my relationship with my agent who finally spelled it out to me when he told me this was not a book that he could sell to his clients. We were finished.

Exhausted and disappointed, I stopped knocking on doors that wouldn’t open and focused instead on my day job. Every now and then someone would ask about Drabble and Harris; I would change the subject.

Then my son Herbie was born in 2016, and his arrival rekindled my ambition. So in the small hours, I dug out Rule Britannia and reread it, shook my head at parts that hadn’t aged well, and I polished it. And I pitched it again.

After a string of rejections (emails now), I went direct to publishers, finding an independent in Cardiff, named Accent Press. 

When the owner telephoned me and told me she’d take it – and she’d want two more books after – I was standing in a corridor at work. I didn’t punch the air, but a tear might have come to my eye. It had taken 20 years and I had endured numerous disappointments but it had finally happened. Drabble and Harris would get to their readers, and I was going to have a novel out. So what’s my advice for would-be authors. Don’t give up. And as Martin Amis once told me when I asked him for advice at book-signing: keep writing. After all, what else are you going to do?

Alec Marsh is author of the Drabble & Harris novels, published by Headline Accent. The latest book, ‘Ghosts of the West’ is published in original paperback and ebook on 9 September