A gentle return to rhythm, ritual, and the living earth
There is a quieter way of learning. One that doesn’t rush or push or measure childhood against a clock.
It begins with noticing. The first buds appearing where yesterday there was only soil. The slow turning of light across the seasons. The way children instinctively pause for a feather, a stone, a falling leaf.
Circle of Seasons was created for families who feel that pull — the desire to live and learn in rhythm with something older, deeper, and more rooted than a curriculum checklist.
Across the wheel of the year, from the first stirrings of spring to the stillness of winter, this curriculum offers a pathway into seasonal living.
Not through rigid lessons, but through 48 carefully created activities and crafts that invite children to experience the year as it unfolds.
You might find yourselves:
• weaving simple crafts at the turning points of the seasons
• lighting candles as the evenings draw in
• gathering nature treasures and turning them into art
• marking the festivals in ways that feel gentle and meaningful
Each activity is an invitation — not something to complete, but something to step into.
This is not just a collection of ideas.
It is a way of seeing childhood differently.
A way of allowing learning to emerge from connection — to the land, to the seasons, to the quiet cycles that exist whether we notice them or not.
Children begin to understand time not as something abstract, but as something they can feel. They recognise patterns. They anticipate change. They become part of the turning wheel, rather than separate from it.
You don’t need to follow every festival perfectly. You don’t need to “do it right.”
This work meets you where you are.
It’s for the parent who feels the pull toward a slower, more intentional way of living. The one who wants their children to remember childhood not as something scheduled, but as something deeply felt.
Over time, something shifts.
Your days begin to fall into a rhythm that feels natural. Seasonal changes feel meaningful. Learning feels less like something you organise, and more like something that simply happens.
And in that space, childhood has room to unfold exactly as it should.
Explore Circle of Seasons →