Puzzles! And Some Cool Facts for Nature Lovers

I saw a tongue-in-cheek cartoon recently about how things are often more appealing when we’re more ignorant and how our right to be happy may be trampled by our right for education 🙂 For some reason I got to thinking about that when I wrote the title for this post.

But this post will be about puzzles for kids :), the best kind of people to confuse, as they have answers for everything, no matter how hard it all is to puzzle together. Okay, so I couldn’t help myself.

Here come some of my designs. They offer landscapes, butterflies, tigers, lots of penguins and bowls of fruit for the little ones, marine life in ocean reefs for the ones developing an environmental conscience, castles for those growing to love art and architecture, cats and whimsical landscapes with lots of birds, horses for lovers of these noble animals, flowers, and so on.

Disclosure: This blog post contains some affiliate links. I am a Zazzle Associate and designer, and I earn commissions when you buy products through my referral links, at no additional cost to you. All affiliate links on this blog are identified as such. Here’s my Full Disclosure.

Of all my jigsaw puzzles, I’m most proud of my butterflies collages and my elaborate collage of marine fish and animals in coral reefs, of which I could, in fact, fit only sections on some of the puzzles.

Gorgeous collage of butterfly photos for kids aged 8 or 9; 252 pieces
Butterfly Collage, 252 Pieces, Ages 8 and 9 (affiliate image link)

The photo collage on the above jigsaw puzzle includes images of the Old World swallowtail (Papilio machaon), yellow, black, blue, and red; the peacock butterfly (Aglais io), red with colorful round spots; the black-and-blue blue tiger butterfly (Tirumala limniace), the buckeye butterfly (genus Junonia), brown with colorful round spots; the fritillary butterfly, yellow with black spots; a black and white butterfly with black spots; and a largely blue butterfly.

Coral reef marine fish and animals puzzle for ages 8 and 9,
252 pieces (affiliate image link)

The marine life photo collage above includes photos of organisms such as: nudibranch/sea slugs (order Nudibranchia), including Chromodoris nudibranch, parrotfish (family Scaridae), yellow tang fish (Zebrasoma flavescens), sea anemone (order Actiniaria), clownfish (order Perciformes), orange-lined and clown triggerfish (family Balistidae), lionfish/dragonfish/turkeyfish/butterfly cod (Pterois), miniatus grouper/coral grouper/coral hind (Cephalopholis miniata), jewelled blenny (Salarias fasciatus), sergeant major fish (Abudefduf saxatilis), copperband and lemon butterflyfish (family Chaetodontidae), sea turtles (order Testudines), seahorse (Hippocampus), octopus, crab (infraorder Brachyura), starfish/sea star (class Asteroidea), and many varieties of coral (class Anthozoa). A design for those who appreciate the beauty of coral reefs and their importance in helping survive a quarter of all oceanic organisms.

Please note that the collage image is crisper on the actual jigsaw.

I also love penguins, and many young kids do too.

Family of penguins with chick, 110-piece puzzle for six-year-olds
Emperor penguins with a little chick, 110 pieces, suitable for age 6
(affiliate image link)

And here’s a puzzle made from a photo of one gray horse with a white strip on its face, and two tan horses, each with a star (white spot) on its forehead.

Three horses. Easy 110-piece jigsaw for six-year-olds
(affiliate image link)

Do you know why horses are said to be noble creatures? It’s because horses are both wise and generous. They give their riders all their strength it’s safe for them to give, being wise enough to let them know when they are too tired and need some rest. Also, for all their muscled grandeur, they are gentle giants, communicating in little understood ways with kids with autism, for instance, and with all of us, adjusting their rhythms to ours. The fact that they are emotionally sensitive can be gleaned, perhaps, in their case, from the fact that they startle easily, among other things. Horses also read very well out facial expressions and voice notes, and are confused when, in experiments, these don’t match. They are that smart and attuned to human emotions!

For lovers of castles, I have a beautiful photo of Bretesche Castle (Château de la Bretesche), located on the Loire Valley in Missillac, France. This is a medium difficult puzzle, suitable for ten-year-olds.

French castle on the Loire Valley in Missillac, medium to difficult puzzle for ten-year-olds
Bretesche Castle in Missillac, France, on the Loire Valley,
challenging puzzle, age 10+, 520 pieces
(affiliate image link)

Back to lovers of nature and animals, I have a wonderful photo of a Siberian tiger (Panthera tigris altaica) on another challenging puzzle for kids aged 10 and above.

Amur/Siberian tiger puzzle for ages 10 and above, 520 pieces, medium difficult
Siberian tiger, medium difficult puzzle for ages 10+, 520 pieces (affiliate image link)

I’ve also made puzzles for preschoolers aged 4 or 5. Here’s an easy one, made of 56 pieces, for five-year-olds.

Easy puzzle for ages 5+ with photos of butterflies; 56 pieces
Easy jigsaw with a collage of butterflies for kids aged 5, 56 pieces
(affiliate image link)

Now, if you really want to confuse a four-year-old, here’s an illustration of a meadow with flowers and a lake, two large trees and a house in the distance, and lots of birds.

Flower meadow puzzle, with two trees and lots of birds, for ages 4 and above (30 large pieces)
Flower meadow with a house, two trees, and lots of birds.
Puzzle for preschoolers aged 4+, 30 large pieces (affiliate image link)

And again some penguins.

Easy penguins puzzle, age 4, 30 large pieces
Easy penguins puzzle for four-year-olds, 30 large pieces
(affiliate image link)

Note that you can personalize each of these jigsaw puzzles with a photo (or other image, such as an illustration) of your own, essentially creating new puzzles! Just choose one with a level of difficulty suited for a certain age and easily replace my own image on Zazzle.

But back to penguins, here are some fun facts. Did you know, for instance, that their “tuxedo” look helps camouflage them as they swim in water, making them more difficult to spot by predators from above and below them? And have you ever wondered why they stick together in large waddles on land? Part of it is to keep warm! But did you know that they have an oil gland they can tap into so as to cover their feathers and better fight the cold, even as do do have a lot of blubber to help them with that? And where you aware that penguins can usually walk up to 1-2 km/a mile an hour, and even faster than humans if they are frightened? And that penguins sometimes swim dozens of km/miles a day to find their food (krill, fish, and other seafood)? And did you know that while they do have a streamlined body perfect for swimming, Emperor penguins, for instance, also come up for air every twenty minutes or so, shooting very fast out of the water?

Here’s another illustration of that cute couple of Emperor penguins with their chick, for four-year-olds this time.

Emperor penguins with their chick, puzzle for age 4, 30 large pieces
Family of Emperor penguins with their chick,
easy puzzle for four-year-olds, 30 pieces
(affiliate image link)

Your children may ask (if they haven’t already), are penguins mammals or birds? They are, of course, birds, even if they can’t fly. But they lay eggs and have a coat of feathers, as much as it may look, in fact, like fur.

But if your kid has just discovered a love for cats, here’s a tabby kitten in an easy puzzle for four-year-olds.

Easy cat puzzle for preschoolers, 30 large pcs.
Tabby kitten, easy jigsaw for four-year-olds, 30 large pcs.
(affiliate image link)

And here’s a fun approximation of their cat, should they have one. Make sure you personalize the name.

Easy cat puzzle for kids aged 4, 30 pcs.
Easy personalized cat puzzle for preschoolers (age 4), 30 large pcs.
(affiliate image link)

And some sunflowers, also for preschoolers.

Easy sunflowers puzzle for little kids aged 4, 30 pcs.
Easy sunflowers puzzle for preschoolers (age 4), 30 pcs.
(affiliate image link)

I almost forgot the most difficult puzzles. Here’s a part of my photo collage or coral reef marine life for eleven-year-olds, in a jigsaw with 676 pieces.

Marine life coral reef puzzle for age 11+, 676 pcs., difficult
Marine fish and animals in coral reefs.
Difficult jigsaw for eleven-year-olds, 676 pcs.
(affiliate image link)

And if you want a nice jigsaw with 1,000 pieces or more, here’s that beautiful castle on the Loire Valley in a 1,014-pc. puzzle for ages 12 and above.

Difficult jigsaw of a castle on the Loire Valley, for kids aged 12 and above, more than 1000 pieces
Difficult puzzle with a wonderful photo of Bretesche Castle on the Loire Valley,
for kids aged 12+, more than 1,000 pcs. (affiliate image link)

Oh, but I mentioned some landscapes too, in the beginning, and while the image above does have that, it’s primarily about the castle in Missillac and the wonderful reflective waters of its lake. The jigsaw below, on the other hand, is all about fall/autumn, with its colorful red, yellow, orange, and red leaves. It’s a medium difficult puzzle for age 8+, with 252 pcs., but it’s actually more challenging than other puzzles with that number of pieces on account of the actual photo. But that only enhances the pleasure of putting it together. You have to admit, the landscape photo is quite gorgeous!

Landscape in the countryside with the colors of the fall, challenging jigsaw for age 8 and above, 252 pcs.
Path leading out of a forest in the countryside,
with the colorful leaves of fall/autumn.
Challenging puzzle for kids aged 8, 252 pcs. (affiliate image link)

Puzzles can offer great occasions for learning, but let’s not forget that they also carry us into a state of flow, where we’re riding a wave of full absorption that takes us to a happy place. For both reasons, jigsaw puzzles are great playthings.

I hope you enjoyed this presentation 🙂

To a happier, healthier life,

Mira

P.S. Pins and shares are much appreciated! Thank you! 🙂

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