Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I think it will very much depend on who owns the local franchise. My mate used to work locally (5 years back), and it was very popular. He then moved up north and bought a franchise up there. The guy who owned the local franchise at that time was not known for his fine organisational skills, and ended up owing money to venues and stuff. No idea if he's still doing it in the ED area.

My boy has gone to Little Kickers for about three years now and it's been excellent. Don't recognise any of the negative opinions that you cite.


He goes to the class at Haberdasher Askes in Nunhead, so if you're looking at the West Dulwich classes there may be some difference, but these groups are run by the same franchisee so wouldn't expect too much difference.

We went in West Dulwich for a couple of years. The kids loved it.


The admin side (at the time, this was a few years ago now) was dire - I got the distinct feeling it was pen and paper driven rather than automated. We went on holiday and put our membership on hold, then, understandably, went on a waiting list to get back into a class. Despite chasing, we never got a place, and our kids then started school and were too old. I never got a refund of our remaining classes.


The classes themselves are quite structured, which suits some, but not all.

@Pickle - That's interesting that it comes across as that, I know for a fact that it's all automated, the woman that set it up used to be in a big IT firm, and built the system that all the bookings etc are run on! I know what you mean though, it's a bit clunky.


Classes are fairly good - I also go to the Nunhead one at Haberdasher's - it's a bit samey after a while (been doing it for... 6 months?), reasonably structured, but it's tough for the 18m+ class to hold their attention. Met some nice people through it, the boy seems to enjoy the class. We're tossing up whether we're going to renew in March - it's ?100+ for 13 weeks, which is a lot at the moment.

  • 6 months later...

Bumping this, as we've just been offered a place. Any experience to share with the Nunhead class?


My son is 2.3. I wonder whether the routine of structured weekend activities is a good one for a boy his age....He's at nursery 5 days a week and maybe this is a step too far.

We used to do the Nunhead class - coach Sophie is particularly good with little ones. We started at 2, when they need quite a lot of encouragement/hand holding to join in (now nearly 6 and doing little rugby instead!). I'm not sure they see it as routine, it's just another (fun) thing to do.

We do the Nunhead class and think it's great. Our son (approaching six) has been doing it since he was two and his little sister (2 1/2)is also going now. They both really enjoy it.

They run two classes concurrently and the coaches are great on both streams.


ETA Rereading the thread - to clarify an earlier question, LK Nunhead have indoor and outdoor facilities.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Hospices are coming under increasing pressure at the moment. Not only have their costs been forced up by the increase in employers NI and possibly the minimum wage for some workers, but the recent assisted dying legislation, which forces doctors faced with patients likely to die to offer suicide as a way out means that numbers of hospice doctors will withdraw as they don't ethically hold with the legislation. Additionally we might anticipate a reduction in research on end-of-life care and pain alleviation where the government is supporting an alternative (and one far cheaper than proper end-of-life care). This all brings pressure on the hospice movement as the assisted dying philosophy runs counter to it. It is hardly surprising then that they are looking to gain as much benefit as they can from higher prices.
    • There are plenty of charity shops around, even on Lordship Lane. For SCH one, would be interested to see how much of the donations goes to rent and overheads, rather than the actual intended cause.
    • https://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/cat-vegetable-onion-deadly-health-anaemia-b2817541.html#comments-area '... Researchers call for spreading more awareness among pet owners about the dangers linked to common foods toxic to cats, such as onions, garlic, and chocolate. They urge pet owners to keep these foods securely stored away from their cats, and raise awareness within their community.'
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...