About us

A day with us

Our day follows a clear, caring rhythm. Even the youngest children know what comes next — and find their place in every part of the day.

    • 08:00 – 09:30

      Arriving & free play

      We greet each child personally and leave time for a short hand-over chat with the grown-ups. Then the little ones settle in gently — with their comfort toy, building blocks or a quiet moment at the window.

    • 09:20 – 09:50

      Breakfast

      At the low table we take our time — practising spoons and cups and sharing fresh fruit, bread and yoghurt. As much as each child would like.

    • 09:50 – 10:10

      Morning circle — German & Greek

      Songs, finger plays and a familiar greeting ritual in both languages. Short enough for small attention spans, warm enough to connect.

    • 10:10 – 10:30

      Snack time

      After the morning circle we refuel with a small snack. Fresh fruit, vegetables or other healthy bites give everyone new energy for the day. The children practise independence, enjoy eating together and have time for little conversations in a relaxed atmosphere.

    • 10:30 – 11:15

      Outdoor time

      Digging, swinging, discovering puddles — outdoor play matters to us every day, even under a drizzle, with waterproof suits and little rubber boots.

    • 11:30 – 12:00

      Lunch

      Hands washed, a candle lit, and a freshly cooked meal from our own kitchen — German and Greek favourites shared at the table.

    • 12:00 – 14:00

      Midday rest

      With lullabies, a dummy and a trusted cuddly friend, the youngest sleep in our quiet darkened room. Children who don't sleep snuggle and doze.

    • 14:00 – 14:30

      Snack & slow wake-up

      Water, fruit and a small snack. Time to arrive in the afternoon — no rush.

    • 14:30 – 15:45

      Free play & gentle activities

      Indoors or outside: sensory play, picture books, first painting, movement landscapes. We follow what moves the children today.

    • 15:00 – 15:45

      Pick-up

      A short update for parents and a warm goodbye. Every child goes home feeling seen.

Why so steady?

Rhythm is security

Children don't need the perfect minute — they need a dependable frame. Repeating transitions — the morning circle, washing hands before lunch, the lullaby — tell them: I know what comes next. I belong here. Out of that safety, curiosity grows.

Curious how our day feels?

Come and meet us — ideally between morning circle and lunch, when the Kita is at its liveliest.