Not actually linking itself to Easter in the overt way the Hobbycraft one was, it nevertheless comes with similar blow-moulded eggs, which are far too large to be considered the birthing chambers of any of the dinosaurs included, unless they're all very, very young!
I must say I didn't notice the connotation of BJ when we last encountered them, but if someone can get away with Bum-Slot racing, it's not too far of a stretch to consider someone knew what they were doing when they went with BJ Toys, although the back of the card tells us it's B&J . . . right, the logo was just some accident, guys?
Six dinosaurs, similar to several sets we've seen recently (and others to come); 'monochromatic' in bright/primary colours and quite small, but not the same as any we've seen here - all new sculpts.A couple of old favorites in a Triceratops and a Brontosaurus, also the Parasaurolophus - a dino' type which has gained popularity since my childhood and is now in most sets line-ups, having been all but absent when I wer't lad!
The two eggs and a palm tree make the weight, the palm tree - it must be said - is the poorest of the many vertions of this tree out there.And it struck me the other day that there have been three generations of make-weight palm trees in rack-toys, since the popularisation of plastics; first Marx and many copies of both the large singles and small twins, then Britains and the many copies of the flat-four and 'trees' singles, and now these scraggy pairs, which have been with us for a couple of decades now, and while some are quite good, with coconut looking nuts and plenty of thicker foliage, sometimes doubled-up, the one here is a particularly small, sparse example with discs for coconuts!
Cheers Peter, two eggy-dino' posts in time for Easter! And there are still some 'sauroposts' in the near queue!
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