Step2 Arctic Splash Water Table

Step2 Arctic Splash Water Table
Average Customer Rating: 4.0 / 5
- Multi-level water wells
- Raised design to keep feet clean and dry
- Includes polar bear, walrus, and penguin squirt toys
- Minimal adult assembly required
Product Description
Children will stay cool as they explore glacier mountain! The glacier mountain comes complete with ice slide, tunnel and dumping bucket. Multi-level water wells for aquatic fun. The set includes a polar bear, walrus and penguin squirt toys for added fun. Raised design helps keep feet clean and dry. Minimal adult assembly required. Made in U.S.A. with domestic and imported components. Measures 31.5″L x 31.5″W x 31.5″H…. More >>
Step2 Arctic Splash Water Table
Tagged with: Arctic • Splash • Step2 • Table • Water
Filed under: Toys for Preschoolers
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My daughter received this as a gift on her two year birthday, and so far she absolutely adores it. She has always been attracted to water and splashing so this was a perfect fit for her.
The table arrives in a large, flat box containing several pieces; the table itself, three legs, a three-part plastic “iceberg”, a translucent water bucket, and a package of three squeezable rubber animal squirt toys (penguin, polar bear and walrus). A simple instruction sheet shows how it all goes together but it’s really not needed. Without so much as a glance at the instructions I was able to fully assemble the table in under a minute. The resulting platform is strong and stable; my daughter easily climbed onto and sat in the (empty) table and there was no indication of stress on any part of it.
One particularly nice thing: Fully assembled, the table easily fits through a typical doorway without the need to tilt or rotate it and without scraping the backs of your hands, making it easy to move the table indoors and out without the need to empty it if you don’t want to.
Once set up, you add a couple gallons of water to it and then let the little ones have at it. The toy is entirely child-operated; there are no pumps, cords, batteries, or other automating devices. The child dunks the bucket into the water and places the bucket on top of the iceberg. A hole in the bottom of the bucket releases the water into a chute which creates a small waterfall. The chute is large enough to drop the penguin through but not large enough for the polar bear or walrus, but an “ice cave” goes through the bottom of the iceberg which all three toys can fit through. A larger, deeper reservoir is at the ‘front’ of the table while a smaller reservoir is at the ‘back’ of it, and there’s a small slide that allows water to go from the smaller to the larger reservoirs. (Refilling the empty smaller reservoir requires manual intervention.)
So far as toys like this goes my daughter and her friends have fun with it. They get a lot of enjoyment just splashing around in the water for extended periods of time. There’s no real education value to speak of but toys like this aren’t designed for education, so it really doesn’t matter. We all look forward to having her play with this when the weather really starts getting hot. I think it will be a much-appreciated toy in the summer months!
The only bad things are nitpick items and are questionable at best. Although the legs secure very snugly onto the table, the iceberg components do not. There are three pieces to the iceberg and each sits upon the other via molded-in plastic pegs. While this does a good job in keeping the pieces aligned to one another it does nothing to secure the pieces in the event of even a small bump, so I found myself fixing the askew iceberg every few minutes. On the other hand, having such a loose fit would ensure that my child’s arm doesn’t get caught inside of it by accident, so this could be argued either way.
It’s also a little annoying that all three animals don’t fit in the upper chute. My daughter got very frustrated trying to stuff the polar bear down the chute and eventually gave up. If the polar bear and walrus toys were literally about 5% smaller they would have fit through the chute easily.
I would have liked to see more activities in this playset as well. If you look at competing products you’ll find ones with more things to do – hand-operated pumps, water wheels, etc. Outside of the child’s imagination and ability to splash (which is a constant on any water table), the entire extent of this toy’s interactivity is pouring water down a chute. Compare this to, say, the Little Tikes Island Adventure Water Table or the WaterWheel Play Table which has more moving parts and activities for small hands. I’ll know better by the end of the summer, if she’s still interested in playing with this.
Rating: 4 / 5
This is a decent water table, especially because I got it for $24.99 on sale at Target. I think last year’s version (the water wheel table, which my husband threw out when we moved, unfortunately) was better.
My main gripe regards the glacier toy. It has three or four pieces that do not “click” in place – they just rest on each other and on the table, so they are easily knocked over and dismantled. Why?? The parts are not intended to be played with individually, so there is no advantage to having them constantly come apart.
The water wheel on the other version is more fun b/c it has moving parts and is visually interesting. The glacier is cute, and makes a little fountain, but my kids aren’t that fascinated by it. I’ll probably buy a separate water wheel to play with in the table.
My other comment is that the table is pretty low – good for my 18 mo, but my average sized 3 yo is too tall to play well at the table. Other than that, it’s a fine water table, for what it is. Not too huge, not heavy at all. Very easy to assemble, and I appreciate the fact that it doesn’t use batteries or make annoying noises.
I agree that it would be great if all the animals could slide down the glacier chute. The toys are not well designed at all.
Rating: 3 / 5
My daughter received this table for her first birthday. She loves to play with it. It was a breeze to put together. The slide pieces are easy for her to remove, but she rarely does it because she is too involved with the water play. I wish it came with more squirt toys, but no biggie…We just went out and got her some more. We are very happy with it.
Rating: 4 / 5
I purchased this for my 2 yr. old grand daughter who loves to play in water. I really liked the waterfall feature because pouring water into things keeps her occupied for quite a while. Unfortunately the design of the toy is so poor, I don’t expect to keep it. First and most importantly is the relatively sharp edges of the bottom of the pool area. Within the first 30 minutes of playing with it, she scraped and bruised her thigh 2 separate times by getting her leg caught under it while squatting a little with her knees under it and then standing. 2nd is the waterfall slide. It comes apart into 3 pieces and does not snap into the pool area at all. It is very easy to knock over and therefore you have to put it all together again…and again.
3rd problem, only the Penguin actually fits down the slide. The Walrus and Polar Bear are too big.
In conclusion, she has had some fun with it but honestly; she has just as much fun with a bucket of water and a cup.
Rating: 2 / 5
My daughter loves this table! She loves to dump the water from the bucket (included) and put the animals (three included) in the artic tower. She plays with it for 1/2 hour – 45 minutes at a time. Lots of fun!
Rating: 5 / 5