Posted on 06/17/2011 4:36:33 PM PDT by Fiji Hill
Increase in lawsuits, decrease in seesaws. Simple math. ;-)
First thing that came to mind....
BIll Cosby - Playground
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rqv38fP7cr0
“.....and then came....the ‘Monkey Bars’............”
I think seesaws along with corndogs deserve to be consigned to the dust heap of history along with petrocks.
Some of the best childhood injuries came from see saws.
And who can forget the asphalt playgrounds?
The same can be said for diving boards. The scarcity of diving boards in this country probably has something to do with the fact that the US has not won a gold medal in Olympic diving events since 1996. For decades, America was highly competitive, if not dominant in this sport.
The article makes a point that the absence of physically risky activity might be the reason for obesity in children.
That’s possible. As a child I walked everywhere until I received a bicycle for my birthday (12th). We really did walk to school, to the beach and climbed trees in the woods, stringing swings over deep gullies. All day long we were absorbed in some form of physical activity. Horses, were de rigeur - but we had to clean tack, take the herd to pasture, muck out stables and give riding lessons to earn privileges. I feel so blessed that my childhood was in the golden age.
I went to rural school where we never had asphalt playgrounds.
I think kids are becoming too safe to learn some pretty basic self taught lessons.
Bring back rhe sand boxes.
Corndogs?! From my cold dead hands!
well..
just
ooops
Asphalt playgrounds provided wonderful cushioning when you fell off the jungle gym...
The corn dog stick makes a wonderful weapon to stab the clown who tries to take your see saw away.
I always liked see-saws. And swinging as high as I could and jumping off the swing. Those monkey bars got really slippery after they had been worn in good.
Stabbin' is too good for the bastage.
Do they still make metal slides that make your butt sizzle like bacon on a sunny day?
The see-saw is the cruellest ride.
It tricks you with the upward glide.
The person on the other side
Jumps off.
You fall and smack your cheeky hide.
I agree. The old ‘double dare you’ was a way to test our physical capabilities, reactions, strength and courage. We also learned to be creative, solve problems and find our way out of trouble.
I slid down a steep cliff one day - chasing after my stupid dog. It was high tide at the bottom and I quickly realized I needed to scramble back up at an angle (not straight up) it limited the sand & rocks collapsing above me and was an easier climb..
Survival!!!! Essential for girls and boys.
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