Posted on 10/13/2005 6:31:00 PM PDT by Clive
I want one....good work
I could not swim but my technique would be to go to the bottom then push off at an angle so that I broke surface just at the right place to grab the ladder.
That was until my dad came to fetch me one day and arrived just in time to see me going off the tower. He finked to the teen lifeguard that I had not passed any swim badges so I was barred from the tower until I got a Red Cross badge.
It's probably gone now.
I remember when the swing seats were a 1" thick piece of oak bolstered by aluminum or iron mounts to the chain that you AND a friend could sit on, and it would hold you. Of course, I also remember the teacher telling us six times every recess not to go near the swings, and the blood and stitches on a buddy's forehead when he failed to heed that advice. Those swings were still a lot more fun than the limp rubber things that hurt your hip bones when you just sit in them.
I remember that we used to have elaborate handmade slingshots that got more powerful the older you got. Every kid in the neighborhood had one and shot many rocks with them. I don't remember anyone ever shooting one at another kid.
We also had an old stable on our small lot which we called "the Horsey House". We built an elaborate fort in the attic of this small outbuilding as well as multiple escape routes (through windows and the roof, as well as a rope line.
Nice!
Just be sure to build a tall fence around your yard as well, and never let any other children play on it, otherwise you'll be sending some lawyers' kids through college.
Mark
Well, the current idea is to not even have really deep water. Some of the newer pools don't get any deeper than 4-5 feet deep (slides, sprinklers, but no diving boards). I'm speaking from my experience here in Kentucky; I know two of our State Parks have these new pools with no deep water.
When my sons first learned to swim at our city pool, jumping off the board was the ultimate goal. My youngest wanted to try, and so I asked the lifegaurd (who had given him lessons) if he thought it was okay. He promised to watch him, but it was pure torment for me. My little boy jumps off, then proceeds to semi-swim, semi-dogpaddle to the side of the pool, as the lifegaurd and I both watched from the edge (it was only a short distance to the side of the pool, but it took him forever). He made it, and then did it over and over and over again that day. He is now an excellent swimmer, but I don't think a kid could be truly adept at swimming if they didn't have experience in deep water.
She took over.
I know in Toronoto they went around and tore down a whole bunch of perfectly good playgrounds built with pressure-treated lumber, the kind that replaced the oh so "dangerous" metal playground equipment I enjoyed as a child. They decided that since the pressure treated wood contained arsenic (I think it was arsenic, anyways) that it might present some sort of danger to the children. Nevermind that a child would probably have to spend all day every day licking the playground equipment to get enough arsenic or whatever to do any harm, they tore them down. Also a lot of perfectly good equipment was torn down because it didn't meet the new standards - no foot deep layer of rubbery stuff all around, etc. Of course they didn't have money to replace all these playgrounds, so now the kids that live in those areas are SOL. Stupid, stupid, stupid.
You know it's a really sad commentary on the world today when you can look back on the 70s with fondness and nostalgia, but for everything that was bad about the 70s we weren't nearly as screwed up then as we are now.
We couldn't get to the plane but we could swivel the guns on the anti-aircraft guns and sit on the chairs at each side of the gun and have a great time. We could crawl all over the really big tank but the hatch was welded shut. There was a gun barrel about nine inches in diameter which seemed to me to go about fifteen feet or so which we could slither out on as far as we dared. It was a fun time which I guess helped our patriotism? I'm a little hazy on the details of the various war machinery. By the way, I am a girl and I loved it as much as any of my guy friends.
I think you're right... So sad.
That's ok. Most lawyers think their clients suck.
Playgrounds don't stand a chance against Playstations and gameboys.
We have lost a lot, along the way, haven't we?
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