Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

23 Dangerous Things You Should Let Your Kids Do
The art of manliness ^ | June 28, 2017 | Brett and Kate McKay

Posted on 08/09/2017 4:50:01 PM PDT by vannrox

alt

Even though the modern world isn’t any more dangerous than it was thirty or forty years ago, it feels like a more perilous place. Or, more accurately, we inhabit the world today in a way that’s much more risk averse; for a variety of very interesting and nuanced reasons, our tolerance for risk, especially concerning our children’s safety, has steadily declined.

So we remove jungle gyms from playgrounds, ban football at recess, prohibit knives (even the butter variety) at school, and would rather have our kids playing with an iPad than rummaging through the garage or roaming around the neighborhood.

Unfortunately, as we discussed in-depth earlier this year, when you control for one set of risks, another simply arises in its place. In this case, in trying to prevent some bruises and broken bones, we also inhibit our children’s development of autonomy, competence, confidence, and resilience. In pulling them back from firsthand experiences, from handling tangible materials and demonstrating concrete efficacy, we ensconce them in a life of abstraction rather than action. By insisting on doing everything ourselves, because we can do things better and more safely, we deprive kids of the chance to make and test observations, to experiment and tinker, to fail and bounce back. In treating everything like a major risk, we prevent kids from learning how to judge the truly dangerous, from the simply unfamiliar.

Fortunately, we can restore the positive traits that have been smothered by overprotective parenting, by restoring some of the “dangerous” activities that have lately gone missing from childhood. The suggestions below on this score were taken both from 50 Dangerous Things (You Should Let Your Children Do), as well as memories from my own more “free range” childhood. If you grew up a few decades back, these activities may seem “obvious” to you, but they’re less a part of kids’ lives today, and hopefully these reminders can help spark their revival.

While each contains a element of danger and chance of injury, these risks can be thoroughly mitigated and managed by you, the parent: Permit or disallow activities based on your child’s individual age, maturity level, and abilities. Take necessary precautions (which are common sense and which I’m not going to entirely spell out for you; you’re a grown-up, not a moron). Teach and demonstrate correct principles, and supervise some practice runs. Once you’ve created this scaffolding of safety, however, try to step back and give your child some independence. Step in only when a real danger exists, or when your adult strength/dexterity/know-how is absolutely necessary. And don’t be afraid to let your kids fail. That’s how they learn and become more resilient.

In return for letting your children grapple with a little bit of healthy risk, the activities below teach motor skills, develop confidence, and get kids acquainted with the use of tools and some of the basic principles of science. Outside any educational justification, however, they’re just plain fun — something we’ve forgotten can be a worthy childhood pursuit in and of itself!

Play With Fireworks

alt

Playing with fireworks is not only a fun way to celebrate freedom, it teaches your kids how to responsibly handle fire and to have a healthy respect for exploding objects. Unfortunately, thanks to stringent fireworks laws and parents freaked out from viral stories of children losing eyeballs while lighting Roman candles, many kids today have never experienced the pure excitement and joy of igniting a fuse and waiting for the impending explosion.

Introduce your 3-5 year olds to the world of fireworks with “pop-pops” — those little paper-wrapped tadpole-like things you throw on the ground. They’re safe and the kids can have fun with them without injuring themselves or anybody else. You can also get them acquainted with sparklers. These preparatory “fireworks” offer a chance for children to learn general principles of safety: not to throw lit objects at others, touch people with a hot sparkler, handle a dud, etc.

When your kids hit age 6, you can start letting them light innocuous fireworks like snakes and smoke bombs. These don’t explode and will teach your kids how to light a fuse safely and to be aware of others as they use firecrackers.

By age 9 or 10, your kid should be ready to fire off pretty much anything you can find at a fireworks stand. You should continue to supervise their pyrotechnics until they’re teens, though.

Hammer a Nail

alt

Hammering a nail is a basic life skill every person should master, but many parents don’t let their kids attempt this task out of fear of them smashing their fingers. Yes, little children are uncoordinated, but the only way they’ll ever become coordinated is if they gain hands-on experience in using tools. Start letting your 3-year-old practice hammering nails with a ball peen hammer. They’re lighter than the traditional claw variety and thus easier to handle. As your child’s dexterity and strength improve, upgrade him to a full-sized claw hammer, lay out a 2×4 and a box of nails, and let him go to town.

Talk about cheap entertainment.

Stick Your Arm Out a Car Window

alt

Sticking their arm out the window of a moving car and letting their hand ride the wind is a great way for kids to get acquainted with the basic principles of aerodynamics — it’s like a personal wind tunnel. Encourage your child to play with different positions — moving the angle of her hand, closing and opening her fingers — to observe how these variations affect lift and drag.

Yes, an arm could be severed if it hit an object alongside the road, but objects are very, very rarely positioned close enough to cause a collision. And if they are, your kid’s got eyes, doesn’t she?

Jump Off a Cliff

alt

When you jump from a cliff 20 feet high, you’ll hit the water at 25 miles an hour. That’s enough force to do some serious bodily damage. But making such jumps, and even those which are higher, is certainly doable, even for small kids, as long as you take precautions and teach them proper technique.

Make sure the water is deep enough; for a jump of 20 feet, the water should be at least 8 feet deep. Then add 2 feet of water depth for every additional 10 feet of jump height. Ensure the landing spot is free from underwater obstacles like rocks. And teach your child to jump in a pencil dive: body straight, arms overhead, back slightly arched to avoid rotating forward. For little ones who aren’t strong swimmers, put them in a life jacket before they Geronimo! into the water.

Use a Bow and Arrow

alt

After watching a Robin Hood flick or reading The Hunger Games, your kids will probably want to shoot a bow and arrow. Instead of getting him (or her) the wimpy Nerf variety, let them use the real thing. A youth archery set can be found for less than $50, will provide hours of entertainment, and will teach your kids how to be responsible with potentially dangerous objects. They’ll also pick up skills like judging distance and how to aim.

Cook a Meal

alt

Cooking might not seem that dangerous, but once your kids start wanting to help make dinner, you begin noticing how many tasks prompt a “Whoa, be careful there!” response. Sharp knives, stove fire, and hot pans present hazards. I remember when I was five, I decided to nuke a bowl of milk by myself; when I took the bowl out of the microwave, I spilled its scalding hot contents all over my arm. At first I hid from my mom, but as a huge blister formed, I had to confess and get it tended to by a doctor.

Despite such potential mishaps, it’s worth not only letting your children assist you in the kitchen, but allowing them to try cooking on their own too. More so than any other activity on this list, it’ll teach them a valuable skill towards grown-up self-sufficiency.

Climb a Tree

alt

Few activities feel more liberating than climbing a tree. It’s thrilling to leave the ground and test your physical deftness, as well as your daring as you decide just how high up you’ll go. The air seems fresher among the branches. The most classic of classic childhood activities, hopefully tree climbing will continue on for another millennia.

Roughhouse

alt

Roughhousing may just look like a primitive-level melee of potentially injury-causing wrestling and hair pulling, but it actually has a bunch of high-level benefits. Whether children are mixing it up with Dad, or with each other, research has shown that good old fashioned horseplay develops kids’ resilience, intelligence, and even empathy — it teaches them how to negotiate the dynamics of aggression, cooperation, and fair play. So suplex your children more often, and don’t break up the good natured battle royales they put on between themselves.

Go Sledding

alt

Yes, it’s hard to believe this needs to be mentioned — that sledding isn’t an intrinsic part of every childhood (at least for those who live in colder climes). But I’ve met an alarming number of kids who grew up where there was at least occasional snow, and yet never went sledding. It’s hard to know if this is because parents are worried about the danger of the activity, or are just too lazy to leave their toasty, climate-controlled home to take the kids to a local hill. Either way, while sledding invariably comes with some bumps and bruises, as well as environmental discomforts, there’s hardly a more fun and memorable childhood activity. Especially when mitten-molded snow ramps are involved.

Drive a Car

alt

Not by themselves, mind you. Or on public streets, of course, which would be illegal. But in a big parking lot, largely free of obstacles, positioned on Dad’s lap, who can work the pedals and grab the steering wheel if needs be. From this position, a kid can experience the thrill of learning how to steer a 2-ton hunk of metal in relative safety.

Burn Things With a Magnifying Glass

alt

There are many fun and interesting ways to start a fire without matches, but using a magnifying glass is one of the most versatile. It provides you with a focused beam of heat that cannot only burn paper and leaves, but melt plastic. A kid can even use it to burn a symbol or his name into a piece of wood.

Walk or Ride a Bike to School

alt

According to one study in the U.K., while 80% of third-graders were allowed to walk to school in 1971, that number had dropped to just 9% in 1990, and is even lower today. Parents started prohibiting their children from walking or riding their bike to and from school by themselves out of the fear that they might be kidnapped along the way. Yet abductions are exceedingly rare, and no more common now than they were several decades ago. Further, a child has a 40X greater risk of dying as a passenger in a car than being kidnapped or killed by a stranger.

If letting your kid walk to school (or even the bus stop) still fills you with dread, work up to it gradually: 1) Walk together with your child to school a few times, pointing out any dangers from traffic and reviewing how to deal with strangers, then 2) walk halfway to school with your child, watching her walk the rest of the way alone, and finally 3) let her walk all the way by herself, without you watching.

Shoot a Gun

alt

Guns and kids is an understandably sensitive topic, but we’d make the case that proactively teaching your kids how to safely use firearms is the best way to teach a healthy respect for them. When they’re 7 or so, introduce them to a pellet gun and begin teaching proper gun safety rules like keeping their finger off the trigger until they’re ready to shoot and treating every weapon as if it were loaded. Set up a a target (tin cans are fun) in your backyard and let them plink away while you watch. As they get a little older, they can tote around their BB gun by themselves. Don’t worry about them shooting their eye out!

When they reach about age 10 or 11, you can introduce them to a .22 caliber rifle or pistol. Again, this should be done under your supervision and you should reinforce good gun safety principles the entire time.

Stand on the Roof

alt

What kid hasn’t wanted to get a bird’s eye view of the neighborhood? Standing on the roof of your home is one of the more risky activities in this list, naturally, so supervise this vertical venture and take the necessary precautions: Only allow your child to attempt if your roof isn’t overly steep and is in good condition, without loose shingles and other potential hazards. Have your kid walk straight up and down the roof, standing with one foot on either side of its peak for stability, as they survey the landscape below.

Squash a Penny on a Railroad Track

alt

Kate did this once in Vermont as a kid. At the exact moment she placed the penny on the track, a car in an adjacent parking lot happened to honk its horn; thinking it was the sound of an oncoming train, she jumped 10 feet in the air. Her family still laughs about it.

You do want to stay aware as you put your penny on a railroad track to be sure a train isn’t coming. If you’re going to wait for the train to come by and smoosh your coin, you also want to stand back at least 30 feet, as it could hypothetically come flying off and hit you. You don’t have to wait around for the train, though. If you decide to come back in a few hours or the next day to see what became of your penny, mark the spot with a stick before you leave for easy finding later on.

There’s a myth that a penny can derail a train, but that’s not true. You don’t want to put anything larger than a penny on the track, though.

Sword Fight With Sticks

alt

Parents are wary of anything involving sharp objects, sticks included. But letting your kid engage in some improvised swashbuckling is too fun an opportunity to pass up because of a negligible risk of injury.

Shoot a Slingshot

alt

In a time not too long ago, the archetypical boy had a handmade slingshot dangling from the back of his pocket. Today, most boys have never touched one. Which is a shame because slingshots can provide hours of fun and they’re a great way to introduce firearm safety to your young ones (e.g., only point at what you plan on hitting).

Yes, you could just buy your kid a fancy manufactured slingshot on Amazon, but how about exposing them to even more positive danger by letting them make their own? (You can find instructions here.) They’ll learn how to handle a saw safely and get to practice some knife wielding skills to boot.

Explore a Construction Site

alt

While I was growing up, the subdivision I lived in was still under construction, so there were always plenty of partially-built houses to explore. After the construction workers left for the day, my boyhood pals and I would cruise down the street on our bikes to check out their work and poke around the skeletal structures rising from the muddy lots. The ones that were the most fun to explore were the two-story houses. You’d have to climb up the railing-less, unfinished stairs and when you got to the top, you were able to walk to the edge of the second story’s framing and throw stuff down on your buds.

It’s a hard way to beat spending an afternoon.

Use a Pocket Knife

alt

In Home Grown, author and homesteader Ben Hewitt describes how he gave his sons their first pocket knives at age four. Hewitt admits that he was worried that they would constantly slice open their pudgy toddler fingers with these sharp implements, but much to his surprise, his young boys rarely injured themselves. “There was something in the seriousness of the blade and the responsibility granted that transformed our son[s],” he notes. By giving them the responsibility of using a knife safely, Hewitt’s kids became responsible.

While you don’t have to give your toddler a pocket knife, consider letting them handle this trusty, handy tool sooner rather than later. It’s the only way they’ll learn how to handle sharp things safely and deftly, and doing so will open up new activities to them — from whittling to mumbley peg.

Climb a Rope

alt

Many schools have banned certain physical activities from recess and P.E. class due to their being too “dangerous.” Football, dodgeball, tag…even all balls of any kind and running itself have gotten the boot in some places. Ropes have also been removed from many school gyms, due to the perceived risk of a child falling from the top — and probably also because of the risk of injury to the self-esteem of the kid who can’t even make it halfway up.

Climbing is one of the crucial physical skills everyone should develop, however, so if schools don’t provide the opportunity for its practice, then parents ought to, perhaps putting up a rope of their own in the backyard.

Ride Your Bike Off a Ramp

alt

As a kid, taking your bike off a ramp is the closest you’ll get to flying without being on a plane. Back when I was a boy, my neighborhood posse and I built a big ol’ ramp out of a pile of dirt. We’d spend hours flying off that thing. For some reason, my favorite thing was to let go of my bike in midair and watch it continue to fly while I hit the dirt.

Building and riding off ramps will teach your kids some basic physics and even some construction skills. They’ll also learn, just as Napoleon Dynamite did, that if you’re not careful, taking your bike off sweet jumps can be hazardous to your junk.

Make a Fire

alt

There’s a primal connection between man and fire. Nurture that connection with your kids while they’re young. Let them play with matches and light candles when they’re pre-school age (with your supervision). They’ll learn that fire indeed burns, but from a flame so small it won’t hurt too much if it glances their skin. When they get to be about 8 or 9, let them build a fire all by themselves (still with your supervision, of course).

Explore a Tunnel

alt

When my father-in-law was a boy in the early 1960s, the post-WWII housing boom was still in full swing, and a huge neighborhood was being built about a mile away from his home. Once the land was cleared, workers laid out gigantic sewer pipes so high he could walk through them without bending down, and so long they became pitch black once you advanced several yards from the openings. Though exploring the tunnels was a favorite activity of the neighborhood boys, my father-in-law recalls being a little terrified by these expeditions. Yet they still became an indelible memory!

Modern explorers should avoid tunnels filled with sewage and unsavory critters or humans, stay away from storm drains after rain, wear gloves, and bring along a flashlight — as well as a heaping helping of courage!

_____________

Magnifying glass photo courtesy of George’s Workshop

Penny photo taken by Eli Duke

Last updated: June 29, 2017


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: childhood; chldren; father; fun; play
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 61-8081-100101-120 ... 161-168 next last
To: rlmorel

I lived on my bike.

Jumped up and down all day.

What this kid did wrong is let his feet come off the pedals.


81 posted on 08/09/2017 6:06:22 PM PDT by ifinnegan (Democrats kill babies and harvest their organs to sell)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 66 | View Replies]

To: vannrox

Thanks for posting this great list.

I did all of these things because my parents raised me under the benign neglect love/rule. So did my wife’s parents, and our uncles and aunts with their kids.

We did the same with our kids.

At a recent birthday celebration for one of our adult kids (in their 50’s or close now), this came up.

A discussion of Helicopter parents came up re how a church camp (not our church) was basically ruined for everyone due to some Helicopter parents at the church camp.

A daughter in law asked if our adult children thought that we were Helicopter parents.

They answered no! That, we gladly took them to the church and dropped them off for their church camps and other camps.

They added that we were never helicopter parents. However, they knew that if they really needed us, we would be there.

The parents on both sides of our families, raised their kids with benign neglect/love. Now, our siblings and cousins are in their 70’s and survived being children, teenagers and adults. That benign neglect/love is being passed on to our and their children and grandkids.


82 posted on 08/09/2017 6:06:45 PM PDT by Grampa Dave (Voting for Trump to be our President, made 62+ million of us into Dumb Deplorable Colluders, MAGA!!!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: vannrox
Yes, an arm could be severed if it hit an object alongside the road, but objects are very, very rarely positioned close enough to cause a collision.

Maybe where he lives.

I have lost two right side mirrors on my pickups due to mailboxes or trash dumpsters positioned too close to the road.

Both times I was well on the road. I was getting off work both times after a long shift but I was never off the road.

This is an old rural community with some narrow roads and many mailboxes positioned too close to the road.

Then there are the people who set their dumpster right next to the road. Just a pet peeve after paying $300 for a replaced mirror.

83 posted on 08/09/2017 6:08:25 PM PDT by Pontiac (The welfare state must fail because it is contrary to human nature and diminishes the human spirit.L)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: dfwgator

Our BB gun battles took a turn for the worse when crosman came out with the Pumpmaster 760. You can actually get some penetration with one of those. But someone was a big pussy and told his mom and after that we had to go back to just throwing rocks at each other.


84 posted on 08/09/2017 6:10:34 PM PDT by Garth Tater (What's mine is mine.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 73 | View Replies]

To: forgotten man

Not a good idea to do it on the street!


85 posted on 08/09/2017 6:11:05 PM PDT by gr8eman (Facts and evidence are bourgeois constructs weaponized by patriarchal penis-people)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: vannrox

Yep. We did all those.

Dad worked for the “Phone Company”, and would bring home big cable spools. We would take a slat out of the center section and roll the spool up a big hill in the horse pasture. one of us would get inside the center and then we pushed them to roll downhill to crash into fence at the bottom.

One problem. There was a really mean horse in the pasture that bites! So after you crashed into the fence, you had to peek out and make sure the biting horse wasn’t close. If she was, maybe you could run to one of the near by trees and climb up beyond her reach. If not, your laughing friends at the top of the hill might distract her. Usually not though.

It was also fun to put the little brothers in the clothes dryer and give them a ride.
It had a “no heat” selection, so we normally chose that mode. Mom yelled at us.

We also would open shotgun shells and empty the lead out, then close the crimp. Put those shells into shotguns and shoot the wad at each other. That really hurt.


86 posted on 08/09/2017 6:11:27 PM PDT by MountainDad (A strong man stands up for himself. A stronger man stands up for others. Support your local militia.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: CodeToad

“To be old and wise one must survive being young and stupid.”

Amen!


87 posted on 08/09/2017 6:13:47 PM PDT by Grampa Dave (Voting for Trump to be our President, made 62+ million of us into Dumb Deplorable Colluders, MAGA!!!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 40 | View Replies]

To: vannrox
Roughhousing

When my kids were little, they would call it "Glasses off".

I'd get home from work, kiss my wife and then head into the living room, take my glasses off and lay down on the carpeted floor.

I think Dr. Seuss called it "Hop on Pop". Good times.

88 posted on 08/09/2017 6:14:48 PM PDT by Bloody Sam Roberts ("Good judgment comes from experience, and a lot of that comes from bad judgment." - Will Rogers)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Bloody Sam Roberts
I think Dr. Seuss called it "Hop on Pop". Good times.

In my case it was "Hop on Pop's Balls."

89 posted on 08/09/2017 6:15:28 PM PDT by dfwgator
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 88 | View Replies]

To: vannrox

Grew up in a small town in the ‘50’s. Lots of guys in the neighborhood. We used to launch firecracker propelled rockets into our neighbors’ yards. We would throw firecrackers at each other’s feet. We played “army” with BB guns . . . the rule was you had to aim below the waist. We would dump every chemical could find in our dads’ garages into a bucket and then dump it onto ant hills. We all survived.


90 posted on 08/09/2017 6:18:04 PM PDT by NorseWood
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Billthedrill
Oh, and I forgot one. Model rockets. Oh hell yeah...

Definitely - it's fireworks raised to another level. My parents' house backed up to a utility easement that had high-voltage power lines running down the middle, straight as an arrow for miles. We'd angle the rocket launcher guide rod over and go for horizontal distance. Great fun back then (now, the SWAT Team would probably roll out).

91 posted on 08/09/2017 6:18:35 PM PDT by Charles Martel (Progressives are the crab grass in the lawn of life.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 77 | View Replies]

To: Fiddlstix

The kids nowadays couldn’t do what we did back in our day! They wouldn’t know how...


92 posted on 08/09/2017 6:23:34 PM PDT by W. (What's crackin', bitch? Har!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 56 | View Replies]

To: All

Someone asked what happened. I think we all know what happened. The ‘brave new world’ of the Nazi-nanny state. Federal take over of local communities — The Department of Education as just one example.

They pushed out the family and now parents rights are near non-existent. Not to mention the time a working parent actually gets to be with their children.

Mandatory pre-preschool starting earlier and earlier all the time. Last I heard they wanted to start them off at 2 and 3 now. I wonder if soon they will take them at birth to cut down on ‘home influences’. A parent and freedom are things they want to erase. If a parent can be ‘anyone’ then the birth parent is of no special standing.

What we experienced growing up, what gave us common sense and liberty loving spirits, is exactly what they hope to rob our children of.


93 posted on 08/09/2017 6:24:09 PM PDT by TianaHighrider (Deplorable me)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 78 | View Replies]

To: Charles Martel

See? Every guy has one of those stories.

Back in the mid-sixties, I wanted a skateboard, but...that wasn’t gonna happen. So I took my sister’s metal roller skate, separated it, hammered both sides flat then screwed one at the front and one at the rear of a piece of a board.

We were using a downhill section of sidewalk and putting cans and stones in the sidewalk to use as an obstacle to skate around. The problem is, the skateboard was so primitive with limited capability, and the sections of the sidewalk were not even, so when those metal wheels hit the seam between two sections and the one you approach was higher...the skateboard would just stop.

I fell, and fell, and fell, ripping flesh off of my elbows, until the last time I wiped out and hit the pavement with such force and so painfully that I think I screamed at the top of my lungs for about 30 seconds out of pure frustration and pain.


94 posted on 08/09/2017 6:25:10 PM PDT by rlmorel (Those who sit on the picket fence are impaled by it.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 80 | View Replies]

To: Billthedrill

“Model rockets. Oh hell yeah...”

Estes rockets and Cox airplanes.

I still have a couple Estes I built with my son.

L


95 posted on 08/09/2017 6:27:24 PM PDT by Lurker (President Trump isn't our last chance. President Trump is THEIR last chance.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 77 | View Replies]

To: rlmorel

I fell, and fell, and fell, ..etc etc
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

Best part of story.

SOMETIMES persistence pays off.

BUT small wheel, big crack makes for interruption when going from point A to B.

Just how many stops did it take before you figured it out or did an adult show up? (And probably save your life)


96 posted on 08/09/2017 6:29:31 PM PDT by xrmusn ((6/98)""There is more to life than being a passenger. Amelia Earhart")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 94 | View Replies]

To: vannrox

I did most of these.

Model rockets were a favorite, but we lived near the woods and I”d always lose them in the trees if I used a parachute.

Lost a lot of kites in the trees too.

I eventually learned to leave the parachute off and just not be underneath them when they came back down.

I still have some rockets. Been too long since I shot a few off...


97 posted on 08/09/2017 6:29:46 PM PDT by chrisser
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Pollster1

DANG!!

Fireworks, Yes all summer.

Pennies on train tracks. Yes. Twice a week. Where did they end up? Didn’t you wonder? We did. It was a summer project in “hood”.(LOL)

Slingshot a must! You never shot a slingshot???? Why? Or a B-B gun??

Dangerous biking. YEAAAHH! Flying into the air never knowing you were gonna land on your tires or on your face. That was such a hoot!!!!!!!!!!!

All these was the best part of being a kid. This and living in trees. We lived in the woods. Heaven.


98 posted on 08/09/2017 6:29:51 PM PDT by lizma2
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 41 | View Replies]

To: vannrox

Sledding...

I lived on a street with a pretty steep hill. On snow days, the town closed the street (except to residents), didn’t plow, and it was open for kids and their sleds. On a snowy Saturday afternoon, there could easily be 50-100 kids out there.

We would form sled trains and go flying down the hill whipping back and forth, the best place to be was at the end of the train, if you could hold on. We groomed the hill with large kid-filled cartons for better speed.

The best part, for the lucky ones who lived right there, was to go out after dinner for a couple of hours when the hill was pretty much deserted.

If a car appeared, kids would yell out “CAR!” and the hill would instantly clear.

And if it got too crowded, there was always a trail back in the woods for the few who knew about it.

I don’t remember anyone getting seriously hurt.

That could never happen today. Too many people would complain, too many lawyers would get involved.


99 posted on 08/09/2017 6:33:28 PM PDT by Fresh Wind (Hillary: Go to jail. Go directly to jail. Do not pass GO. Do not collect 2 billion dollars.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: vannrox

23 for 23. We crawled through the storm drains a lot.


100 posted on 08/09/2017 6:34:07 PM PDT by henkster (Ask your favorite liberal to take the "Snowflake Challenge.")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 61-8081-100101-120 ... 161-168 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson