I mean that is what the subject line says...
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| My 8 year old weighs 50lbs. If you have a special needs child who cannot walk you’ll get better answers on that forum. |
+1. |
| I think the Bob is good up to 60lbs. My 4yo weighs 44lbs and occasionally sits in the foot area while my 25lb 2yo is strapped in. It rolls fine. But she also walks 5 miles without protest, so, yeah, unless there's a special need at play I'd work on walking stamina. |
| My tall 1st grader doesn’t weigh 50lb. He can also run a mile and can ride a scooter or a bike. |
| My 7 year old is just shy of 50 lbs! |
Their own feet. |
| My 7 year old weighs 50 lbs so you probably don’t need a stroller. They do have special needs strollers , though, that my friends use for their disabled child that have much higher weight limits. Also , my 10 and 7 year olds push each other in my youngest child’s stroller when they’re messing around outside and nothing has ever happened to it so I wouldn’t worry much about the limit, either. |
Hahaha I had to find out more about this giant baby.
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At that point they used a scooter, bike, or one of those ride on bikes that the parent is also able to push. If this is a SN issue, you will definitely find some great help over on the SN forum. Otherwise, a child who weighs 50 pounds is old enough to walk or use another form of transportation other than a stroller. |
| The OP may just not be familiar with the fact that growth and weight gain really level off over time. Kids grow rapidly in the first year but it slows down significantly by age 2. They slim out a lot too. My friend mentioned that her daughter shot up in height but gained like a single pound between 18 months and age 2. Perfectly healthy kid. |
A 50 pound 2 year old is not healthy...no matter what growth spurt they may be in. |
| This reminds me of a Maury Show episode where the guest was a huge baby. He was sitting around in only a diaper eating a drumstick and grease was dripping down his face and streaming over his rolls of fat. |
That wasn't what I was saying, I'm saying the OP may have a new toddler or infant and be wrongly assuming the kid's growth will continue linearly, not understand how much it slows. |
LOL! Yes! My first thought was, “That is NOT a baby!” |