The opposite. She no longer needs a life jacket on the dock. When they were 6 and 9 yo we did have them in life jackets all the time. It may have been overkill for the 9 yo, but not worth enforcing different rules for different sets of kids. |
My kids don’t wear life vests at the beach but they’re also not allowed to swim in the ocean. They’re allowed to put their toes in and fill up buckets of water for play (with an adult). So you won’t see them in life vests for that. |
I'm a PP whose 9 year old has never worn a life jacket outside of a boat ride, and I agree with you. Was just at the beach and didn't see anyone with life jackets. But I know my sister's kids wear them at the beach. I've never known anyone else in real life. |
What is with the dock stuff? Are docks more dangerous than other open water? I'm not a lake person so haven't had this experience.
I did grow up going to lakes and never wore a vest, but it was the 80s. |
We never did any life vests at pool or beach. Always within arms reach until they could swim. Both kids on swim team by 6/7. Dad is still in the water with them at the beach if they go in deeper than ankles. We don't boat or go to freshwater often. But when we do any boat rides, vests for everyone. |
Of course this isn’t real life. No one in their right mind has kids in life jackets at the beach. Normal people don’t reply to these threads, just over-anxious parents that can use this as an opportunity for virtue-signaling. |
It's pretty easy for a little kid to fall off a dock. There are no railings and water on all sides. Plus the water off our dock is dark and >20 ft deep. If a kid went under off the dock there is basically no chance you'd find them to pull them out. And kids are often in clothes and shoes on the dock, making it harder to swim if they fall in unexpectedly, unlike planned swimming where they're in a swimsuit. |
I think people are more likely to affirmatively post when they are cautious than to post “I don’t worry about that” (and likely get flamed). Don’t get me wrong; I think caution around water is justified. But there’s always some virtue signaling going on with the internet posting. |
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But I will echo I’ve never seen a child in a true life vest at the pool. Water wings, yes, but I’m guessing most people on this thread know those are unsafe. |
Being able to pass a typical swimming pool swim test for using the diving board/deep end is a good gauge. Being able to easily swim the length of a pool on your front one way (crawl, side stroke or breast stroke but NOT doggy paddle) and on your back the other way, and then (without touching the floor or side of the pool) tread water and keek your face above the surface for 2 minutes.
If kids can't do those things easily (and also they need to be OK with going under water without any panic) they need an attentive adult with them at all times near the water. Attentive adult means someone aware of water safety and: a) If water is over child's head: attentive adult is in the water, within arm's reach. b) If water is not over child's head, attentive adult can be sitting by the side of the pool but is aware of possibility that child could move to deeper water and is attentive to child, not on phone, distracted by chatting. In any other situation near the water, if no attentive adult is constantly available, the child who cannot swim strongly should wear a coast guard approved life vest. At our community pool, well-staffed with lifeguards, I never had my non-swimming children in life vest, but I was always attentive to them when they were in and out of the water. If non swimmers we in the water, I was either right there with them, or very close by and attentive if they were in the shallow end. This policy is a good incentive to teach your kids the basics of swimming early, though. Both kids could pass the deep water swim test by age 5. |
So I'm the PP. I'd fall into your description I guess. If the kids are competent swimmers, meaning they can tread water and swim a couple laps without touching the ground or hanging on to the side of the wall, then they can swim in a community or municipal type pool (with rules, lifeguards, etc) "independently". They don't need an attentive adult nearby, and they don't need the life jacket. The life jacket is for when they *aren't* competent swimmers AND when you can't count on an attentive adult (in safe, known waters) OR for even competent swimmers, in unknown or dangerous or unpredictable waters.. Your example of family swimming off the dock in a lake would be fairly predictable waters IMO. If my kids were competent swimmers, they would be swimming in that lake as long as a responsible adult was around, or even some responsible teens. But the key is that you know the kids are competent swimmers and could tread water/float/yell for help if they needed to for some reason. If I had a non-swimming 4-year-old at your family's lake house, she would be wearing a life vest on the dock, especially if it was a social event and she wanted to run around with her cousins. If she's sitting on the side of the dock with me, and I *know* I am attentive and aware of her, she could take off her vest. But that's the most dangerous of all water situations. Child can't swim, social event, distracted parents each think the other one is watching the kid, and not a professional pool with life guards on duty and good lines of sight. This is the best situation for a life vest on non swimmers. |
I wouldn't call it lazy parenting, but I do think those ages are old enough to make sure your kids are good swimmers. If your sister's kids are good swimmers, still requiring them to wear vests at a normal, guarded beach (not one with known rip tides etc) does seem a bit like overkill to me. If they aren't good swimmers, though, I could understand it. I'd work on the swimming skills in that case. |
I think it really depends on the particular beach and conditions. There are many with an undertow, riptides or big waves that are unsafe for even stronger kid swimmers. Adults who are familiar with the currents and who are strong swimmers may be fine, but that's a lot to expect for a 9 yo. |
I sort of agree but also think it's a good time in life to learn this awareness which you never will with a vest. If others are out in the waves, your child should be able to do so as well. In truly unsafe conditions, no one goes in the water. If it's safe to go in, its safe to learn how to do so without a vest imo. |
The ocean is inherently dangerous. |