What age would you let your good swimmer be in the pool unattended? |
No one, no matter how good a swimmer should be left to swim in a pool unattended. |
Do you mean watching but not actually in the pool with them? I sit on the edge or steps while my 5 year old swims, but I have a constant eye on her and won't let her go over her head. If she's in water over her head, I'm in there with her. |
Depends what you mean by "unattended". Do you mean with no lifeguard? If so, I'd say age 15, after they have earned their Red Cross Basic Lifeguard certificate, and with a friend. |
Meaning you keep an eye on them, but are not in the pool too or beside it, but you can see them from where you are. |
Oh and this is a small pool, about 4 ft deep. Not a public pool (no lifeguards). |
I was 10 in our backyard in-ground pool, had a deep end with diving board. All my friends could swim. |
4 foot pool, smart kids, rule-followers? 8 years old. Just make sure kid understands to stand up when struggling, don't just flail around. You really do have to teach and practice it. |
Thanks for the tip! |
No one ever swims alone. There is always a buddy. |
In general, not a great idea for anyone (adult or child) to swim alone, simply because accidents happen and even an adult can panic when faced with inhaling water. That being said, a 4 ft. pool - the child should be able to stand with his/her head above water so the child should probably be at least 4'6"-ish. |
Please, please, please never let any child swim alone. If they hit their head or otherwise black out, they could drown in 3 feet of water like this very accomplished teen swimmer did at Michael Phelps's training center in Baltimore.
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/baltimore-county/towson/ph-tt-lowenthal-1107-20121101,0,4905655.story I don't think a parent always has to be watching, but there always has to be a buddy. |
+100 -former lifeguard |
Never, I sit outside when my 20 year old swims lap. Around 13 I let my kids out if someone else was with them, but stayed out if it was a group. Left the group alone around 15. |
Once they could swim back and forth in the deep end (7 feet) several times and could do a "survival float" (dead man's float we used to call it) I let them swim without me keeping an active eye. My kids were late swimmers so this was about age 6-7. |