
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remove the ladder. I bet your kid can still climb up to bed. Even if he can't, keep the ladder in a closet/under the bed during the day.
I can't remove the ladder, it's a really heavy ladder that is attached to the safety rail. It's not one of those light, separate ladders you can just take off and lay in the top bunk unfortunately.
Ugh. Then the plywood solution might work.
Or you could do what we do to our bird feeder pole to keep the squirrels out: Grease it heavily so they just slide right back down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remove the ladder. I bet your kid can still climb up to bed. Even if he can't, keep the ladder in a closet/under the bed during the day.
I can't remove the ladder, it's a really heavy ladder that is attached to the safety rail. It's not one of those light, separate ladders you can just take off and lay in the top bunk unfortunately.
Anonymous wrote:Remove the ladder. I bet your kid can still climb up to bed. Even if he can't, keep the ladder in a closet/under the bed during the day.