Anonymous wrote:Training wheels are there for a reason and not every kid responds to being thrown off the deep end. Get her a bike with training wheels so she learns how to enjoy riding a bike first.
Anonymous wrote:I think the balance bike fad is really dumb and something that’s become popular because it’s seen as European. American kids used to grow up with training wheels. I think training wheels are great because you immediately get to experience the beauty of a bicycle: speed and actually transporting yourself somewhere faster than you can walk. Balance bikes are awkward and slow compared to a bike with training wheels and just aren’t a lot of fun, as your smart daughter has quickly figured out. If it were so difficult to go from training wheels to a bike generations of kids would never have learned, and yet we all did, with much more enthusiasm than had we all been subjected to balance bikes.
Tl;dr: get her a real bike with training wheels even if you lose cred with the other upper middle class parents.
Anonymous wrote:I think the balance bike fad is really dumb and something that’s become popular because it’s seen as European. American kids used to grow up with training wheels. I think training wheels are great because you immediately get to experience the beauty of a bicycle: speed and actually transporting yourself somewhere faster than you can walk. Balance bikes are awkward and slow compared to a bike with training wheels and just aren’t a lot of fun, as your smart daughter has quickly figured out. If it were so difficult to go from training wheels to a bike generations of kids would never have learned, and yet we all did, with much more enthusiasm than had we all been subjected to balance bikes.
Tl;dr: get her a real bike with training wheels even if you lose cred with the other upper middle class parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was also skeptical of the balance bike and had basically given up on it, then a few months after our first "lessons" with it, I suggested taking it out on a walk (figuring I'd wind up carrying it most of the time) and DD took off on it. It was amazing. I don't know if her body/brain just put together the stuff we'd been trying to show her previously, or if nothing we said mattered and she just needed to figure it out on her own, but suddenly it was her favorite thing.
She's now 4.5 and we are thinking about getting a pedal bike with training wheels because she's outgrowing the balance bike. We are honestly not in a hurry either way -- she also loves her scooter. If she weren't getting too tall for the balance bike, I think we'd stick with it for another year even because she's so quick on it.
So I guess my suggestion is to give it a couple months and then pull it out and see if anything has changed. One of the best things about the balance bike is that it is very easy for them to stop on it, which is great for teaching safety in the neighborhood. The coordination of stopping a pedal bike is more complicated and I know it's going to stress me out for a bit once we switch.
If she's great on a balance bike, you may not need the training wheels. Once my kids were super competent on the balance bike they switched over to regular pedal bikes seamlessly -- no learning curve at all. It was like magic. They got on and pedaled off.
Anonymous wrote:I think the balance bike fad is really dumb and something that’s become popular because it’s seen as European. American kids used to grow up with training wheels. I think training wheels are great because you immediately get to experience the beauty of a bicycle: speed and actually transporting yourself somewhere faster than you can walk. Balance bikes are awkward and slow compared to a bike with training wheels and just aren’t a lot of fun, as your smart daughter has quickly figured out. If it were so difficult to go from training wheels to a bike generations of kids would never have learned, and yet we all did, with much more enthusiasm than had we all been subjected to balance bikes.
Tl;dr: get her a real bike with training wheels even if you lose cred with the other upper middle class parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was also skeptical of the balance bike and had basically given up on it, then a few months after our first "lessons" with it, I suggested taking it out on a walk (figuring I'd wind up carrying it most of the time) and DD took off on it. It was amazing. I don't know if her body/brain just put together the stuff we'd been trying to show her previously, or if nothing we said mattered and she just needed to figure it out on her own, but suddenly it was her favorite thing.
She's now 4.5 and we are thinking about getting a pedal bike with training wheels because she's outgrowing the balance bike. We are honestly not in a hurry either way -- she also loves her scooter. If she weren't getting too tall for the balance bike, I think we'd stick with it for another year even because she's so quick on it.
So I guess my suggestion is to give it a couple months and then pull it out and see if anything has changed. One of the best things about the balance bike is that it is very easy for them to stop on it, which is great for teaching safety in the neighborhood. The coordination of stopping a pedal bike is more complicated and I know it's going to stress me out for a bit once we switch.
If she's great on a balance bike, you may not need the training wheels. Once my kids were super competent on the balance bike they switched over to regular pedal bikes seamlessly -- no learning curve at all. It was like magic. They got on and pedaled off.