Anonymous wrote:Old playgrounds were a lot more fun, I will say. A nice slick metal slide, real jungle gyms, see-saws, merry go rounds.
Anonymous wrote:Ha.. I’m Canadian, and our playground is circa 1993.
We’re not as unsafe as you think. For example, we have gun laws and universal healthcare.
911, I'd like to report a murder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My inlaws live in the rust belt here in America and they have awful city playgrounds. I didn't know that metal slides still existed. Even my 2 year old was easily bored. The playground was seriously one slide, one monkey bars and a fireman's pole.
What does your 2 year old need to entertain himself?
Anonymous wrote:Just got back from Quebec and still have not gotten over how unsafe Canada is regarding young children.
Anonymous wrote:Just got back from Quebec and still have not gotten over how unsafe Canada is regarding young children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We were in Toronto earlier this summer and we found a great little playground that my kids loved. It looked new and had a merry-go-round/round about that my kids loved and is harder to find in the US.
Toronto area is a lot richer than Quebec in general, even Montreal. It's like saying they have awesome playgrounds in the Bay Area and outdated ones in NE Ohio.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Old playgrounds were a lot more fun, I will say. A nice slick metal slide, real jungle gyms, see-saws, merry go rounds.
+1
I'll bet Canadians aren't as lawsuit happy as American's are. I played on all of the above as a kids, didn't have rubber or even mulch below it and survived.
Our elementary school had a tall set of monkey bars bolted to the asphalt. In retrospect, it's amazing that I can only think of one kid who broke his arm on that thing.
You're right, though, that plastic slides can't compare to the speed you get on a good polished-metal slide. Of course, they also can't match the pain of bare legs hitting one of those things on a sunny day in mid-summer!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My inlaws live in the rust belt here in America and they have awful city playgrounds. I didn't know that metal slides still existed. Even my 2 year old was easily bored. The playground was seriously one slide, one monkey bars and a fireman's pole.
What does your 2 year old need to entertain himself?
Anonymous wrote:Kind of funny because I think this area (I'm in NOVA) has crummy parks compared to where I'm from in Florida. We had tons and tons of great parks, splash pads and creative play places. Even clemijontri or the water mine can't compare at all.
Anonymous wrote:My inlaws live in the rust belt here in America and they have awful city playgrounds. I didn't know that metal slides still existed. Even my 2 year old was easily bored. The playground was seriously one slide, one monkey bars and a fireman's pole.