Anonymous wrote:I’d say 10ish but would feel a lot better with a group of three instead of two. 8 definitely seems too young to me. The Bancroft playground is kind of isolated since it’s behind the building which would worry me a bit unless they were going at a time the playground is known to be busy. I live nearby but not in Mt P.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in the suburbs and allowed this at 6.
Yes in the suburbs you can do this earlier and kids can run around the neighborhood more freely. The flip side is that you wind up driving them around to everything until they can drive themselves (and then have to worry about a teen driver) whereas in the city it takes longer to let them be independent, but then they can be very independent in terms of getting around town, to activities, etc., because they can take public transport most places.
My experience in DC is that public transport doesn't reach far, and it doesn't circulate all that often.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very kid dependent but probably 9. However, I would worry a little bit that they are too old for the playground at that point and will get in the way of younger kids. If you don't have a watch is there a walkie talkie that would go that range?
You think 9 is too old for a playground? Most 9 year olds are still happy on a playground.
Anonymous wrote:Very kid dependent but probably 9. However, I would worry a little bit that they are too old for the playground at that point and will get in the way of younger kids. If you don't have a watch is there a walkie talkie that would go that range?
Anonymous wrote:Personally, I would not, ever.
Anonymous wrote:Personally, I would not, ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:15. I say this as an unsupervised child/teen in DC when I was a kid.
Why do you say that?
I'm a little surprised at how young the answers are, but cool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in the suburbs and allowed this at 6.
Yes in the suburbs you can do this earlier and kids can run around the neighborhood more freely. The flip side is that you wind up driving them around to everything until they can drive themselves (and then have to worry about a teen driver) whereas in the city it takes longer to let them be independent, but then they can be very independent in terms of getting around town, to activities, etc., because they can take public transport most places.