Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are building a pool at our new house. We will not be putting a fence up. Youngest is 12 and a strong swimmer. Oldest is a competitive swimmer and lifeguard. Yard is walled/fenced from neighbors but we're not putting a fence around the actual pool.
You are the reason there need to be laws in place in every state for this.
Imagine you're having a big party. Parents come with kids of various ages, everyone is chatting, no one has their eyes peeled on their kid every second, and lines of sight are blocked by the number of people. It takes a couple of minutes for a toddler to fall in and drown.
Not PP, but their yard is walled/fenced. They shouldn't have to live their life around a hypothetical toddler party scenario. Pools CAN be dangerous but a law requiring double fencing is rather extreme.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are building a pool at our new house. We will not be putting a fence up. Youngest is 12 and a strong swimmer. Oldest is a competitive swimmer and lifeguard. Yard is walled/fenced from neighbors but we're not putting a fence around the actual pool.
You are the reason there need to be laws in place in every state for this.
Imagine you're having a big party. Parents come with kids of various ages, everyone is chatting, no one has their eyes peeled on their kid every second, and lines of sight are blocked by the number of people. It takes a couple of minutes for a toddler to fall in and drown.
Not PP, but their yard is walled/fenced. They shouldn't have to live their life around a hypothetical toddler party scenario. Pools CAN be dangerous but a law requiring double fencing is rather extreme.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are building a pool at our new house. We will not be putting a fence up. Youngest is 12 and a strong swimmer. Oldest is a competitive swimmer and lifeguard. Yard is walled/fenced from neighbors but we're not putting a fence around the actual pool.
You are the reason there need to be laws in place in every state for this.
Imagine you're having a big party. Parents come with kids of various ages, everyone is chatting, no one has their eyes peeled on their kid every second, and lines of sight are blocked by the number of people. It takes a couple of minutes for a toddler to fall in and drown.
Anonymous wrote:We are building a pool at our new house. We will not be putting a fence up. Youngest is 12 and a strong swimmer. Oldest is a competitive swimmer and lifeguard. Yard is walled/fenced from neighbors but we're not putting a fence around the actual pool.
Anonymous wrote:We have the same set up as you described. We’re keeping the safety fence up. Apparently someone climbed the outside fence and drowned in the pool before we lived in the house and when there was only the outside fence. We want to keep that extra layer of protection.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:so a fence would not have helped in this case.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Never take it down. A friend of mine drowned on his 18th birthday.
I'm sorry to hear that, but would a safety fence have prevented it? Did he fall in while running in the yard or something?
While swimming, drunk, with friends after his parents went to bed.
It would if it was complicated enough that he’d be too drunk to work it.
Anonymous wrote:Never. No age.
Anonymous wrote:Check with your insurance before you do anything.
But as a former lifeguard and pool manager, I’d say leave it up. Even kids who can swim can get into trouble if they hit their heads diving in, or crack their head on the side falling off a float.
And if your kid has friends over, 8 is old enough that you don’t need to have eyes on them all the time. But you can’t guarantee they won’t decide to flout your house rules and go swimming.