Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, a parent willing to take all those people to the beach is not planning to supervise much if at all. You can tell by the number of kids the parent is allowing to go. I'd frankly be more worried about riptides and drownings.
Drownings?!?
They are teens. Do you supervise them at all times?!?!
NP - When they’re in something as powerful and unpredictable as the ocean, then yes, I would want them supervised at all times. Even though they’re aware of the dangers and have been to the beach, they haven’t spent enough time there for the relevant safety skills/awareness to be fully integrated like their safety skills/awareness of being in a city. Add in the distractions of a bunch of teenage friends who may be even less focused on safety and I think there is reason for concern. Are all the kids strong swimmers? Have the hosting parents even bothered to check? Even though my kids can swim, if their friend gets in trouble and starts to panic, they’re not prepared to safely rescue someone. Lifeguards are great, but if a beach is packed, they might not catch everything. It’s not like a pool where there is a limited area to watch, controlled conditions, and there’s always someone nearby.
These kids aren’t graduating seniors about to head off to college, they just finished junior high.
+1. I would want my kid supervised as well. Not every kid was on the swim team.
Anonymous wrote:I take friends to the beach every time and I never watch them in the water. I let the parents know up front they are mainly unsupervised. We have a house in OCNJ and it’s a dry town and the teens have full range of the island on their bikes.
They can’t swim after lifeguards finish at 5:30pm and an 11pm curfew. We usually meet up for dinners and they sometimes sit with us at the beach.
They are 16 and 18 this year and will do the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, a parent willing to take all those people to the beach is not planning to supervise much if at all. You can tell by the number of kids the parent is allowing to go. I'd frankly be more worried about riptides and drownings.
Drownings?!?
They are teens. Do you supervise them at all times?!?!
NP - When they’re in something as powerful and unpredictable as the ocean, then yes, I would want them supervised at all times. Even though they’re aware of the dangers and have been to the beach, they haven’t spent enough time there for the relevant safety skills/awareness to be fully integrated like their safety skills/awareness of being in a city. Add in the distractions of a bunch of teenage friends who may be even less focused on safety and I think there is reason for concern. Are all the kids strong swimmers? Have the hosting parents even bothered to check? Even though my kids can swim, if their friend gets in trouble and starts to panic, they’re not prepared to safely rescue someone. Lifeguards are great, but if a beach is packed, they might not catch everything. It’s not like a pool where there is a limited area to watch, controlled conditions, and there’s always someone nearby.
These kids aren’t graduating seniors about to head off to college, they just finished junior high.
+1. I would want my kid supervised as well. Not every kid was on the swim team.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, a parent willing to take all those people to the beach is not planning to supervise much if at all. You can tell by the number of kids the parent is allowing to go. I'd frankly be more worried about riptides and drownings.
Drownings?!?
They are teens. Do you supervise them at all times?!?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, a parent willing to take all those people to the beach is not planning to supervise much if at all. You can tell by the number of kids the parent is allowing to go. I'd frankly be more worried about riptides and drownings.
This. And this is what I thought this post was going to be about. I am so, so much more worried about the dangers of the ocean than teen drinking or boys or something.
Anonymous wrote:Yes- I would probably aplow this.
How old is this brother and his friends?
I don’t see 16/17 yo being super interested in some 8th graders.
I have kids with this same age differential and there isn’t a lot of cross interest between them when with their friends. Only when my older one is without her friends does she even deign to engage with her little sister and sisters friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, a parent willing to take all those people to the beach is not planning to supervise much if at all. You can tell by the number of kids the parent is allowing to go. I'd frankly be more worried about riptides and drownings.
Drownings?!?
They are teens. Do you supervise them at all times?!?!
NP - When they’re in something as powerful and unpredictable as the ocean, then yes, I would want them supervised at all times. Even though they’re aware of the dangers and have been to the beach, they haven’t spent enough time there for the relevant safety skills/awareness to be fully integrated like their safety skills/awareness of being in a city. Add in the distractions of a bunch of teenage friends who may be even less focused on safety and I think there is reason for concern. Are all the kids strong swimmers? Have the hosting parents even bothered to check? Even though my kids can swim, if their friend gets in trouble and starts to panic, they’re not prepared to safely rescue someone. Lifeguards are great, but if a beach is packed, they might not catch everything. It’s not like a pool where there is a limited area to watch, controlled conditions, and there’s always someone nearby.
These kids aren’t graduating seniors about to head off to college, they just finished junior high.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, a parent willing to take all those people to the beach is not planning to supervise much if at all. You can tell by the number of kids the parent is allowing to go. I'd frankly be more worried about riptides and drownings.
Drownings?!?
They are teens. Do you supervise them at all times?!?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, a parent willing to take all those people to the beach is not planning to supervise much if at all. You can tell by the number of kids the parent is allowing to go. I'd frankly be more worried about riptides and drownings.
Drownings?!?
They are teens. Do you supervise them at all times?!?!