Anonymous wrote:Blame the working parents who were pissy their kids couldn’t do morning swim team. The evening swim practices are a direct result of this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait -- you think that everyone should be quiet so your toddlers can nap AT THE POOL??? I'm not a swim team member, but that is absolutely nuts. We always took my daughter to the pool either before or after her nap -- there would be no way she could have napped at the pool, nor would I have expected kids playing in the pool to be quiet enough. Your entitlement on that issue rivals the swim team members.
Did OP say this? I didn't see it.
OP commented later on the first page: "I am not going to do that, but I was frankly embarrassed trying to meet up with friends who have toddlers to admit that basically we could swim for an hour or so before their kids needed to go home to nap or we could deal with the bullhorns. And we would not be able to get a table under shade until the swim team families decided to leave. "
That sounds like they planned to have the kids at the nap at the pool. Did I read that wrong?
I believe OP is saying there is only one quiet hour before her friends have to leave to go home for the toddler’s nap. If they get to the pool earlier than that quiet hour, they’ll have to listen to the bullhorn.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I think we belong to the same pool and I agree, it’s ridiculous. At our old neighborhood pool, it was much better so it’s very pool dependent. I have older kids now and I’ve learned to deal with it. We tend to go when we know there are away meets or times after the meets at our pool when it’s empty. IF they put out the schedule. That’s my biggest issue with the pool—they don’t update the online calendar and they only send out notices half of the time. They are terrible communicators and planners. This week alone, they are closing the pool early for swim related stuff. Plan better—at least spread it out. But as others have said, the board is made up of swim parents so they don’t care. Which is why I refuse to give one minute of my time to volunteer for the pool.
In any case, I have a lot of friends who have swim and dive team kids and the drama between the two teams, with the pool, among the kids and parents is nuts. It makes me glad my kids never wanted to be involved. The intensity is just too much. It’s summer swim, not the Olympics.
Ohhhh I bet we do belong to the same pool! It’s funny because we know some swim team families who are very nice people and seem a little exasperated by all of it too so I wonder how much is being driven by a handful of very intense people/families. It seems to me that even more than thinking their kids will make it to the Olympics it’s about making the teams this very big and hierarchical social thing. I love our neighborhood but there are definitely some parents who still seem to have a high school mentality about popularity (hence some of the drama you referenced…)
Anonymous wrote:Normal until mid-July.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I think we belong to the same pool and I agree, it’s ridiculous. At our old neighborhood pool, it was much better so it’s very pool dependent. I have older kids now and I’ve learned to deal with it. We tend to go when we know there are away meets or times after the meets at our pool when it’s empty. IF they put out the schedule. That’s my biggest issue with the pool—they don’t update the online calendar and they only send out notices half of the time. They are terrible communicators and planners. This week alone, they are closing the pool early for swim related stuff. Plan better—at least spread it out. But as others have said, the board is made up of swim parents so they don’t care. Which is why I refuse to give one minute of my time to volunteer for the pool.
In any case, I have a lot of friends who have swim and dive team kids and the drama between the two teams, with the pool, among the kids and parents is nuts. It makes me glad my kids never wanted to be involved. The intensity is just too much. It’s summer swim, not the Olympics.
Anonymous wrote:Buy some land and open a pool.
DMV has a pool shortage
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait -- you think that everyone should be quiet so your toddlers can nap AT THE POOL??? I'm not a swim team member, but that is absolutely nuts. We always took my daughter to the pool either before or after her nap -- there would be no way she could have napped at the pool, nor would I have expected kids playing in the pool to be quiet enough. Your entitlement on that issue rivals the swim team members.
Did OP say this? I didn't see it.
OP commented later on the first page: "I am not going to do that, but I was frankly embarrassed trying to meet up with friends who have toddlers to admit that basically we could swim for an hour or so before their kids needed to go home to nap or we could deal with the bullhorns. And we would not be able to get a table under shade until the swim team families decided to leave. "
That sounds like they planned to have the kids at the nap at the pool. Did I read that wrong?
Anonymous wrote:EVERY summer!
Join the team, it’s fun. Kids love it. It creates lifelong memories.
Tons of pools in MoCo do it and there is an NVSL league also.