T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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582.1 | Safe than Sorry | CADSYS::BOLIO::BENOIT | | Thu Sep 09 1993 14:57 | 4 |
| I always kept my 2 1/2 year old out of the kitchen, and intend to keep my
6 month old out when I am cooking. I'd rather be safe than sorry.
Michael
|
582.2 | | WONDER::DBROWN | | Thu Sep 09 1993 15:16 | 17 |
|
I have the little tykes kitchen set in my kitchen which my daughter plays
with when I'm in the kitchen. I've never had a problem (thank god) with her
in there at the sametime as me. The outside of my oven gets a little
warm but not warm enough to burn. She's put her hand on it and of
course did take it off. I just hope by the oven being a little warm
to touch has somewhat taught her that the stove/oven is not something
to play with. How can you teach a child the right from
wrong if they aren't exposed to it? Assuming you are very careful
and constantly keep your eyes open I can't see a problem. My daughter
is 1 yrs. old and gets into the cabinets. I have all cleaners above
my fridge in the cabinet and the only cabinet she can get into is where
the pans are. I give her a wooden spoon and she loves to play the
drums on the pans.
deb
|
582.3 | We take it day by day | CSTEAM::WRIGHT | | Thu Sep 09 1993 15:23 | 18 |
| Luckily, I have a rather new stove--it stays quite cool on the
outside even when cooking on the inside. So I've always allowed my
toddler in the kitchen when I am baking, but not when the oven is
self-cleaning (temp. gets very high.) As for the stove, I allow him
in the kitchen if I'm only using the back burners and if it's a kind
of food that doesn't sputter grease. But if I have to use the front
burners, I keep him out. I've found, all in all, that it is not very
often that I have to keep him out of the kitchen, and have managed to
find something else to occupy him in the living room during these
times. Our kitchen is such a central focus for our family that I would
hate to ban him from the kitchen on a regular basis. Now that he is
almost 3, he often pulls up a chair to the counter when I am cooking,
to "help" with the stirring or whatever. I really enjoy these times
with him and I think he learns from them. So the kitchen is a happy,
bustling place for him.
Jane
|
582.4 | | GLITTR::WARREN | | Thu Sep 09 1993 15:35 | 11 |
| Whether you should allow toddlers in the kitchen probably depends in
part on the size and layout of your kitchen. One suggestion--your
daughter can't be expected to figure out when the oven is or isn't
"safe," so you should define limits that are safe when it is on and
enforce them consistently. (For example, my kids have been trained
NEVER to touch the stovetop even if they "know" it is cold. It's
easier for them to remember the rule and therefore more likely they'll
observe it.)
-Tracy
|
582.5 | | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Thu Sep 09 1993 17:35 | 62 |
|
I never tried to keep my kids OUT of the kitchen - but to teach them to
be CAREFUL in the kitchen. I take precautions that make others crazy
sometimes too, but to me they're simple things to do, and the benefits
could be immeasurable in the event of an accident. Having grown up
with a gas stove, and having reached over the front burner a few too
many times and setting towels/potholders on fire more than a few times
has taught me a LOT of respect for the stove.
First, I ALWAYS use the back burners first. No matter what I'm
cooking, if there's any way that I can cook it on the back of the
stove, I do it there. I only use the front burners when I'm using more
than 2, or when I need to cook with a large pot (there's no "large"
burner on the back).
I ALWAYS turn the handles toward the middle of the stove. This stops
them from hanging over the edge, and also helps keep them cool. Let a
handle hang over/near another burner and then try to grab it - you'll
understand pretty quick!
The outside of an oven door has to be pretty darn hot to inflict a
burn. I guess I never worried much about them touching the outside.
When the oven was on (when they were younger), and I had to open it, I
would first put the child in their highchair. They could SEE, but I
was CERTAIN that they couldn't get hurt that way. As they got older, I
made sure that I TOLD them that I was going to open the oven and to
stand back, and even still, even now, I put myself in between them and
the oven when opening it.
Also, they've seen me get spattered enough from things cooking that
they know to take me SERIOUSLY when I say to get away from the stove.
I don't tend to be real quiet about it when I get burned, so they get
the idea pretty darn quick.
On the other hand, one of the ladies that used to babysit for us had a
2 year old grandson. He was *FASCINATED* by the oven. She baked
**ALL** the time, so the oven was constantly being opened/closed and
was always very hot. Any and all chances that he could get, he would
run over to the oven as soon as she opened it, and stand with his hands
on the inside of the door, SCREAMING crying because of the burns. Many
many times he got second and third degree burns on his hands, but he
never ever lost his fascination for the oven. Strange kid!
I used to know a guy who was *SO* afraid that his kids didn't
understand "hot", that he turned the burner (electric) on very low -
just warm enough to cause a reaction, and had his daughters touch it.
They understood HOT pretty darn quick, and in a controlled environment
so that they didn't get hurt. And a friend of mine was baking his
older daughter a b.day cake, and he went to take it out of the oven.
Both girls were watching, fascinated, by what they'd made. Suddenly
the younger one started screaming hysterically, and no one could figure
out why. Turns out she had put her LIPS on the oven door.
So, you can't be too careful - but I do believe that if you just ban
them from it completely, they'll never learn how to be careful around
it. A child doesn't have to be very old to understand HOT! or NO! My
kids know not to touch the oven/stove top, ever. Period. Luckily,
this has been enough for us. For that matter, I don't even like my 8
year old messing with the microwave - stuff still gets HOT, and I don't
want them burned.
Teach them caution and responsibility - not just fear.
|
582.6 | HOT == hot ouch thanks ! | SPECXN::MUNNS | | Thu Sep 09 1993 18:57 | 12 |
| One of the 1st words my son learned to speak was "HOT". He very briefly
touched an open oven door that was quite warm and never did it again.
No damage was done. Now my son is 3 and helps my wife make desserts -
cookies, cakes, pies. He loves to lick the beaters and manages to
avoid the hot spots.
Keeping a small child out of the kitchen by verbal orders or moving them
out will certainly keep them puzzled. They are like ants that will
keep returning. Supervision and a temporary decrease in the rate of
activity in the kitchen will get your little ones familiar with the
kitchen and what to avoid. For novice crawlers, one parent could keep
their little one occupied in a safer environment while the other cooked.
|
582.7 | Gate it if you can | ICS::NELSONK | | Fri Sep 10 1993 16:27 | 27 |
| If you can set up the gate, set it up and save yourself some grief.
I had the kitchen gated off when our son was the baby, but once
our daughter was born, I couldn't gate the kitchen. It's the "hub" of
the house's layout -- you have to walk through the kitchen to get to
the rest of the house, including the bathroom and the bedrooms. So
I had to leave the kitchen open, because I was toilet-training him
by that time, and I wanted to make it as easy as possible for him to
attend to his own needs. (Putting the potty chair in the front room
wasn't an option.)
So the long and the short of it is, my daughter has always had the
run of the (child-proofed) kitchen. I just make sure she stays away
from the immediate stove area (hard to do in a small kitchen like
ours). When she was younger, I would just put her in th high chair,
but now she's 26 months and that won't do at all! Plus, the only
cabinets either of the kids can get into have safe stuff in them, like
Tupperware and pots and pans.
Another thing I do is when I bake something, I leave the oven light on
till the oven has cooled off a bit. The kids are learning that the
light means HOT and STAY AWAY.
I think the question in the basenote is one of the reasons why American
kids watch so much TV. :-) :-) Parking them with a Disney video or
"Sesame Street" really does seem like keeping them safe when you're
rushing around like a maniac trying to get dinner.
|
582.8 | I want to keep my baby in the kitchen | BROKE::NIKIN::BOURQUARD | Deb | Fri Sep 10 1993 18:13 | 15 |
| where I can keep one eye on her. She's now 13 months old and walking. I
set up toys for her to play with and try to help her keep herself amused so
that she stays with me. Lots of times, though, she toddles off into the other
rooms where I worry that she will bump her head. When the spouse is home,
it's his job to keep her entertained while I cook.
We have a fairly large kitchen so she's not right underneath the stove. We
keep wires from crock pots, steamers, etc. out of reach, and we make sure
she's not underfoot when transferring pans of hot stuff from microwave, oven,
or stove top to countertops or the sink.
I enjoy her company, but she gets kind of frustrated that I can't give her
100% attention.
- Deb
|
582.9 | Thanks for the input | WEORG::DARROW | | Mon Sep 13 1993 10:37 | 13 |
|
RE: kids and the oven. I met a 14-month toddler in our pediatrician's office
last month. His hand was all bandaged up. He'd opened the hot oven and
grabbed the rack. OUCH! His mom said she still can't keep him away
from the oven when it's running.
Unfortunately, it seems the door to the broiler on our gas oven doesn't
fit very well. There's a metal strip at the bottom of the oven door that
gets burnably hot whenever the oven's on. I think I'll call Sears out and
see if they can fix it. This is a gas stove, used, that we traded with someone
to get rid of our electric. The front of the electric got burnable hot
whenever you used the top elements. We can't seem to win! I'm looking
to buy a NEW stove!
|
582.10 | My .02 | COMPAC::PELLAND | Eat, drink and see Jerry! | Tue Sep 14 1993 13:33 | 18 |
|
FWIW, there is a oven door lock that you can buy to keeps kids
from opening the oven (sold at Toys R Us and I'm sure other
places). I have a gas stove too. I let Nicholas in the kitchen
with me but only when I'm making bottles and not when I'm cooking.
Sometimes it's hard to keep him in the other room while I'm cooking
(very determined child) so I make sure that all the pans are on
the back burner. I have the safety hooks on all of the cabinets
except for my pots and pans cabinet so he can play in there
(he thinks he's getting away with something when he can get the
pots n' pans cabinet open). So far it seems to work but i'm
going to knock on wood.
Now, if I can only keep him out of my trash can! That's a whole
other topic in itself!
Good luck!
-chris
|
582.11 | Watch the oven locks | MACNAS::BHARMON | September 17th, 1993 | Wed Sep 15 1993 06:54 | 10 |
| I hope in the States, you have better oven door locks then they have
here in Ireland. I bought a plastic one. Daniel had it broken
within two weeks. So far, even though he is trying, he has not
managed to break the locks on the freezer and presses. We also
let him at the pots and pans. He seems to get better fun out of
these then he does his toys.
Bernie
|
582.12 | | CDROM::BLACHEK | | Wed Sep 15 1993 12:44 | 20 |
| I never tried to keep my daughter out of the kitchen. I started having
her help me when she was fairly young. She is now 3 and can break
eggs, mix things, measure flour or sugar into a cup, press the
microwave buttons, unload the silver in the dishwasher, and other such
stuff.
Our oven door does not get hot, so that helped. We taught her that
the burners are hot and she should never touch them. (We put them on
and held her hand above the burner to feel how the heat radiates.)
Basically, I believe that you should take away the stuff that you don't
need that can be dangerous (trinkets on tables, a lamp that we kept on
a low table, and so on). But, you can't do much about the kitchen.
You gotta eat and they have to learn.
At this point, she wants to help sometimes, and other times she wants
to do puzzles or watch TV. I think since the kitchen wasn't off
limits, it hasn't become so tempting.
judy
|
582.13 | Mommy's Cooking Rule | KAOFS::M_BARNEY | Dance with a Moonlit Knight | Tue Sep 21 1993 11:22 | 22 |
| We have a kitchen that opens to the both to the livingroom and to the
dining room completing sort of a circular track around the first floor
(the dining room opening into the livingroom).
Since Charlotte has been mobile, we've always given her the catch
phrase "mommy's cooking" or "daddy's cooking" or "there's cooking" as
a enforcement of the no-enter rule when food is being heated (even
when taking something hot out of the microwave there is a risk).
She's pretty good about not using the kitchen as her personal
"thru-way" when this rule is in force, only at times when she's trying
her best to be disobedient on all fronts does she slyly attempt to
drop things past the kitchen doorway so that she just has to step
in and pick them up. Normally, we do fine, since we started early
enough. Only later when she understands the potential dangers do
we plan to relax these strictly enforced rules.
I've had friends' family members endure serious childhood burns as
a result of kitchen accidents and so these stories have become my
personal lessons on the danger of hot items.
Monica
|
582.14 | | GOOEY::ROLLMAN | | Tue Sep 21 1993 14:33 | 17 |
|
We have kids in the kitchen while cooking, however,
there are strict rules about *where* in the kitchen
they can be. Never near the stove.
Also, the cooking parent is responsible only for cooking,
and the assisting parent is responsible for slave-labor,
keeping kids safe, etc, not necessarily in the kitchen.
So, the cook is never expected to also entertain.
This rule breaks down when my husband or I miss dinner.
Then we rely heavily on Sesame St, and "special occasion"
toys in the family room, which has worked so far.
Pat
|
582.15 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | John 3:16 - Your life depends on it! | Tue Sep 21 1993 16:37 | 13 |
|
Emily's always been allowed in the kitchen. I'd never get
anything done if she wasn't. Most times, I'm slicing and
dicing, and am usually lucky enough to be able to pass her
off to my husband when I need to use the stove (it helps keep
them *both* out of the room - I need my SPACE when I'm cooking ;-) ).
If I have to cook while she's in the kitchen, I use the back-burners,
and I put her in her high chair if I'm cooking something that may
spatter, or requires my constant attention. This only happens
at dinnertime, so Emily's ready for a few Cheerio's anyway...
Karen
|
582.16 | We also do laundry together, and vacuum, and... | SOFBAS::SNOW | Justine McEvoy Snow | Tue Sep 21 1993 17:53 | 23 |
|
I've always let Callie in the kitchen with me - we sort of have no
choice, the way our house is set up. But HOT was one of the first
things she learned, and if I have to drain spaghetti or cook something
that splatters, she either gets Dad or a special treat video in
the other room. Cooking gets done on the back burners, always always
always. We bought the covers so she wouldn't be able to turn the
oven/stove on, but she can rip them right off. SO we go mental when
she reaches for them - I think she's getting the idea that they're off
limits.
The fun part is now she cooks with me! This works especially well
if I'm baking, but even if I have to slice and dice, she likes to watch
while I do it out of her reach.
She likes to try whatever I'm cutting up/baking, and LOVES to
play with the measuring cups and spoons, ESPECIALLY if water is
involved. (She's 18 months, and has been "cooking" with me for a
few months.) So now instead of cooking being a Momma-only activity,
it's a time-with-Callie activity.
Justine
|
582.17 | Benefit of letting them in the kitchen | CSTEAM::WRIGHT | | Fri Sep 24 1993 14:15 | 5 |
| Cooking time is also a great time to get my son to eat vegetables.
Things that he wouldn't touch on a plate at the table he will eat
if I hand him a piece or two while chopping or dicing.
|
582.18 | Cutting Mushrooms | CARTUN::FRYE | | Thu Sep 30 1993 14:05 | 12 |
| I would have the children help in order to keep them where I could
see them and out of trouble while I worked in the kitchen. The
favorite occupation was cutting up mushrooms for the salad. I would
stand the child on a chair at a section of counter near me (which was
always on the other side of the kitchen from the stove), or at the
table, with a cutting board, mushrooms, and a plastic knife. And
no matter how hacked to bits they were, we put them in our salad or
cooked with them if the recipe called for them.
This was in the 2-4 year old range.
Norma
|
582.19 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is STILL not a family value | Thu Sep 30 1993 15:52 | 8 |
| Norma,
We use a hardboiled egg slicer on the mushrooms. (the kind with the
wires that hinges together. It usually kept carrie busy. Now she is
old enough to really help, but I need her to play with Atlehi to keep
her out of the kitchen while I cook.
Meg
|
582.20 | | DOCTP::BINNS | | Thu Oct 07 1993 13:43 | 17 |
| I always welcome my children in the kitchen at any time. It's fun for
them, and they should learn early to help. For tiny ones, pots and pans
in low cabinets are great toys to bang around. When they can sit up
they can help pour ingredients, break eggs, etc. A little older and
they can help clean up. I firmly believe kids should be involved in all
household chores and activities as early as possible, for their sake as
well as mine. It takes longer, and may be more frustrating to the
adult, and may not get done as well, but the benefits far outweigh the
costs.
Of couse, one should exercise a little extra care around the stove (not
so much the oven, as the stove-top from which something hot could get
dumped -- oven doors aren't usually *that* hot, and kids aren't really
so dumb that they don't get it if you show them.)
Kit
|
582.21 | Jeff's Curiosity | CSC32::J_NOTTINGHAM | | Mon Nov 29 1993 17:01 | 18 |
| I, too, have always allowed Jeff in the kitchen. He's 11 now and likes
to help cut up the salad, but I had a little problem with him and HOT!
He's always been very curious and one to experience things first hand.
When he was about 5 (I don't remember *exactly* how old he was)
he was in the kitchen with me as usual as I made dinner. I was using
one of the front burners on the stove because both back burners were
busy. When I took the pan off the burner, as usual, I told him to stay
away because the burner was really HOT! I turned to drain the pasta
that I had cooked and momentarily turned my back to him and the stove.
As I turned back around, he walked up to the stove and before I
realized what he was doing, he laid his hand on the burner.
Fortunately, he only briefly touched and got his hand off before it
was badly burned. It was only a first degree burn for which I am very
thankful. I asked him why he did it and he told me that he wanted to
know how really HOT felt! He has never done anything like that again.
So no matter how careful you are accidents can still happen . . .
|
582.22 | | NOTAPC::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Thu Dec 02 1993 15:35 | 14 |
| Hey... it worked for me...
I still remember an incident I had in the kitchen as a kid... I don't
know how old I was, but my mother was cooking pancakes on a griddle.
She had dripped a little batter while pouring, making a "pancake"
that was less that 1" across. As I recall, it went something like
this...
As I was saying "look at that", I was pointing, and reaching, and
ended up burning my finger tip on the griddle..
Sometimes we do learn the hard way..
- Tom
|
582.23 | AJ learned the HOT way! | LEDS::TRIPP | | Mon Jan 31 1994 13:07 | 32 |
| I think this may be in another note, but in case not...
AJ learned HOT, but not by using the stove as an example. We were
doing the fourth of July bit at my sister inlaws a few years ago, the
"grown men",(read boys who never grew up!) were setting up for some
real fireworks, and the children were given sparklers. All went well,
except we had trained AJ to be "neatnick" a little too well. After his
sparkler had burned out, he wanted to give take it to the trash can,
but it dropped on the ground. Before I had time to react and scream
NO, don't touch it, he had picked it up and gotten a blister raising
burn on his finger. That the one and only lesson he ever needed in
HOT! He is 7 and still remembers the incident well. He is very
careful to ask first if the stove is hot, and what I do is when I get
done cooking on a front burner (we have electric) is to put another
pot, usually the teapot or an old cast iron frypan on the hot burner,
just to keep the burner covered to eliminate the risk of someone, even
an ussuspecting adult from accidentally touching it, or putting
somethig on it.
We do have to break one habit though, which is to use the stove top as
a counter extention. Unfortunately it sits right beside the fridge,
and we tend to put cups or the milk bottle down "just for a minute",
and it really is a dangerous habit!
My husband related several years ago about a coworker who had a
"climber", the child wanted something in an overstove cabinet, climbed
up and put a bare foot on a still very hot burner, the result was
tragic, the child was hospitalized, and faced many surgeries and skin
grafts!
Lyn
|
582.24 | | BAHTAT::CARTER_A | Rozan Kobar! | Tue Feb 01 1994 06:51 | 12 |
| A neighbour related the following story to us the other day, from some
years ago.
She was busy in the kitchen with her toddler Jon-Jo and he kept getting
in her way, so she lifted him up & sat him down on a counter top. A few
minutes later he started saying "Ot, ot", she looked around to see him
smoking. She'd put him on a recently turned off electric hob which
still retained some heat. It had burned through his clothing, and was
steaming his nappy dry. Fortunately he wasn't injured, lucky for him he
had a wet nappy!
Andy
|