T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1151.1 | | CSCOA1::HOOD_R | | Mon Sep 30 1991 10:18 | 12 |
|
Yes, this is one of those things that he'll just pick up. You
might check out the GOOFOF::BICYCLE notes conference (dir/title=learn)
for some pointers. You should try to find a shallow
downhill where he can coast and learn how to balance without worrying
too much about pedaling or braking. The shallow downhill should NOT
run into something that requires a quick stop (such as a parking lot
with cars). Once he can balance and coast, all he has to do is to
learn to pedal and to use the coaster brake.
doug
|
1151.2 | | USOPS::GALLANT | your fingertips keep callin' me | Mon Sep 30 1991 10:37 | 14 |
|
I remember when my parents were teaching me to ride a bike
sans training wheels...
They'd hold on to the handle bars and the back of the bike,
eventually let go of the handle bars, holding on to the
back and then without my knowing, let go and vooooooom...
I was off.
The security was in knowing (ha!) that they were holding
on to the bike... gave me a bit more confidence.
/Kim
|
1151.3 | Raise the training wheels a little | DELNI::VINECOMBE | WES | Mon Sep 30 1991 12:39 | 11 |
| We've taught our two oldest how to ride "two wheelers" by simply
raising the training wheels up a bit at a time. When the training
wheels are up, they will still stop them from falling however when
they attain even minimal forward speed, the balance only on the two
large bicycle wheels with both the training wheels in the air. When
the forward speed slows, they tip back onto one training wheel or the
other. The only drawback is at slow speeds they tend to rock from side
to side .....
Best of luck,
Wes Vinecombe
|
1151.4 | See V2 | POWDML::SATOW | | Mon Sep 30 1991 12:43 | 18 |
| See also Parenting-V2, notes 61.* and 2052.*.
I'm an advocate of the method, mentioned in one of the V2
notes, of teaching the child which way to turn the handlebars when
s/he starts to lose balance, before they move at all.
We also had more success working on a grassy surface than on
the street. The street is smoother, but grass is much nicer to
fall on. Also, we had more success on a hill, letting gravity do
the work.
And also remember that the age at which a child can learn to ride
a bike varies greatly from child to child. There are a lot of factors,
like balance, coordination, willingness to take risks, ability to
recover from falls, and the like.
Clay
|
1151.5 | Start early with balancing . . . | CAPNET::CROWTHER | Maxine 276-8226 | Mon Sep 30 1991 13:33 | 5 |
| My son found it easier to start with a scooter to learn how to balance.
Once he had mastered it, we took him to the local school parking lot on
a week-end day and let him loose. It took him a couple of hours and he
still had trouble getting off. But balancing was no problem. Now he
is trying to convince his little sister to learn the same way!
|
1151.6 | Helmets!! | MCIS5::TRIPP | | Mon Sep 30 1991 14:07 | 18 |
| Please, please, please people!! Before letting your child ride a bike,
no matter what size or speed, spend the Twenty-odd dollars on a good
youth bike helmet! (Toys R Us is my reference point)
AJ rode just once before we bought his helmet, and almost went over the
handlebars twice on his first attempt (just barely 4 at the time), at
one point he was coming down our driveway, a good 45 degree angle, and
I was about to literally throw myself in front of the bike so to
prevent him from plowing into the back of my parked car at the bottom.
He hadn't quite gotten the concept of how to stop his bicycle using the
foot brakes yet. He now has the habit of when the bike comes out, so
does the helmet. Same principal as "this car won't move without your
seatbelt buckled"!
.....and now I'll jump OFF my soapbox!
Lyn
(the EMT and mom and safety-nut!)
|
1151.7 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Sep 30 1991 14:10 | 7 |
| Re: .6
I agree 100%. It's now an ingrained habit with Tom. Parents who ride
should also get a helmet to show the kids it's "the right thing to do".
Today's helmets are lightweight and comfortable.
Steve
|
1151.8 | Let his FEET be the training wheels! | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Mon Sep 30 1991 18:54 | 28 |
| Chris taught himself how to ride at 4 years old. We had gone through
trying to teach him, put the training wheels on, take them off, put
them on take them off etc. Well, we'd finally had ENOUGH, took them
off at his INSISTENCE, TRIED to help him learn, but he was too afraid.
So, we left it that way. He still DESPARATELY wanted to ride, so he
just got on his bike, and pushed himself around with his feet instead
of peddling. He'd push himself a little faster and pick his feet up a
little longer, until one day he was CONFIDENT (and that's all there was
for him to learn - was that he COULD do it!), he stuck his feet on the
peddles, and there's been no looking back ever since.
I'd say it took about 1-2 weeks from when the wheels came off to when
his feet when on his pedals.
The biggest thing to remember is that it's VERY different riding w/
training wheels - you need to learn to ride all over again. If you
notice, when your child turns now, they probably lean 'out' - because
the training wheels let them. When Chris was pushing around on his
feet, he figured out he had to lean IN because he could really FEEL
what the bike wanted to do. He grasped the concept of recovering from
a near-spill all by himself.
Take off the wheels, lower the seat so he can touch the ground with his
knees pretty bent, and let him have at it!! I'd stay away from hills
though!
Good luck!
Patty
|
1151.9 | clarification.. | CSCOA1::HOOD_R | | Tue Oct 01 1991 12:15 | 12 |
|
I just wanted to clarify that when I said "shallow hill" in
.1, I meant "barely enough hill to keep going.... not enough hill
to pick up speed". Shallow grassy hills tend to be automatic brakes....
they provide enough resistence to prevent going really fast. I
agree with -.1, take the training wheels off and lower the seat so
that the child can touch the ground (After he can ride, raise the
seat up to a point where he can almost fully extend his leg with
the balls of his feet on the axle of the pedal).
doug
|
1151.10 | Wear those helmets! | FENNEL::MATTIA | | Tue Oct 01 1991 13:26 | 13 |
| This note sure is timely, my husband took Jason (4 1/2) out on Sunday.
They went over to the school while I cooked so I didn't see any of it.
Boy did my husband come home tired and sweaty from running holding on
to that bicycle!!
As for Lyn's comments, I agree. My kids started the helmets when they
rode in the kiddie seats on our bicycles. It's just second nature to
them. As a matter of fact when the boys are using their fisher price
roller skates they wear the helmets also becase they tend to fall alot,
and they fall hard from that upright position when their little feet go
out from under them.
Donna
|
1151.11 | back in the olden days... :-) | RANGER::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Tue Oct 01 1991 13:50 | 13 |
| Gee... I learned the "old-fashioned" way - I fell so much that I
didn't want to fall any more! :-) Really, though, I remember
learning and it was only through running into enough shrubs and
fences and knocking over enough of the neighbor's trash cans that I
learned to stay up.
I never did use a helmet - they weren't as widely recommended back
then... hmmm... I wonder if that's why I like computers so much..
:-) :-)
- Tom
|
1151.12 | Steep hills ain't necessarily bad | POWDML::SATOW | | Tue Oct 01 1991 16:43 | 13 |
| Not to be contrary, but a short, steep, hill, with a long flat grassy
area at the end may work very well, at least it did for us.
Maintaining balance on a bicycle is actually EASIER the faster a bicycle
is moving. With our son, we started him downhill, and he went fast enough
that he was able to maintain his balance quite easily, until he lost
momentum. Once he got the hang of maintaining his balance, he started to get
the hang of starting to pedal when he slowed down.
Of course you could tell by the way he tensed up that he was somewhat
afraid of the speed at first, but you could also see that the tenseness
diminished quite rapidly, as he discovered "Hey! I'm keeping my balance."
From then on he was all set.
Clay
|
1151.13 | | CSCOA1::HOOD_R | | Tue Oct 01 1991 21:27 | 11 |
| re -1: I agree.... increased speed makes it EASIER to balance.
I'd hate for someone to take the child to a steep hill on my
recommendation, though, and have him(her) wreck. I , too, learned
from a short steep hill with a long flat grassy area. The
point is get going fast enough to learn to balance, but make
sure that there are no obstacles in the bike's path. Once you've
learned to balance, the rest is a piece of cake.
doug
|
1151.14 | unusual method but worked for me. | CSC32::K_SWARTZELL | | Wed Oct 02 1991 13:58 | 10 |
|
I learned on my mom's old bike and she had me sit on the back fender
instead of the seat and I had no trouble reaching the pedals or
handlebars and being it was my mom's it was a pretty big bike. It was
sitting that high on the seat that scared me so being at fender level
made it much much easier for me. I was about 6yrs old and not that big
a kid. It might be worth a try.
Kim S.
|
1151.15 | Don't "push" if it doesn't happen | TNPUBS::STEINHART | | Wed Oct 02 1991 14:07 | 17 |
| If your child doesn't readily learn how to ride, don't push the issue.
I say this because as a kid I couldn't learn. I really worked at it,
with my father's help. But I neither learned to ride nor skate,
despite all efforts. Both were quite a chore, and no fun.
When I was 10, my friends rode together all over town, visiting each
other's houses, playing records, and surreptitiously trying out their
mothers' lipsticks. I couldn't bear to miss out on such fun, and taught
myself to ride in a few days. I became quite adept very quickly.
I never did learn how to ice skate.
There's no point in turning a pleasurable activity into a chore. If a
child is ready, he/she will learn, but not until then.
Laura
|
1151.16 | If they don't learn from you . . . | POWDML::SATOW | | Wed Oct 02 1991 14:15 | 15 |
| . . . they will learn from your grandchildren
> I say this because as a kid I couldn't learn. I really worked at it,
> with my father's help. But I neither learned to ride nor skate,
> despite all efforts. Both were quite a chore, and no fun.
. . .
> There's no point in turning a pleasurable activity into a chore. If a
> child is ready, he/she will learn, but not until then.
Same story for me, except I learned how to ride a bike at 40! I guess it took
a while for me to be "ready" :^)
Clay
|
1151.17 | | WMOIS::BARR_L | My someone got hit by a semi | Wed Oct 02 1991 14:41 | 7 |
| I also didn't learn how to ride a bike until I was 12. My father tried
teaching me when I was much younger, but couldn't figure out how to
coordinate the steering and the pedaling and I ended up running into a
parked car and falling off the bike and hurting myself. I guess it
scared me enough not to try it again for a while.
Lori B.
|
1151.18 | | A1VAX::DISMUKE | Kwik-n-e-z! That's my motto! | Fri Oct 04 1991 13:10 | 9 |
| After one outing with my six year old he told me he won't be ready
until he's nine.
I just feel bad that he wants to ride where the big kids go, but I
won't let him because I don't feel he has enough control and speed to
keep out himself safe.
-sandy
|