Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#18
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 25 Jan 2004 03:15:35 -0600, "Keith"
wrote: Most people around here who have a boat, then a baby, see the boat maybe once or twice over the next year or two before they sell it. YMMV. That's how we got our boat, from a couple who sold it to me because their 6 and 4 year olds "didn't like sailing". Well, not to go all Nazi on the topic, but my kid doesn't get a vote on that topic. Sailing is what we do, and he's part of the package until he's 16 and can be trusted to stay ashore without burning down the house. My wife and I will make his stay aboard as pleasant as we can, but there is no way we aren't going because he may not like it. Part of that logic means giving him lots of "jobs" on board so that he feels responsible and engaged while we sail. Even a two-year-old can wipe down cockpit seats, swab decks and "tidy up", something he does spontaneously if not very effectively at home. The fact that it's not really "help" is irrelevant: it's his shot at getting involved and getting praise for being "helpful crew", just like staying put while we dock or jibe is part of HIS routine aboard. If you are willing to endure moments of unpopularity and occasional fits of protest, parenting becomes much easier. Children should have choices over the small stuff: squash or carrots, sweetie? not over vegetables are going to be eaten at all. Anyway, enough lecturing... R. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
A Dickens Christmas | General | |||
Sailboat Trash Cruising Guide | Cruising | |||
Cruising Grounds Search | General | |||
Cruising the Bahamas | Cruising | |||
AUS: Licences and/ or Quals for International Cruising | Cruising |