You have selected your toddler's first
bike. It is a sweet sassy little number complete with
racing stripes and a bell. It is only 18 inches off of the
ground. After the frenzied research and purchase is
complete don't be tempted to think your job is done. Dreams
of Christmas morning watching your child run to the toddler
bike are incomplete unless your toddler is properly
equipped with a helmet and other safety gear.
Why does a toddler need a
helmet?
Many parents when shopping for a
toddler bike forget about the helmet. The bike is only
knee-high and the likelihood of serious injury may seem quite
remote. Don't be one of the parents whose Christmas efforts and
dreams are rewarded by a broken baby. It is very easy to see
the reasoning that a tiny bike might only cause a small bump or
bruise, and let's be honest, for many this is the case. The
news headlines on Boxing Day are not topped with mangled and
helmetless riders of toddler bikes. Yet there is an element of
protection a helmet provides that will insure your child's
safety.
Does a Toddler need the
padding?
Toddlers have plenty of natural
padding in the form of chub, but they may need a few extra
layers to prevent bumps and bruises as they hit the road on
their new tricycle. It seems kids these days are buckled,
padded and helmeted until they can hardly see or breathe. These
safety items really make a difference.
Even the most vigilant parent
cannot prevent every fall, nor do they want to. It is necessary
to risk a good tumble to learn how to ride a bike, even if it
is a tricycle. Toddlers want to learn how to do everything by
themselves. Why not give them the padding to make any falls
less scary for both parent and child.
Think of it this way: your timid,
yet eager child perches atop his bike ready to ride when splat!
He falls off skinning his elbows or scraping his knee. This is
not a serious life threatening injury, but how long and how
much talking will it take to convince your child that this
fancy tricycle is fun and not a toddler torture
device?
Teach them young
Perhaps the more compelling
reason is that of precedent. This is a toddler bike, but it is
your baby's first bike. Setting the expectation of wearing a
helmet and other padding protection for knees and elbows now
will establish good habits. Then when your toddler somehow
becomes a daredevil 8-year old rocketing up and down the street
he is doing so while happily wearing the appropriate safety
gear.
The first toddler bike is a big
deal. Enjoy your child's Christmas present along with them and
have the shiny new helmet and elbow pads with red racing
stripes to complete the holiday Kodak moment. Have a safe and
merry Christmas!