My daughter is 18mths, and is just starting to swim a bit on her own. Hubby and I are ex-lifeguards/swim intructors, so we don't like the arm bands. She swims with us, but on her very own. No matter what (armbands, lifejackets, or whatever) your child should always be within ARMS reach, until they are 7. Just felt like I had to say that for anyone who is reading this. LOL
My daughter is 18mths, and is just starting to swim a bit on her own. Hubby and I are ex-lifeguards/swim intructors, so we don't like the arm bands. She swims with us, but on her very own. No matter what (armbands, lifejackets, or whatever) your child should always be within ARMS reach, until they are 7. Just felt like I had to say that for anyone who is reading this. LOL
Bubbles are another big thing. Everytime your baby puts their face in, they should blow bubbles (to prevent water going in). That is a fun thing to teach when they are young. Once they learn to do bubbles, you can get them to reach down for a toy on the bottom and blow bubbles (usually around 2 they can really do this).
Otter has used arm bands with confidence on his own since age 2. He will use steps to get out of the water, go to the edge, jump in on his own, swim to the steps, and repeat. But I also stay within close reach of him. That's at a family member's pool.
In our local public pool, they don't allow arm bands.So, both my kids stay in an adult's arms all the time. Neither can keep themselves up yet.
I don't know... I think it is a stupid rule, too. But I suspect it is because parents are less likely to be attentive to their kids if they have arm bands on, thinking they are safe with them. Thus, they end up being more dangerous.![]()
My daughter is 18mths, and is just starting to swim a bit on her own. Hubby and I are ex-lifeguards/swim intructors, so we don't like the arm bands. She swims with us, but on her very own. No matter what (armbands, lifejackets, or whatever) your child should always be within ARMS reach, until they are 7. Just felt like I had to say that for anyone who is reading this. LOL
Where I work - leisure centre in the UK - we do swimming lessons for children (without parents or instructors in the water) from the age of 4.![]()
Earl has had armbands since he was 16 months old (we didn't really go swimming prior to this frequently) and has been able to 'swim' using them since he was about 20 months old.
My daughter is 18mths, and is just starting to swim a bit on her own. Hubby and I are ex-lifeguards/swim intructors, so we don't like the arm bands. She swims with us, but on her very own. No matter what (armbands, lifejackets, or whatever) your child should always be within ARMS reach, until they are 7. Just felt like I had to say that for anyone who is reading this. LOL
Where I work - leisure centre in the UK - we do swimming lessons for children (without parents or instructors in the water) from the age of 4.![]()
Earl has had armbands since he was 16 months old (we didn't really go swimming prior to this frequently) and has been able to 'swim' using them since he was about 20 months old.
Yup, us too...3 years actually. Maximum 5 kids though, but still...it was alot of work! BUT..instructors were in the water. We had to be in the water for 100% of the time for little ones, 50% of the time for mid-levels, and at least 25% of the time for older levels. We weren't allowed to teach on the side of the pool deck in our pool.