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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Jackson Hole, Wyo.
    Posts
    189

    Age of infant for bike trailer?

    Dear ladies,

    It's been eons since I've posted, being preggers and swamped with work and all. But I searched the threads here and found the coolest baby trailer: The Chariot SideCarrier.

    Only problem is, I can't find anywhere on the Web a recommendation for how old an infant should be before riding in a bike trailer. I'll keep looking, but I wanted to ask you ladies if you had experience with popping a wee one in a trailer.

    Little DD is due on Christmas Day-- oooh! I forgot I hadn't announced it here! It's a girl! -- and I'd love to be cycling with her a bit, just on the paths around town, in her first summer.

    P.S.-- Yellow, I'll be reading her "Duck on a Bike" to get her psyched about it!

    “You have brains in your head. You have feet in your shoes. You can steer yourself any direction you choose ...” -- Dr. Seuss

    Life's an adventure! http://www.lovenewsjh.blogspot.com

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    I'm the only one allowed to whine
    Posts
    10,557
    I started dragging SKnot in the trailer when he was a toddler. He had good strong head control at that point, and enough trunk strength ("core") that I didn't have to worry about him getting hurt when the trailer jerked or bumped.
    "If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    WA State
    Posts
    4,364
    No kids here so definitely confirm this...... but I've always heard that they have to be strong enough to hold their head up while wearing a baby helmet.

    I found this on a helmet site
    Are there helmets for infants?
    Yes. Many infant-sized helmets are of the soft-shell variety. They are light, an important consideration for small children whose necks may not be strong enough to comfortably hold a hard-shell helmet. Babies younger than 1 year have relatively weak neck structure. Neither helmets nor bike traveling is recommended for them


    There's a whole bunch of good info here http://www.helmets.org/little1s.htm
    including the pros and cons of sidecar style trailers.
    Last edited by Eden; 08-27-2008 at 10:41 PM.
    "Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide

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  4. #4
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Sacramento, CA
    Posts
    747
    Be careful with helmets.org, though, because if you read enough it might convince you that you should never get on a bike yourself, much less let your kid ride on or behind one.

    We have a regular Chariot trailer and we started her around six months, no helmet, trails only, and she hated it until about eight months. We did not push it until she started to like it. Actually we took a break after our first attempts and waited until she was sitting very solidly upright on her own, and I think that helped. She is very small for her age so we use the infant insert for the Chariot.

    She's a year old now and we've just started using a helmet (and riding on the road as well as trails). She loves it.

    We have friends who put their kids in much younger than six months, and others who waited until a year. The one thing that has been pretty universal is that nobody uses a helmet until one year ... the trailers are very safe, but a helmet, ironically, is not safe for a baby's neck until about a year.

    Some people also put a carseat in the trailer, but that isn't going to work with a Chariot unless the sidecar is much bigger than the trailer. There just is not enough room.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Folsom CA
    Posts
    5,667
    Quote Originally Posted by CyclaSutra View Post
    Little DD is due on Christmas Day-- oooh! I forgot I hadn't announced it here! It's a girl!
    That's wonderful !!!

    2009 Lynskey R230 Houseblend - Brooks Team Pro
    2007 Rivendell Bleriot - Rivet Pearl

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Jackson Hole, Wyo.
    Posts
    189
    Eden, thanks for the helpful -- and yes, scary -- helmets.org link. And Xeney, thanks for the dose of reality to go along with it.

    I'll put a few parameters on my thinking here and then eventually do what feels right to us, her pediatrician and to little DD (whom I'm calling JJ for the time being... Johanna Junior).

    Where we're planning to live upon delivery (real estate wrangling aside) is about 1/4 mile along bike paths from daycare, grocery store or my gym (plus crossing two small-town streets). It's about a mile further along paths to where I work. While locking JJ up in a car seat and joining the bazillions of other car commuters is definitely a plan for her first six months, after that, it seems healthier for both of us to consider seeing how she likes a bike trailer.

    For that distance, my speed wouldn't exceed 6-7 mph, roughly twice as fast as pushing her in a jogging stroller. Far as I can tel, no one suggests helmets for a baby riding in a stroller. And it only makes sense to me, a cyclist, that cycling would get us there just as smoothly and twice as fast as pushing her in a jogging stroller.

    I'm not talking about mountain biking or curb-hopping or anything other than a graceful, chariot-like ride.

    Of course, this is the gestating, still-biking person talking, not the over-protective OMG-I'm-a-mother person.

    Bottom line: I just don't want to register for the bike trailer if there's no hope of using it until her second summer. We don't have the storage space for devices that are of no use for 18 months. I'm leaning toward the thinking that she may be able to use it by 7-10 months, at least a wee bit, but I've got more thinking to do.

    Thanks, all, for your input!

    “You have brains in your head. You have feet in your shoes. You can steer yourself any direction you choose ...” -- Dr. Seuss

    Life's an adventure! http://www.lovenewsjh.blogspot.com

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Milwaukee
    Posts
    44
    Congrats cyclasutra! Can I add my two cents? I work for a Children's Hospital as an injury prevention educator, and I would second Eden's reply and the bikehelmets.org source - we use that reference when families ask us.

    As for pediatricians' advice: some are very good at keeping up to date on injury prevention (and other topics) and some are not. Car seats are a good example - the law in our state is a lot less than what is recommended nationally, but most peds still quote the law to families, so many of our kids are not riding as safe as they could be. It's not that the docs are careless or ignorant - the info just changes too quickly and there is so much to keep track of (nutrition, immunizations, fitness, diseases, etc).

    It's always good to look other places for info like you're doing now and then make the decision you think is safest.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    St. Louis, MO
    Posts
    612
    Both Burley and Chariot recommend 1 year in their products sitting. Both companies have an infant sling that fits their trailers - the slings usually work around 3 months. Check with each company's guidelines.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    mo
    Posts
    706
    I started my (now 5 year old) son when he could support the helmet. We bought it when he was 5 months, got him used to the weight a little bit at a time, started with the trailer a couple of weeks later. Ours was pretty big so I had pillows to support his head when he fell asleep...he spent a lot of time sleeping in there at first.
    I flipped the trailer twice, once on a path when I didn't quite clear a barrier and once on the road when it hit a very very small pothole on a turn. He remained suspended in the seatbelt. Not very happy with me but otherwise alright. A helmet's now second nature to him and he'll yell 'helmet' at you if you forget yours!

    Another note. One of our friends went to a local shop for a helmet for their year-old daughter and what they came back with was completely unacceptable. The helmet was the smallest that shop happened to carry and instead of trying to find something suitable they sold it, saying there wasn't anything smaller. While this may have been true for the line of helmets they carry it doesn't happen to be true in general. It was simply too big and actually kept sliding onto the side of the little girl's head. DON'T let anyone talk you into something that doesn't fit.
    I used to have an open mind but my brains kept falling out.

 

 

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