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....... If so what size do you recommend
In 2009, the last year of available data, trampoline injury rates were 70 injuries per 100,000 children ages 0- to 4-years-old and 160 injuries per 100,000 5- to 14-year-olds, for a total of 98,000 injuries that year. Kids in the older age group were more likely to use a bicycle or other unsafe equipment on the trampoline. Between three percent and 14 percent of the injuries require hospitalization.
Three-quarters of all trampoline injuries occur when several kids are bouncing at the same time, with the smallest kids 14 times more likely to get injured than their heavier counterparts, due to the added force the bigger kids create by jumping that gets absorbed by the smaller kids.
Well, DUH! You mean my kindergarten child shouldn't ride their bike on the trampoline???? *smacks forehead*
Well, DUH! You mean my kindergarten child shouldn't ride their bike on the trampoline???? *smacks forehead*
Also known as "How to enshrine futility"......put the trampoline IN the inground pool... have cross braces to keep the legs locked out... fill remaining area inside the pool with soft fluff (under the tramp about 1/2 the depth of the tramp height) and padding- nice thck L3 vault stack type... fill the area outside the trampoline with more padding - 30 feet on all sides should be good (dig down 1-2 feet and fill the padding to ground level). Then allow light bouncing only... one at a time... in the very center of the tramp... with adult supervision. Bonus is much less grass to mow
Enjoyed that, along with several other blogs of yours. You are very well written.I wrote a blog post on this a couple years back: http://apextechcorner.wordpress.com/2010/12/15/gymnastics-at-home-part-1/