Lightnsound
Silver Member
Jaylegger said:What does eating and choking have to do with an adult choosing to take their kids along for a ride on the tractor? Just imagine the number of fatalities and injuries if the numbers of kids who accompanied their father on the tractor equaled the numbers of those riding in cars or number of meals eaten. These types of comparisons are idiotic.
My point, Jay, is that everything is dangerous. To have hard and fast rules about never letting a kid on a tractor doesn't make sense to me. I give my daughter rides on the tractor regularly. A ride is a ride only. No mowing or any other work done during a ride. No travel on uneven terrain during a ride. We drive slowly and pay attention to what we are doing. She knows the rules and sits still and just enjoys watching the trees go by. This is how she will learn about the tractor. This is how she learns to respect the machine. There is far less of a chance of her sneaking on it someday in the future because she is curious and I have not let her near the machine.
The point is that there is a better chance of her choking on a meal or falling down a flight of steps than getting hurt on a 4 mph ride across the lawn while we are careful about what we are doing. Kids in cars are protected by child seats surrounded by the steel cage of the vehicle. Imagine if people didn't text, and carry on cell phone conversations, and argue with their spouses, and eat fast food, and drink coffee, and all the other things that distract them while they drive. Then there would be far fewer automotive collisions and the safety devices would not have to do their jobs as often.
Imagine if people payed as much attention to their driving on their daily commute as I pay to driving my daughter around on the tractor.
Call me an idiot if you want, but calling me names says more about you than it does about me.