Kids in the shop

   / Kids in the shop #1  

Rio_Grande

Platinum Member
Joined
Dec 11, 2007
Messages
555
Always had great expectations of my kids and I working on things. Started out decent enough, I could get them started on a project and they would last 15 or 20 minutes on their own. Which I thought was pretty good. Now at 8 and 10 the boy gets an idea in his head and is impossible to redirect until ultimately I loose my patients and send him to the house. If his sister is out there they just fight to the point I send them to the house. It is as if we are going backwards instead of forward. Does any of this sound familiar?
 
   / Kids in the shop #2  
Don't worry, in about 15 years things will start to get better!
 
   / Kids in the shop #3  
Most kids I know have zero interest unless it is modern electronics...

My goddaughter was always so cute... whenever she would come over for a visit... she always asked if I had a project she could help me with... she was a good worker, careful and diligent. Some of the projects were residing the utility trailer doing an oil change/maintenance... I would actually keep little projects just to be ready for her visits.

My brother didn't like it so much and mostly put a stop to it... she is 13 now and little time with school and all the sports leagues her parents have he participating... he was afraid she would be a mechanic or something...

Now my nephew from another brother is 12 and all of a sudden he is very interested in things... they bought a ranch and I was showing him how to safely operated their new Kubota L3800... he is a quick learner, very safe and the land is flat... both my brother and sister-in-law prefer him to operate the tractor and he does a better job...

I give all the nephews and nieces tools as gifts and they all have a nice little assortment... got to love it when their parents have to ask permission to use it!
 
   / Kids in the shop #4  
We have four children. The oldest daughter and the younger son have zero interest in anything mechnanical or scientific. The older brother had only moderate interest in fixing or making stuff. Only the youngest daughter showed mechanical inclination (like her mother).

When I was a kid I spent most of my time in father's shop. Inhaling second hand smoke and listened to guys badmouthing commies. When I was about 10 or older I used to turn simple projects on lathe (like new axle for pull cart and this sort of things) for neigbors. My father wouldn't take money but didn't mind if I was paid.

Our grandson (2.5 yers old) likes machines so I am hoping I could teach him something when he gets older.
 
Last edited:
   / Kids in the shop #5  
Always had great expectations of my kids and I working on things. Started out decent enough, I could get them started on a project and they would last 15 or 20 minutes on their own. Which I thought was pretty good. Now at 8 and 10 the boy gets an idea in his head and is impossible to redirect until ultimately I loose my patients and send him to the house. If his sister is out there they just fight to the point I send them to the house. It is as if we are going backwards instead of forward. Does any of this sound familiar?

I have boys 9 and 6 and it's tough. Sometimes it requires stopping working on what we started on and working on practicing pounding nails in some boards for a while.
We are planning on building a play fort this winter so I am hoping we can make it fun.
 
   / Kids in the shop #6  
Our oldest boy (nearly 14) has little to no intrest in working on or fixing things. But my youngest son (6) will stick with me and has the natural mechanical inclinations I had when I was young... makes me proud to see him go to the barn and find the wrenches he needs to put the chain back on his or his sisters bike... oldest wants me to do it for him. The girls show no intrest... they think I'm hiding in the barn if I go down there to work on anything, even if its for them. They're young yet and dont understand...
 
   / Kids in the shop #7  
I have boys 9 and 6 and it's tough. Sometimes it requires stopping working on what we started on and working on practicing pounding nails in some boards for a while.
We are planning on building a play fort this winter so I am hoping we can make it fun.

My father let me to do anything (within limits of my skills at the moment) even on expensive stuff. He was building racing motorcycles, racing boat engines etc. and let me polish the "channels" in the engine. One time I was grinding and polishing until I made a hole in the casting. He just threw it to a scrap pile and gave me another to do right. I never made the mistake gain. There were few accidents that could possibly even kill me. Like making an electric mixer for my mother's birthday. When I turned it on first time (14000 rpm) it came apart due to imbalance and parts were flying all over the shop. It was a miracle that none of them hit me. Only after I got my arm wrapped in the lathe when nobody was around my mother made him to put padlock on the door and lathe switch and for some time I was allowed to work there only when some adult was present.
My youger brothers showed mechanical ability but only little interest in spending time in the shop.
 
   / Kids in the shop #8  
I bought my twin 8 year old boys mechanics tool sets for their birthday this past year. They like getting their hands dirty and helping out. Sometimes the attention span runs short, but they love grabbing the tool sets to help with projects. I bought the same set to put away for my 3 year old.
 
   / Kids in the shop #9  
My daughter has her own tool bag, she learns how to use a tool it goes in her bag. If she leaves it out its mine. She will just come and glue, nail, paint, and make things. Sometimes it just running rope around an upside down bike to make a "machine" but to me its that "play" that is so important. It lets them figure things out, how does it work, what can I make it do. Physical play is slowing being eroded by electronic play, I notice my little ones attitude is different when she is using the computer vs outside with me.
 
   / Kids in the shop #10  
Both of my daughters (currently 9 and 11 YO) have shown an interest in whatever I am working on for years, and I encourage it. I have no interest in them growing up to have to rely on a guy to do everything for them, the more independent they are the better. Quite often when they see me working on something they will ask, "Can I build something?" I used to look at that as an opportunity to set them up with a few simple tool and some explanation, and let them give it a go, but that usually ended up with them having so much difficulty and frustration that an hour and a half later my wife will be out there asking why it takes me so long to patch a fence. Meanwhile both girls now have a new chair and bed for their dolls.

Instead I now usually try to get them to help me with my tasks. They both love to hold the cordless drill while I help them drive in some screws, or measure a board and draw the line, etc. It still takes me much longer than normal to do a job, but at least I get to make some progress and if they get bored halfway through I can carry on with the job instead of first having to finish off the doll chairs by myself. ;) I also keep an extra set of hearing and eye protection in my tool bag all of the time, so if they walk up halfway through a job I am ready for them and don't have to make a trip to the house to get the gear they need. Another task that they often help me with is painting. They love to do it and are at the point now that they will already have their painting clothes on when they come out, instead of asking if they can help and then me sending them back in to get changed first. As long as I lay a tarp down they can go at it with some primer or paint and do a reasonable job of whatever I put in front of them. I usually have to follow along behind and clean up the spots they missed, but that doesn't take long.

Like some others have mentioned, I also bought tool sets for my girls a couple years ago. The younger one got the kid's set with fake hard hat and suspenders, and some mini tools that she couldn't her herself too badly with. For my older daughter though, I put some more money into one of those multi-purpose tool sets. It has a real hammer, screwdrivers, a couple of pliers, a basic socket set, tape measure, etc, all reasonable homeowner quality. It isn't going to stock a shop or anything, but it is something that she can take with her when she goes to college and at least she will be able to set up some Ikea furniture or whatever. My younger daughter will get one like it in the next year or so.

For the OP, yes the fighting sounds familiar for sure. As soon as the older one gets an idea, the younger one wants to do it too, which gets the older one mad because she is copying. Or they both want to use the same tool at the same time, or someone took someone else's nails, or they are getting in each other's way, or one is getting sawdust or paint or dirt on the other, or any of a million other things to fight about. That is just nature for siblings. At least I assume it is since me and my brothers fought constantly too. I think your key word was "patience." You need a lot of it, and the pay back comes in tiny increments. An important thing to remember is that their interest in "building something" is only part of the reason they are there. Primarily they are there because they want to be with you. They may work independently beside you some of the time, but other times you may be better off getting them to work with you on the task you are doing.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

Neckover GL24-2-7K Gooseneck Trailer  24ft Deck, Dual 7K Axles, 14K GVWR (A52748)
Neckover GL24-2-7K...
2706 (A51691)
2706 (A51691)
2020 CHEVROLET 2500HD CREW CAB TRUCK (A51406)
2020 CHEVROLET...
1000 Gallon Concrete Fuel Tank (A50774)
1000 Gallon...
2009 Grady-White 17ft Fishing Boat with T/A Boat Trailer (A50324)
2009 Grady-White...
2019 JGL 2632ES 26ft Electric Scissor Lift (A50322)
2019 JGL 2632ES...
 
Top