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Riding Motorcycles with Child Passengers You
can safely bring a small child... if you prepare properly.
By Art
Friedman.
Updated Motorcycling with kids
can be done safely, if you understand the risks and take the proper
precautions.
Taking a child for a motorcycle ride can be a scary
proposition, but if you have children, the question will arise, probably sooner
than you think. You may also be confronted with it from children in your
extended family or neighbors. Unfortunately, too many people don't think it
through before the child climbs on the bike.
Here's a typical disaster
in the making, one that I've seen far too frequently. A motorcyclist rides down
the street with a kid sitting in front of him, a helmet four sizes too large
bouncing around on the child's head, its little hands trying to hold onto the
gas tank or the rider's legs. The kid interferes with the rider's control of
the bike, the first strike against them.
What's going to happen if the
rider must stop quickly? Will he grab the child with one arm, and thereby
probably lose control of the bike if he really has to panic stop, or will he
keep control of the bike and watch the kid fly off the front of the bike?
Neither option bodes well for the child. And when he goes flying, that oversize
helmet will probably come off his head. That loss of an oversize helmets
happensto adults as well as childrenmuch more often than most
motorcyclists realize, but kids wearing helmetas that are way too large are
most like to be the victims.
My kids, now 12 and 14, began
agitating for rides around age three or four. I said that they couldn't ride
until they could reach the footpegs, which was possible on some bikes when they
were five or six. In the meantime, my wife and I discussed the issue to be sure
she was completely comfortable with it. I have friends whose spouses have
forbidden their kids to get on a bike. Although my wife doesn't ride herself
(except as a passenger), she was confident about the kids riding with
me.
I also researched the matter. I
went through our many apparel catalogs looking for helmets and apparel for
kids. I talked to helmet makers and looked at kid-size helmets. Most
illuminating, I talked to the motorcycle-accident researchers at the
Head Protection Research
Laboratory, the same folks who conducted the famous Hurt Report about
motorcycle-accident causes and countermeasures.
Kids' Helmets
When my older child, my son,
finally was old enough to sit on some bikes with his feet on the passenger
pegs, I began collecting gear. Much of the motorcycle apparel made for kids is
aimed at the off-road side of the market. Most of the XXXS helmets on the
market are off-road lids, not all of which are D.O.T.-certified. I wanted a
full-coverage helmet with a chinbar with real expanded polystyrene (EPS, the
hard foam) in the chinbar as well as the rest of the shell. Most importantly,
it had to fit snugly, to be sure it would stay put during the violence of a
crash. Shoei's VT-J fulfilled those requirements. Even though it was for the
off-road market, it provided extensive EPS coverage. Since it had no
faceshield, I had to buy some goggles.
A couple of years later, he
graduated to an XXS Shoei RF200 street helmet, which included a faceshield. We
are now up to a medium, and his sister has inherited his last helmet at each
step. At $200 or so apiece, this out-growing helmets isn't cheap, but don't
scrimp here. My research turned up far too many instances of children wearing
adult-sized helmets, which simply came off during a crash. Read
this jsonline.com report for an example of what
can happen. And make sure the helmet is fastened snugly. Kids will typically
complain at first, but don't let them fasten the chin strap loosely. I'd also
have trouble giving a child anything less than a full-face helmet with a
chinbar, since facial scars could be almost as devastating as a head injury and
facial impacts can kill you too.
Leather Jackets for
Kids?
I thought we might get away with
well-made denim or other tough generic jacket, but Harley's Kid's Leather
Jacket (about $160, see
the Kids section of Harley's Motorclothes site) was too cool
to pass up. Since my son was scrawny and the jacket started out a bit large, it
actually lasted almost five years before my daughter inherited it full-time
and, after watching a video of Grease what seems like a few hundred times,
turned it into a fashion statement as much as riding apparel. It is a real
riding jacket though, with thick leather, heavy-duty stitching and zippers, and
zipped cuffs. It makes them comfortable while riding and would provide
significant protection if we ever fell.
Since this article was
originally printed, a new web-based company
Family
Motorcycling.com has sprung up to serve this motorcycle-apparel market
segment, with textile and armored jackets and pants and gloves made for kids
five and up. There is also a similar site in the UK,
www.babybiker.com, with
even more riding gear for kids.
My son now wears my wife's old
jackets. In a few years, he'll be wearing mine. But I would have felt
comfortable with him wearing a tough jacket made of something else, such as
denim, too. If you have to choose wear to spend your money, a good D.O.T.
helmet and real motorcycle gloves should top your priorities. The difference
between no jacket and solid denim jacket is bigger than the difference between
denim and leather in my experience.
Other Apparel
The other item that I am
emphatic about using is good gloves. Hands are an essential part of our daily
lives and deserve good protection. A number of companies make child-size gloves
for off-road use, and I have also found a few all-leather street gloves (which
I prefer) in XXS sizes. Several companies, including
Olympia and
Tour Master make XS-size
gloves in good, solid, comfortable styles, and
Family
Motorcycling.com and www.babybiker.com both carry kid-specific gloves. Get some
that have a good retention system -- that is, that strap on tightly. Even if
the gloves are a bit large, this will keep them from coming off in the violence
of a crash. Some of the off-road gloves are made well with abrasion-resistant
material, but you may also find small road gloves, which tend to have better
abrasion-resistant coverage.
Some heavy, long pants should be
worn (again, see Family Motorcycling.com and
www.babybiker.com for
actual motorcycle pants made for kids) and we just used heavy weight jeans.
Some well made shoes, preferably a pair that rises above the ankle, are a good
idea. We used cowboy boots for a while, but I wasn't convinced that they'd stay
on in a crash. The shoes should fit well, so they won't come off under
pressure. Be mindful of shoelaces too. A shoelace that gets caught in a chain
can cause a disaster.
Retention
Once a child has proper gear,
you confront a bigger issue. How is the child going to ride? Putting a child in
front of you is stupid, for the reasons already discussed. So he or she will
sit behind you. That raises the issue of control. A child, especially a small
one, can simply fall off. Even an older kid can fall asleep on a longer ride.
Mine do, all the time. Any child can be flicked off in a brake-skid-stick
situation or just a quick avoidance maneuver. Holding onto the rider can be
difficult for small hands and short arms. My research uncovered an alarming
number of instances when a child fell or was ejected from a motorcycle that
didn't crash, often with horrifying results.
The aftermarket has a number of
solutions. The simplest is one of the several types of belts for the rider with
handholds for the passenger, like the Buddy Belt ($50) from G&G or the
Pillion Pal from Family Motorcycling.com. You may be able to offer a passenger
similar security by attaching handhold loops to your regular pants or jacket
belt. However, kids have trouble remembering to hold on all the time, so I
rarely used this solution until they were 10 or older.
My preferred system for carrying
a young kids is the Child's Riding Belt (formerly the CRV Belt) ($129) from
Child's Riding Belt Company, and
imported by several retailers for the U.S. market. The CRV is a harness that
goes around the child's waist, over the shoulders and between the legs so she
can't wriggle or pull out. The quick-release buckles are all on the back so she
can't release them, but getting in (before the helmet is donned) is quick. The
child's harness fastens to a foam-rubber pad with handlebar-type grips. A large
belt, attached to the front of the pad, goes around the rider's waist to secure
the child to you. The child cannot fall off unless you do. My kids routinely
fall asleep back there, and we have even ridden off-road, jumping and bouncing
around, with no fear of them getting thrown off. Of course, if you did crash,
the child would be attached to you, which might cause additional injury if they
ended up between you and whatever you bounced against. On the other hand, you
can also jump up to leap out of harm's way, and the child, since it is
attached, will come with you, without the need for an
explanation.
Though my daughter, who is
younger and braver, sometimes suggested riding without the CRV Belt, both kids
felt secure in it, and it has proven comfortable on a wide variety of bikes. On
short rides, such as the few blocks to school, we used just a belt with
handholds after about age 9. But until they were in their teens, they requested
the CRV for anything more than a few minutes.
I tried talking to my kids early
on about the potential dangers of riding, but they didn't get much of it. I do
it every day, so how could it be that bad? To them it's pure fun, even riding
in the rain (though they don't have rainsuits). With repetition, they did learn
what they needed to be conscious ofhot exhaust pipes, not mounting from
the right, keeping their feet out of the wheel, faceshield over their eyes,
keeping their feet on the pegs. We have a simple system of communications, and
we may actually get one of the communicator systems.
Trying It Out
Of course, they had a gentle
introduction and haven't had any bad experiences. They both had their first
rides on a deserted, dead-end rural road with little traffic. Next it was rides
to school, where every kid on the yard came out to watch their arrivals and
departures. One mother, watching us arrive on a big Vulcan, even commented, "My
kids want you to be their dad." Progressively longer rides led to weekend
outings with my son, which he loved. We made a motorcycle camping trip to a
spot back in the mountains where a car has a hard time reaching. My daughter
has begun agitating for her and I to ride to Alaska.
A few people have told me that
they think motorcycling is too dangerous an activity to involve kids. My
response is simply that since I believe, after taking a long sober look at the
risks and preparing myself for them, that it's safe enough for their parent to
do, it's safe enough for kids as well, assuming I consider their needs. And
I'll sometimes add that if people would stop talking on their cell phones in
traffic and engage their brains, it would be safer for everyone.
Resources
Child's Riding Belt Company
PO Box 22 Edmonton, Alberta Canda T5E 5S7 (780)973-3253 www.childridingbelt.com
Family
Motorcycling.com
www.babybiker.com 11 Union Road Leamington Spa
Warwickshire CV32 5NB United Kingdom
G&G Corp. 6751 NW 34th
St. Margate, FL 33063 (954)752-7446
www.buddybelt.com
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