DH and I plan to ride our bikes to the gym after the baby gets here. My grandparents live between us and the gym, and will be babysitting.
We have an ergo and he plans to wear baby, while riding the bike. Is this safe? It doesn't seem very safe to me. I'd rather have him in one of those carriage things.
He told me to ask you guys! haha.
WDYT?
Re: Baby wearing on a...Bike?
I hadn't even thought about the possibility of not being able to find a helmet.
I think that pretty much ends the conversation...
Giro does make an infant bike helmet, I just ordered one on amazon. It has the measurements listed and it will fit my DS (he is 7 months).
That being said, I would never wear him while on a bike. We received an iBert bike carrier for Christmas that attaches to the front of the bike that he can sit in. We plan to use it around the neighborhood, but I wouldn't feel comfortable taking him anywhere else that would be a busy road.
You can't use the trailers with an infant. I'd get a seat that attaches behind yours. We have both- the trailer for DS, and the seat for DD. Thankfully DS is getting old enough to ride his own bike short distances, but still wants to ride behind on longer ones.
I would not BW on a bike. If you fall, there is no protection for kiddo.
Thanks for all the responses. Thankfully I didn't have to continue the conversation with H because he decided to do some research. He pretty much found that until they have the head support for a helmet it's a no-no. So he gave up.
I'm curious why you can't use a bike trailer with an infant? I didn't find anything about this.
It's because their head and neck aren't supported enough. The bouncing can be too jarring without the proper support since their muscles are still pretty wek. My pedi said 12 months is when it's ok to use a bike trailer.
Oh ok. I guess I just assumed there was some kind of carseat type contraption in there keeping them steady and whatnot.
Thanks.
You can't bike with your child until they turn a year old, and no, you should definitely not be baby wearing while cycling. It is not safe at all.
I would recommend waiting until a year, as your baby's neck and spine will not be able to handle the jostling around that will happen on a bicycle, especially while wearing a helmet.
We have a Chariot Cougar and absolutely love it, but we waited until DD turned a year old. It was really hard to wait, as we don't own a car, but I did it because it was the safe thing to do. The trailer has shock absorbers and is really comfortable for kids to sit in, not to mention safe. It acts like a roll cage if there were to be an accident.
You can't fit a car seat into the trailer - there's no adapters.
It's also very hard to find a helmet that will fit properly, even at a year old. DD still fits into the infant size at two and a half.
Oh, and the front mounted seats are not safer. They can throw off the balance of your bike, and it can be hard to steer and keep control. I would recommend a back mounted seat if you choose to go that route later on.
Ya I don't really see them as much safer than babywearing. . .
The whole reason I didn't want him baby wearing while riding is because IF DH fell, the baby would fall a LOT farther than in a carriage.
I just don't know why the seat would be any safer...
the seats really aren't safe. A trailer is by far and away your safest option for a baby on a bike. But even with the attached seat, the AAP says no biking with baby before 12 months. Their bodies can't handle the bumps and things in the road and the helmets are too heavy for their heads in addition (no matter how well they seem to be able to hold them up)
I see a lot of BWing while biking over here in Japan but personally I would never do it (of course the moms who are usually doing it have a child on the front, one on the back, and the third on them).
We bought this bike from bridgestone when DD turned 1 https://gliving.com/electric-bike-for-new-gmoms/
I`ve never seen bike trailers here but then again it can be sometimes hard enough to find parking for just your bike here let alone a trailer.