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I thought this was one of your milder ones![]()
I am mellowing with old age
I thought this was one of your milder ones![]()
...
BTW, having been one and parented both, I still think teenaged boys and groups of boys are far more at risk of reckless bravado, violence or mishap than girls! You know, just like "The Inbetweeners"![]()
Yes that's the point of the thread...
What kind of parent would I be if I wasn't worried?
Initially it was, please can I go camping with my friends, one of the families is going too and we are going to borrow a tent and stay there for 2 nights. Now I find out the other family is not actually going which means it's 7 or 8 16yr old girls on there own at a camp site about 10 miles from where we live....
Because your daughter chose to mislead you over who would be there I would have a serious conversation with her on why she felt the need to mislead you!
How sure are you that they intend to go "camping"? do you know who they are borrowing the tent from? And how big is this tent that will sleep 7-8 adults?
there is too much deceit for me but I'm sure you will make the decision that is right for your family.
Were u not 16 once? I remember saying I was going over friends house at 16, then on the bus to town I went with fake id and hit some pubs. Every 16 yo will tell lies to parents about things... I still lie to the wife... Yes dear, I will be back from the pub before 10pm....
I went away and left my girls at home at that age and said they could invite firends over, because you know they will anyway
Rules were
1. If you make a mess clear it
2. Invite the neighbours kids so they can't complain about the noise
3. Remember the neighbours will tell me everything so make sure you tell me first
There was no problem, none of the neighbours complained, house was left clean and tidy
and no one got into any trouble.
You have to trust your kids sometime to do things on their own.
they need space to grow up.
Actually we were talking about it yesterday at work, one of my daughters school mate's sister
works with me and she remember her sister telling her about it
I had three big burly older brothers. That didn't hurt either.![]()
No, but I bet they looked out for you though !
I would have to say 'no' on the grounds that there is not a 'responsible adult' in the group you can't guarantee a duty of care. So basically you have a group of children in the eyes of the law doing their own thing for a weekend. Whilst quite not on the same level as Child Abandonment, if something goes wrong, would you really want to have the police and a social worker to knock on your door?
There are far to many feckless parents allowing their under-age offspring to cause havoc and make peoples lives a misery. The fact that she has already lied doesn't bode well. I would ground her for that alone.
I wonder if all the other parents know the full picture. I wonder how many of them would agree to it if they knew the whole story?
Err, you can get married at 16, join the armed forces etc so comparing a camping trip to child abandonment is very wide of the mark.
Only the op knows his daughter and her friends so any advice based on my son (or anyone else's) is kind of useless. For instance my son is in the Scouts and knows how to build a fire, how to choose a good place to pitch a tent, how to set up a camp, cook over a fire, using knives and axes etc. The op's daughter may know all that or think that high heels would be the best footware!
To the op, go with your gut feeling, only you know your daughter.
So, you'd agree that comparing it to child abandonment is a bit wide of the mark.You can get married at sixteen only with parental consent (except for scotland) and yes you can join the army but cannot be sent into combat.
So, you'd agree that comparing it to child abandonment is a bit wide of the mark.
You can't join the Armed Forces at 16 ! .
I've not called it child abandonment...I'm saying that the 2 examples you cited are poor.
You can't join the Armed Forces at 16 ! You even have to be back in your bunk by midnight and have bed checks until you turn 18.
I'm all for letting your kids have a bit of responsibility but in a controlled environment. Organised camps by Scouts, Air Cadets etc is a positive thing.
Have you eve seen how musicians relax ? The 13yr old was looking after the others !! Her education was really extended - it taught her a lot - and believe me it was the others who returned very much the worse for wear !


the boys will be camping separately and on the same site 'entirely by coincidence'![]()
Because your daughter chose to mislead you over who would be there I would have a serious conversation with her on why she felt the need to mislead you!
How sure are you that they intend to go "camping"? do you know who they are borrowing the tent from? And how big is this tent that will sleep 7-8 adults?
there is too much deceit for me but I'm sure you will make the decision that is right for your family.
And if you were you probably wouldn't....
If I were a parent there would be no 'group' holidays without parents until the child was 18.
And if you were you probably wouldn't.
There aren't border guards at Carlisle on the train to Gretna (although the massive waiting list for weddings there means Annan is a better bet) so the whole needing parental consent business is largely irrelevant to a determined pair of 16 year olds with the ability to purchase train tickets.You can get married at sixteen only with parental consent (except for scotland) and yes you can join the army but cannot be sent into combat.
There aren't border guards at Carlisle on the train to Gretna (although the massive waiting list for weddings there means Annan is a better bet) so the whole needing parental consent business is largely irrelevant to a determined pair of 16 year olds with the ability to purchase train tickets.