By JO ABI
It was my son who informed me that I had purchased the wrong trampoline for our family.
“Mum, does our trampoline have springs,” he demanded, accusation in his eyes.
“Um, yes,” I responded tentatively.
“Because I just saw an ad on the TV and mum, springs are bad and dangerous and not good.”
Mummy-fail 173,980.
Just as an FYI, this post is sponsored by Springfree. But all opinions expressed by the author are 100% authentic and written in their own words.
I thought I was doing the right thing when I purchased our trampoline five years ago. I made sure to get a large trampoline that could cope with the weight of several children complete with padding and netting. There’s no way they could be injured on it.
Here’s a list of things that have gone wrong so far:
- The padding constantly dislodges, exposing the springs;
- The kids hurt themselves on the exposed springs;
- The netting comes lose and my five-year-old FELL THROUGH IT;
- The padding and netting has to be replaced each year due to wear and tear.
Well so much for that.
Like most parents I had the best of intentions. I did my research, found what I thought was a safe choice and chose a design that fit into my budget. But when you consider the fact my children and nieces and nephews us it daily, I probably should have spent more and researched better.