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What They Don't Tell You About Swing Sets

10,419 Views | 41 Replies | Last: 10 mo ago by RightWingConspirator
MasonB
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AG
Cleaning up the hard drive and thought some of you might like this story, too. Fatherhood is great, but you'd better be tough.

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What They Don't Tell You About Swing Sets

There is something important they don't tell you when you buy one of those wooden swing sets for your kids. Buyers want to know how much it will cost, how long it will take to put up, how long it will last, and maybe a few questions about options. And that's usually all the conversation entails. But there is something else very important to keep in mind and they aren't going to tell you. One day you will have to tear it down.

That may seem obvious, but I promise you that it is worth some thought. Don't worry. I'm here to help.

When it is time for the set to come down, tip number one is to get to it before the fire ants come out. They aren't going to be happy with your demolition and they will exact some revenge. Or maybe those devil bugs sting just for fun. Either way, pick a day too cool for them to be out.

That leads into tip number two. You are going to be at least a decade older or in my case a decade and a half. Odds are strong that you aren't in the shape you were when you put it up and you are going to get a pretty good workout. You will welcome the cooler weather. It wouldn't hurt to do a little cardio in the weeks leading up to demo day. Just saying.

And the final tip when it comes to timing is don't wait until your little girl is packing up for college when you take it down. You may think you are ready for all that, but you are going to start thinking about ponytails swaying against the movement of the swing and singing silly songs while you used to push her and those snot bubbles will catch you by surprise.

Tip four is to do it without an audience around for reasons listed in the previous tips.

My wife had been after me for well over a year to do something about our severe listing wooden play set. She is very attached to it, too, but not so attached that she was willing to watch it collapse on a kid.

A couple of weeks ago, a windstorm took off the roof and pressed the issue. So earlier this week, I took her down with a mind full of memories and an embarrassing amount of hard breathing.

I say "took her down" because we named her the day she went up - Fort Chicky Chickee. Her raised platform looked like a fort and she was ruled by girls. Two girls to be exact Ella and Colby.

I can still picture Ella's surprised expression when she walked into the backyard and saw Fort Chicky Chickee for the first time. Colby was less impressed until she went down the slide the first time. Then her expression quickly caught up with her big sisters.

Of course, the fort was home to all of the "usual stuff" - sliding, swinging, sandboxing and picnicking. Ella sang many verses to El Cerrito Place (the Charlie Robison version not the Kenny Chesney version) while I pushed her on the swing. I loved hearing her little voice sing that song and she loved me pushing her, so it was a win-win. And Colby could make her mom slide down with her a hundred times with the irresistible combination of a sweet smile and insistent eyes.

Then there was the "special stuff" with things like decorating her with Christmas lights, modifying her with a special bridge, and using her as viewing platform for fireworks.

And there was the "you never expected that stuff". I sat in the upper fort while on the phone with my mom discussing Colby's funeral. The two of us trying hard to console the other and failing miserably because well because it's not possible. But Fort Chicky Chickee offered some comfort, some temporary refuge from the larger world. She was a tiny space where things made sense if I could just keep from thinking about the world beyond her.

A couple of years later, we made the move to Oklahoma. Ella was getting older, but would probably be young enough to play on a swingset for a couple of more years. Was it worthwhile to move it?

We spent a little time on the rational aspects of moving a wooden playset to a new home, but it didn't take long and the emotional aspects took over. Fort Chicky Chickee would be relocated!

It's a good thing, too. We didn't know it when we moved, but we of course would end up adding another child to the family- Alex. And adding a boy meant it would no longer belong to two girls. So the name of the fort was changed! Just kidding. It's still Fort Chicky Chickee because it like our family will always be indelibly marked by Ella and Colby.

An extra slide was added. The sandbox toys became more earth moving machinery focused. Physics experiments of objects being thrown from the top deck became normal. Brother and sister shared chocolate malts together. Grandparents didn't act their age. Wasps attacked and provided opportunities for boy and dad to show toughness (boy did better than dad).

But icy cold winters and hot dry summers took their toll. Attempts were made to increase her longevity, like some boards being replaced and painted with lemon oil to revive her cedar and repel bugs. Bolts were tightened. Supplemental fasteners added. The set with a 3-year warranty lasted 15, but just barely.

Every swing set has its own stories. Those were just some of ours.

Buyers of new swing sets will soon be living out their own stories and creating their own memories. Those memories will flood your brain on the day you take that swing set down. The pieces will get hauled away and the memories will be all that you have left so make lots of good ones.

If you do, you'll be blessed with some well-earned snot bubbles of your own and you won't want it any other way.
Leggo My Elko
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AG
[We should not have to put a warning on this thread but all TLDR or Cliff Notes posts on this thread will be removed and the poster will be removed from the site for at least a week. -Staff]

[Thank you to all of the posters that used the flag option to alert us to this useless post on a great thread. -Staff]
Claude!
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Great story - thanks for sharing.


Not being sarcastic to be clear.
MasonB
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the TLDR comments are fine...I know message boards aren't really the venue for these stories. I just also know there are a handful of folks here who appreciate them and I enjoy sharing them.

[The TLDR posts are not fine in our opinion and the opinions of the many posters that voted down that post. This board is a perfect venue for these stories and we will not let useless posts ruin or derail a thread that will be enjoyed by more than a handful and should get enough stars to be on the POTD list. Great thread. - Staff]
Hobbes01
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AG
Some stories aren't meant for cliff notes. This is one of them. Probably 10x better than anything else you'll read on this site tonight...and most nights.

Thanks for posting Mason! Your horse story was well worth the read too.
BDJ_AG
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AG
Thanks for sharing.

Our swing set isn't very old as our kids are still pretty young, but reading your story instantly made me think of the future. The future where I will have to let my kids go and send them off to college (or whatever they pursue) and our swing set will be left here without anyone to play on it. The future where I will be facing the same decision you did to have to take it down, and will go through all of the emotions you describe.

Thinking of that future makes me sad but it reminds me to cherish those moments when I am asked to come swing.


chickencoupe16
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AG
Damn, the "singing silly songs" part really got me...
Fdsa
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I can't read the whole thing - in the middle of the journey and don't want to think about that part just yet.
SteveBott
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AG
The most important part of the story is to know when you put one up you gotta bring it down when you are 15 years older. The bad news is the 15 years older. The good news is during that time you bought a chain saw and the kids are big enough to help you cut the damn thing up and haul it out of the back yard.
eduag
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AG
Great post
milner79
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I built one for our girls from scratch; the backyard sloped and an "off-the-shelf" set just wouldn't work. Two swings, an elevated fort, a slide, and a sandbox underneath the fort. Plenty of labor in that labor of love. But I would do it all again. It would take me longer now. But I would do it all again.

(Darn onions.)
Agape91
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AG
I always enjoy these posts from you. Have never had the attention span to read many books (readers digest stories was my limit). I am pretty sure, if you complied all your stories, I would not be able to put the book down.
GasPasser97
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AG
Beautifully written

I pray that you will have peace
Yesterday
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AG
Thank you! Hugging my two girls and boy a little tighter tomorrow.
beatlesphan
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AG
Wow, I wasn't ready for that. I'm so sorry for your loss.

As a dad of 3 (4, 2, 9 months) my only hesitation so far is the danger they present to infants/toddlers
No material on this site is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. See full Medical Disclaimer.
jagsdad
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Nice piece. Brings back lots of memories. My wife sprang the idea on me some years ago that the 2 youngest grands needed a swingset. Bad part was she came up with this idea 4 days before christmas. It did get done, at our house, and then taken apart and moved to their house, all with a torn shoulder tendon. Crawled all over it like monkeys for years. Now it's fenced in around the bottom and home for their geese.
agracer
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AG
Built two swings sets for my kids but they both got left behind when we moved away. Never had to take one down. Some great memories though.

My middle son at about age 5 swinging as high as he could and singing, at the top of his lungs "I BELIEVE I CAN FLY" from the 1st Space Jam.

My youngest at about age 3, coming into the kitchen and asking me and his mom to 'watch me'. He then goes outside, climbs up the slide to the platform, then proceeds to jump off the platform over the rock wall climber thingy, land on his feet while my wife gasps "AHHHH"...thinking he was about to hurt himself. It was a good 4-foot drop which is high for a little guy like that.

He comes back inside all happy and I say, "that looked like fun, but maybe don't do that any more, you're going to give your mom a heart attack"...He calmly replies, "Maybe she can go away and you can watch me!".
MyNameIsJeff
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AG
Damn. It got dusty in here about halfway through your post.

But I really enjoyed the read. We have a soon-to-be 2 year old and just brought our second home last week. My wife and I have already talked quite a bit about a play set for them.

I'll add that my childhood play set is still standing almost 30 years later at my parents house. It did have a tree fall on it and take out the roof over the lower level 2-3 years ago, but the redwood is still sound otherwise all these years later.
malenurse
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AG
Some of my greatest memories are watching my son and his friends playing on that wooden swing set. My then 6 year old son teaching the dog to go up and down the "wavy" slide are hilarious

Great article. Keep em coming.
The last thing I want to do is hurt you. But, it's still on the list.
TH36
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I'm glad I was alone at the moment I decided to read this. Thanks for this, seriously.. It takes a real man to be able to type something like this out and put it on the internet for everyone to see and you could've gone 10x the length and it would never be TLDR. I appreciate you sharing your experiences and your losses.

I've got a 3.5 yr old boy and 1 yr old girl. We had a bit of a scare with my daughter this week. She's been kind of off after being sick so we took her in and of course things like leukemia start getting tossed around that we need to rule out. I was sick hearing that even though there wasn't any signs of it and it was just a precaution. A very empty feeling I'd never had before when wondering the "what ifs" if it was to come back positive for anything bad. Our kids are the best of all of us.
maroon barchetta
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Staff should auto-ban any username that references a new coach.

It never works out.
Naveronski
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AG
Neat story! I have a playset in my back yard waiting to be assembled for my first son to play on.

He's not quite old enough, but I want to have it ready ahead of time.
Mark Fairchild
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I have to jump on board. I have been reading Mason's postings for a good while, and it has done nothing but enrich my life. In this crazy world with tech, we somehow have lost the ability to stop and smell the " proverbial " roses. I feel much to man's detriment. I have on several occasions suggested to MasonB that he should write so that others could benefit from what he has to say. I can only reiterate the suggestion again. Thank you, Mason for this latest of your contributions to this AG's life, and the others on this forum who read your posts.

Gig'em, Ole Army Class of '70
Aggieangler93
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AG
I've lived this too. My two not-so-little swingers still make me smile every day. And it's dusty over here at my place today also. Good post OP!
Class of '93 - proud Dad of a '22 grad and a '26 student!
ABATTBQ11
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AG
I just got ours up in November after it sat in boxes for a year waiting on other projects. Now I wish I'd done it a lot sooner.

And sorry for your loss. We have 2 and I don't know how I'd live without either of them.
Pantera
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AG

What a post.
reproag
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My kids are 14,12 & 9. Time to get ours back into tip top shape if just for one more memory.
bobbunker
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Great story,.. I'm sure that was emotional to draft; thank you for sharing.
DoitBest
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DoitBest
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S
To the young dads out there, he is not kidding about "Tip four"

thanks again for sharing.
MasonB
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Your kind words and feedback mean a lot to me.

I began writing these essays as a way to preserve some memories. Then it become therapeutic. Friends and family said I should try and turn them into a book, but I always dismissed that thinking my stories wouldn't resonate with people outside the circle of people who know us well.

I think the odds of getting published are extremely long, but you have inspired me to try. Worst case is my kids have a collection of stories to reflect on long after I'm gone.

If by some chance it does get published, the Texags Outdoors Board will definitely get honored in the dedication.

Thanks for the appreciation and the encouragement.
ShouldastayedataTm
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I don't know how many of these anecdotes and essays you have, but an anthology of short stories like this and the horse story will resonate far and wide. This world is is suffering right now because these type of anecdotes and reflections on life are missing. Look how many people here have been touched and are able to bring some of their own reflections forward. That is what fixes this world we live in, reflections on the good, the hard, and success in the end that comes with living life right. I too encourage you to explore publishing these stories, and let me know where I can get a copy when you do. And not a discounted one either it will be worth whatever price you decide on.
spud1910
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Wow! Thank you for opening your heart to us and sharing your memories of Colby, as well as Ella and Alex. As the father of a daughter and grandfather of two girls (4 and 6 now), I can relate to the power of the sweet smile and insistent eyes. My daughter will soon be 28 and the swing set made the move from the home we lived in when she was 4 to the house where I still live today. Fortunately I didn't have to disassemble it, but I did get a few looks going down the Farm to Market with it strapped to the bucket of my dad's John Deere. And those granddaughters still use it some. Thank you for the reminder to make a couple repairs that I have been thinking needed to be done. And it probably would be a good idea for the girls to paint it as well.
RED AG 98
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I'm not saying anything new, but I will echo what's been said above in that I really enjoy reading your stories. . We too moved one about 15 years ago, and while it needed to come down 7 years ago for similar reasons it was a bit more difficult than we had expected.

I was smiling and remembering all the stuff from ours right alongside you as I read. And then real tears right there in the middle. God bless you and your family. And more encouragement to pursue getting this all published.
bdb85
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MasonB said:

Your kind words and feedback mean a lot to me.

I began writing these essays as a way to preserve some memories. Then it become therapeutic. Friends and family said I should try and turn them into a book, but I always dismissed that thinking my stories wouldn't resonate with people outside the circle of people who know us well.

I think the odds of getting published are extremely long, but you have inspired me to try. Worst case is my kids have a collection of stories to reflect on long after I'm gone.

If by some chance it does get published, the Texags Outdoors Board will definitely get honored in the dedication.

Thanks for the appreciation and the encouragement.


Thank you for sharing the journey.
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