tibboh wrote:Defineately test him out on some shorter trips with the same load you expect on the OLT. The last thing you want is him pulling the pin on your group on day one or even worse the middle of a week long walk. I think The Acropolis may be beyond a 7yo. Someone may have to stay with him before the cliffs begin. Be sure the group is fine travelling at a 7yo pace.....having said that, he may be faster than you guysBe sure he can exist for that length of time without his mother. It's a pretty easy track, just long.
Should be a memory he carries with him for the rest of his life.....you just have to endeavour to make it a good one.
GPSGuided wrote:I'd say age 7 (barely Year 2!) is a bit too young for tough tracks like OLT. There are too many unpredictable factors along the way to knock a child around. Wait at least he is in Year 5 and beyond or there's a serious question on the duty of care clause should anything happens. He is young, he has plenty of time to walk the great walks. Take him on regular local walks to build up his stamina and observe his responses in the meantime.
Strider wrote:I agree with this but I am interested in what you mean in relation to duty of care?
syzygyeolith wrote:I've taken him on single day bushwalks in the blue mountains before which he's been able to handle, though he wasn't carrying anything, and the weather was mild.
Since then, he's become adamant that he is coming along with me, which I thought might actually be fun.
I've tried to explain to him as best as I could that the location is remote - if he gets tired, theres no ending things early.
I'll probably be going with at least 3 of my other friends (none of whom have done a multi-day before)
icefest wrote:Was it the hyperactive kid, tortoise?
I've said this before, and I apologise for repeating.
I've been taken on hikes this long at that age and earlier. I have great memories of trips like that.
It is not impossible but I am sure that it was hard for my parents. I would do the same with my children.
Giddy_up wrote:My only advice would be to never lead. Let the child set the pace and be prepared to stop short of benchmark camp sites and set up your tent and have a rest and play some games. No walk is a race and yes the OT can be done in hours or days, so plan for longer and enjoy it rather than push hard because of some predetermined factors.
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