A one-year old girl is scarred for life.
She will face months of treatment.
All because of a simple trip to the park which went horribly wrong.
The scars on this tiny one-year old’s legs are hard to look at and even harder to imagine that they were caused by a piece of common playground equipment – one that many of our children play on daily across Australia.
Amanda Hann, of North Haven – the little girl’s mother posted a warning to other parents on Facebook. Her warning has been shared over 10,000 times.
Her daughter, Ella was with her grandmother at Sempahore Beach in Adelaide enjoying a day out.
It was not an excessively hot day and was only 10.15 in the morning.
They had bought an ice cream and went to the shaded area of a playground nearby to eat it.
She says, “Within a matter of minutes my daughter had jumped up and gone to run off and play as toddlers do. She headed straight for this little metal merry-go-round. At 10:15 it wasnt heaps hot yet, sitting about 26/27 degrees”
Ella climbed aboard a metal merry-go-round which was part of the Port Adelaide Enfield Council’s $480,000 new playground.
Top Comments
Sorry Semaphore council, but a coating of rubber ain't gonna fix the problem. Rubber can also get extremely hot in the sun. Where's the common sense? Shouldn't ALL of the equipment be under shade cloth? Why would you leave that one piece of metal play equipment in full sun, when everything else is under shade? We live in the sunburnt country, everyone knows that. Catch on already!
Yeah and I am really really sick of negative comments about absolutely EVERYTHING anyone does. So much for mothers supporting other mothers, I don't see much of it online. The council are at fault, this is new playground equipment and designed for children to play on completely ridiculous that they didn't check the material for heat resistance/capacity to burn. It really saddens me that the first reaction for a lot of people is finger pointing, nastiness and accusations. To be honest it almost ruins places like Mamamia and makes me, and other women I know not want to visit them at all. Can't we just act online like we would to someone's face? Would you say these things to the mothers face? I doubt it.
No the council is not at fault, this is an unshaded piece of play equipment designed for older children, it is inside a playground designed for older children, if people want to let their toddlers play in those areas (and I do) then they have to take extra precautions and accept any falls or injuries are accidents.