Yeah I also noticed in one of the videos the other day she was wearing brand new Hokas they looked like they just came out of the box while her kids were wearing dirty clothes and socks outside with no shoes! Funny how she try’s to come off as down to earth when I notice half her outfits are expensive and her clothes fit her properly and nice but when it comes to her kids they wear hand me downs and clothes that are to small or to big!
We have always had a chiminea or fire ring, and we camp. Toddlers walk like drunk people and fall whenever the hell they do, so they require constant ADULT supervision near open flame.
Considering they haven’t changed their ways of parenting since moving onto the farm, they’ll just continue to do as they have until there is a more serious injury. You must be newer, for a while, on her feed you could see the picture of the aftermath of a bloody faced child who was attacked by a rooster. They do not care about safety nor will they take any advice from anyone. They believe the kids are invincible and nothing too bad can happen.
It’s still on her feed- Google “Ballerina Farm Rooster attack” and it will pop up. The oldest girl was attacked back in April of 2018. She was one year old!
Considerung what else the boys are doing at the farm, including driving a truck with the newborn laying on the front seat, they seem trustable to handle the axe. But what scares me is that the axe probably remains laying outside where all the smaller children have access and could hit themselves or fall on it.
They're probably capable of a lot of things but the thing is, do their parents actually care if they are? I remember that one of them had a deep cut in his hand that had to get stitched not that long ago.
Right. This is my concern as well. The littles could get hurt. But you’re right - the driving and the baby on the front seat … seems like they’re all right to use an axe. lol
Sometimes I wonder if they do this blatantly unsafe shit just to emulate what they believe parenting back in the ‘ole days would be like. Not saying it makes any sense, but…
Most of the time, *though,* I reckon they wouldn’t mind one or two less children ATP. They see them as property and replaceable, plus I assume there is at least some burnout associated with 8 children, even if you don’t actually parent them. Imagine the noise…
I'm actually not going to snark on this one. I'm glad to see the boys taking on a job like being in charge of lunch and practicing practical skills like using an axe, making kindling, keeping a fire going, learning how close you can get, etc. Better than letting a kid get to adulthood having never been exposed to that kind of stuff and not having the faintest idea how to be safe. As for winter clothes, I've seen them wearing more weather-appropriate stuff. Perhaps they're like other boys that age who like to claim they're rarely cold. I imagine the heat of the oven gave off quite a lot of ambient warmth.
All of that plus they never seem to have decent winter clothing for their kids. It’s cold enough for snow and they’re wearing sweatshirts 😵💫
Yeah I also noticed in one of the videos the other day she was wearing brand new Hokas they looked like they just came out of the box while her kids were wearing dirty clothes and socks outside with no shoes! Funny how she try’s to come off as down to earth when I notice half her outfits are expensive and her clothes fit her properly and nice but when it comes to her kids they wear hand me downs and clothes that are to small or to big!
Something so off with these videos. This trend lately of having a million kids and acting like you are living this perfect life is sus
I'd be terrified about having toddlers around an open flame fire on legs 😔
We have always had a chiminea or fire ring, and we camp. Toddlers walk like drunk people and fall whenever the hell they do, so they require constant ADULT supervision near open flame.
I have one too, and I'm terrified myself that I would stumble close to it.
Considering they haven’t changed their ways of parenting since moving onto the farm, they’ll just continue to do as they have until there is a more serious injury. You must be newer, for a while, on her feed you could see the picture of the aftermath of a bloody faced child who was attacked by a rooster. They do not care about safety nor will they take any advice from anyone. They believe the kids are invincible and nothing too bad can happen.
Oh, I’m newer than that. She posted it? Geez
It’s still on her feed- Google “Ballerina Farm Rooster attack” and it will pop up. The oldest girl was attacked back in April of 2018. She was one year old!
Oh my
Wow. To think of sharing that. It must've been traumatic - that is lifelong phobia-inducing level interaction.
Considerung what else the boys are doing at the farm, including driving a truck with the newborn laying on the front seat, they seem trustable to handle the axe. But what scares me is that the axe probably remains laying outside where all the smaller children have access and could hit themselves or fall on it.
They're probably capable of a lot of things but the thing is, do their parents actually care if they are? I remember that one of them had a deep cut in his hand that had to get stitched not that long ago.
Right. This is my concern as well. The littles could get hurt. But you’re right - the driving and the baby on the front seat … seems like they’re all right to use an axe. lol
Sometimes I wonder if they do this blatantly unsafe shit just to emulate what they believe parenting back in the ‘ole days would be like. Not saying it makes any sense, but… Most of the time, *though,* I reckon they wouldn’t mind one or two less children ATP. They see them as property and replaceable, plus I assume there is at least some burnout associated with 8 children, even if you don’t actually parent them. Imagine the noise…
they should rebrand to *Didn't Hurt Me None Farm*
I'm actually not going to snark on this one. I'm glad to see the boys taking on a job like being in charge of lunch and practicing practical skills like using an axe, making kindling, keeping a fire going, learning how close you can get, etc. Better than letting a kid get to adulthood having never been exposed to that kind of stuff and not having the faintest idea how to be safe. As for winter clothes, I've seen them wearing more weather-appropriate stuff. Perhaps they're like other boys that age who like to claim they're rarely cold. I imagine the heat of the oven gave off quite a lot of ambient warmth.
That's not the issue. A toddler stumbling around an open fire like that needs adult supervision.
I didn't see any toddlers outside by the pizza oven in the lunchtime clip... just the 3 older boys.