Not at all. The older Grandddaughter, now 9, started at 4 years old and the youngest, 5, has no problems. One helpful item is the rerailing ramp that Lionel has for Fastrack, I believe it also works on other tracks. It takes the frustration of getting cars on the track, all the child needs to know is how to open a coupler.
I've found that hoppers and gondolas are favored for carrying little dolls, cars, and whatnots. The thing to remember is that with a child it is a toy, not Daddy's, or Grandpa's, collectable. Keep the collectables on the shelve.
I think that "age" is not the question. Only you know your youngster and, from what you have written, I would say he is ready. Santa brought me my first train (Marx- My best friend's family was better off so he got the more expensive Lionel @ the same time) the year the Korean Conflict started and we have been "into" trains ever since.
(If it were me, though, I wouldn't let him "play with" my "high-end" Lionel without supervision but I certainly would let him "run" them. Accidents do happen, even to us "older" guys and repairs are sometime costly)
Have a great holiday.
My grandkids are four and eight.They have been running my trains since they were both three.At first it was whistle buttons and operating tracks.Now the eight year old can run all five tracks and the four year old three.They learn fast and now I know if i'm not around and they touch the trains they won't hurt them.
Ed
Well Frank, let me put it this way. I wasn't even a week old before I had my first train set. My mom said she she could have had a fit when he came home with an electric train set for a kid who could not even sit up yet. Needless to say, he couldn't wait for CHRISTmas either.
So my advice, is the very day you bring the kid home is already late. A week old is plenty old enough. Don't even wait... Get the train set before the kid is even born.
At 5 years old, I was well on my way to being the train nut I am today. To further the point, the backyard of the first house I grew up in was fenced in... the fence connected right to the house... there was no way for a kid, epsecially a little toddler to get out of that yard. To this day, no one knows how I consistantly got out of that yard. But I did.
My mom would put me out in the back yard and watch me. All OK. Then a moment later she'd look out the front window and there I was toddling up the street to the busy intersection to sit on the curb, watching the train tracks across the street and waiting for the train to go by.
Even I was perplexed when I paid a visit to the house and saw that big obstacle of a fence was still there. So are those train tracks too!!!
Many years later, I was doing some fill-in deliveries at work. When I returned to the office, I was asked if the truck was having engine problems? I said, "No. Why do you ask?" One of the sales reps said he saw the truck pulled off the side of the road and was concerned. I laughed and said, "I heard the train coming so I pulled off the road so I could watch it go by."
Ah, not much has changed for me in that respect. Except as a kid I loved the Big Red (Lehigh Valley) and now I love the Big Blue (Conrail) with as much vigor.
brianel, Agent 027
"Praise the Lord. I may not have everything I desire, but the Lord has come through for what I need."
See that photo to the left of this message. That was me at age 4 1/2 running a small Marx train around an oval of track
Celebrating 18 years on the CTT Forum.
Buckeye Riveter......... OTTS Charter Member, a Roseyville Raider and a member of the CTT Forum since 2004..
Jelloway Creek, OH - ELV 1,100 - Home of the Baltimore, Ohio & Wabash RR
TCA 09-64284
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