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Top items Little League parents should carry in their car
By Mimi Jansen
Special to KP News
Three
million players worldwide and nearly a million adult
volunteers make up the Little League International,
according to headquarters in Williamsport, Penn. Perhaps
only a handful of the adults will have carried a needle
and thread to the games. Go figure.
As a
Little League parent, I learned this the hard way. Just
as I learned that juice boxes are like dew on a
blistering summer day: One second they’re there, the
next — gone. Baseball season has arrived — so have
these things handy:
Plastic
surface for kids’ cleats. Preferably the washable
Rubbermaid storage tote covers. Especially if you’re
carting around half the team. Your carpeting will thank
you. Conversely, if you have this in your car, you will
also need:
Extra
kids’ shoes/socks. Stinky, tired feet reek to high
heaven. I know this because three senior leaguers (15-
and 16-year-olds) divested themselves of their cleats in
my car, and windows rolled down still did not dissipate
the noxiousness.
That
needle and thread. And it must be white thread. For
what, you say? Those pesky Little League official
patches that must be sewn on and without which your
child may not play in an official game. Yes, I’ve seen
this happen — and believe me, you do not want to witness
the fallout. And I’m just talking about the father…
Blankets.
Warm and fuzzy, thick and woolen, it does not matter as
long as they are big. Of course regular comforters will
not be appropriate unless sleeping in your car is an
option, which, for some 8- and 9-year-old pitched games
it just might be. Usually these are used as cover from
the wind and cold and are laid upon legs of sitting
spectators. However, it is not unusual to find them
utilized as makeshift parkas, folded to be used as seat
cushions, covering more than one shivering person, or as
in the case of one of my friends, as a wrap skirt (don’t
ask).
Fold-up
camp chairs. Or anything portable that you can sit on
for hours upon hours. Portable being the operative
word, as you never know how far you have to lug them
when visiting other fields. Again, more than one is
recommended, otherwise games of impromptu musical chairs
occur among siblings and friends without the benefit of
music, camaraderie, or nonviolence.
Towels.
These come in handy if for some reason you do not have
enough portable chairs and you need to use the bleachers
to sit on. One, they can dry the surface if it is
raining; and two, they can cover the bird poop and
unknown dried and sticky substances that inevitably mark
the seats. But be careful, do not flaunt these
needlessly, especially on a rainy day, or they will come
back filthy because coaches will have used them to dry
the baseballs. Depends upon how charitable you are
though. Never mind. Give them to the coaches.
Bandages
and ointment. No, not for the players. For their
ubiquitous siblings who will find and play in areas
around the ball fields where sharp branches and objects
reside, not to mention each other.
Cell
phone. For calling frustrated coaches who do not know
where the away team field is either, and consequently to
report your child’s lateness to the field for the same
reason. Also comes in handy when someone can’t make it
to the game and you need to report every play-by-play in
excruciating detail. And that’s just for the umpire and
coach fight.
Yes, I
haven’t mentioned food or drinks. It is a well-known
fact that people get hungry and thirsty so naturally
these will be the very first items you will realize you
need. What is not so well known is that the needle and
thread had come in handy when someone’s baseball pants
split; the towels can be used for muddy players to sit
on in the car and to smack bees; and the blankets used
to cradle a sprained ankle. I have begged for and
borrowed these various items as well as lent them out.
Good luck
this season. Oh, and leave those items in the car
year-round. After all, soccer and football are coming
up.
Mimi
Jansen is a parent of three sons who are all in the Key
Peninsula Little League on three different teams — you
may find her either scorekeeping, jogging from field to
field, or in the bathroom warming her hands with the
hand dryer.
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