cyow5
cyow5 Reader
12/13/23 1:19 p.m.

It was a couple weeks ago, but I wanted to take a moment to celebrate my daughter's first win! Technically, she just had one other entry she was racing against, but the other kid was fast (and fully supported with mechanics and even had a TV crew), and I was just proud of how hard my daughter pushed while having fun at the same time. She got to run a track she had never done before, and it was raining all weekend. We didn't have rain tires until it was it clear the rain wouldn't ease up, and I literally grabbed the four least awful ones I could find in the dumpster. I will say though, slicks in the rain are a great educational tool, haha. 

There was just something really special about seeing a 5yo play with steering and throttle inputs throughout a turn to change the attitude of the kart. She has zero fear, but she's also typically pretty conservative. Kid Karting is also tricky to get fast in because the tires are hard, and the karts are light. Getting any kind of heat in the tires is tricky to the point that rain tires are a known shortcut to dry speed because they warm up faster and are softer. Bringing the limit to her was really what she needed at this point because she was able to really learn a lot about catching a slide. The GoPro video was really fun to watch, and here is a good shot of her catching a slide while chasing the other kid. This was before we got the dumpster tires on, and she was doing her damnedest to keep up anyways. 

 

For the pre-lunch race, we finally got the dumpster tires on and made no setup changes. The tires would be so foreign to her, I didn't want to tweak anything else. Plus, it is Kid Kart. The kart is far second to the driver in terms of influencing the outcome. She did a phenomenal job of sticking to the plan (fast but do not push to the point of spinning, keep pressure on the other kid, and capitalize on their mistakes). The other kid spun twice, and Zoey was able to get her first win! The other kid was a bit faster in the rain, but keeping close enough to take advantage of the spins was still something to be proud of. 

For the afternoon race, the track was drying quickly, so we ran the dry tires for the feature. The other dad and I talked, and I was fine with him continuing to run the rain tires. Technically, that was his right since it had rained in the morning, but I greatly appreciated him letting me know in the name of fairness. The layout was also the traditional one my daughter was used to, so she picked up a lot of relative pace. Both kids have been pretty close in practice, but it has been a while since they ran together, so the final was nerve-racking. Zoey built an early lead that slowly deteriorated throughout the race. On the third-to-last turn, she was catching a kid in the faster class and started pushing too hard to get around him. This led to a spin, and she lost the lead. Still, she gave it the absolute beans, and caught the other kid right at the line. 

 

 

We thought the other kid had actually won and congratulated her and her team, but then we looked at the unofficial results and saw Zoey was 0.010 seconds ahead at the sensor! Tech cleared both karts, and the official results were posted an hour later with her as the winner! She had been so bummed when we told her that we had thought the other kid won because she thought pulling into the pits was the finish line, but she was ecstatic to learn she was getting two trophies. 

 

 

Bottom line is that, while we are thrilled she is going into karting 2-0 against a fast kid, there is something very special about watching your kid push so hard with something that most kids never get to experience while still showing just enough restraint to not doing anything silly.  Now, we just need to make sure we balance the line between helping her do her best versus ruining the fun of racing with racing...

Duke
Duke MegaDork
12/13/23 3:11 p.m.

That is excellent for everyone involved!  Congratulations to her - and you.

 

rob_lewis
rob_lewis UberDork
12/13/23 3:23 p.m.

Wow, talk about a flood of memories that just came back to me.  There must be a bunch of dust in the air today....

Congrats on her first win!!!  Glad that she no only conquered the rain, but she was happy to run in it.  A lot of the younger kids don't like the rain, but it teaches them sooo much.

-Rob

AxeHealey
AxeHealey GRM+ Memberand SuperDork
12/13/23 3:39 p.m.

That is so rad!! I was just telling my daughter (also 5) that I couldn't find indoor karts that would allow me to drive her around. She would totally love that but I think she would be too timid to hop in and drive herself. She has a serious love of speed once she gets over her initial apprehension which I discovered on a mountain coaster last winter when she wouldn't let me hit the brakes. 

 

Huge congrats to your little lady!

J.A. Ackley
J.A. Ackley Senior Editor
12/13/23 3:59 p.m.

Congrats! Now that's a father-daughter memory to treasure!

cyow5
cyow5 Reader
12/13/23 9:01 p.m.

Thanks, everyone!

 

@AxeHealey, if you are near a track you might be able to find someone willing to lend out a kart for a day, but otherwise you do have to kinda just jump in with both feet. We did start in a large parking lot, but that was after buying the (used) kart. We lucked out that a kid kart will fit in the back of an E91 wagon, so I didn't have to get the trailer until after I got my own kart. They let me go on track with her when there are no other kids, and she was able to go a lot on days she didn't have preschool, so the track was usually empty for the first few months. 

The upside of buying a used kart is they resell pretty well if you just try it out and find it isn't for her. I saw go for it though. The learning curve gets scarily steep once you jump up a level (see that other thread today about a 10yo being scouted by F1 and the kid who my daughter raced has an 11yo brother who raced in Europe this year for F1 prep), but kid kart is far more casual. 

triumph7
triumph7 HalfDork
12/13/23 10:47 p.m.
AxeHealey said:

That is so rad!! I was just telling my daughter (also 5) that I couldn't find indoor karts that would allow me to drive her around. She would totally love that but I think she would be too timid to hop in and drive herself. She has a serious love of speed once she gets over her initial apprehension which I discovered on a mountain coaster last winter when she wouldn't let me hit the brakes. 

 

Huge congrats to your little lady!

Full Throttle in Cincinnati has two seater karts.

Tom1200
Tom1200 PowerDork
12/13/23 11:00 p.m.

Congrats....... We had fun karting with my son.

jwagner (Forum Supporter)
jwagner (Forum Supporter) HalfDork
12/14/23 8:58 p.m.

Cool story, thanks.  My grandson is karting in a league at the local indoor track and sent a pic of his time on the top of the FTW (week) board, was pretty proud of himself. 

84FSP
84FSP UberDork
12/14/23 9:48 p.m.

Very cool - congratulations on breeding another petrol head!

rdcyclist
rdcyclist GRM+ Memberand HalfDork
12/14/23 10:53 p.m.

My son and I karted together for many years starting when he was 8. We had such a great time doing that and later in life he went back to racing karts and then Spec Miata. Crewing for him in all of his racing endevours was a high point of my relationship with him. He would've loved to see the picture of Zoey after the race.

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