Walking milestone age
Learning to walk | Pregnancy Birth and Baby
Learning to walk | Pregnancy Birth and Baby beginning of content5-minute read
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Key facts
- Babies usually start walking sometime between about 10 and 18 months old.
- Activities such as crawling and pulling themselves up to stand help your baby develop muscle strength and balance for walking.
- You can help your baby by providing a safe environment for early walking, giving lots of playtime and encouraging your baby to move around independently and experiment.
When will my baby learn to walk?
Walking for the first time is one of the many exciting and memorable milestones in your child's development. Your baby has been preparing to walk from an early age. Now all the rolling, sitting up, bottom shuffling, crawling, furniture cruising and standing culminates in your baby's newest adventure: first steps.
Babies usually start walking sometime between about 10 and 18 months old. Before walking, babies will usually have been crawling (between 7 and 12 months) and pulling themselves up to stand (usually between ages 9 and 12 months).
How does my baby develop walking skills?
To walk, your baby needs to have developed many skills, including balance, coordination, standing up and being able to shift their body weight from one leg to the other.
Each new skill your baby develops builds on the previous skills your baby has learnt. As your baby gets older, the skills they learn get more and more complex.
While your baby was busy crawling and pulling up to stand, then cruising between pieces of furniture, they were building muscle strength. They were also developing skills like balance and coordination, which are all needed for walking and, later, running.
Once your baby starts to walk, they continue this process. They may experiment with moving from the floor to standing then back down again. They may move from sitting to standing and back again, walking, and then squatting to play. All these activities also help strengthen their muscles and balance. They’ll keep on practicing and experimenting to improve their walking skills. They may walk in different directions, on different surfaces and while carrying large toys.
What can I do to help my baby learn to walk?
You can help most by providing a supporting physical and social setting and opportunities to practice walking.
Here are some general tips for helping your baby at this stage:
- Play together — being with or near your child when they explore helps them feel safe and builds their confidence.
- Encourage independent walking — being active and moving around builds your child's muscle strength and posture, which helps your child get better at walking and prepares them for running.
- You can start by positioning yourself about two metres from your baby and encouraging them to walk to you. Once they’ve achieved this you can increase the distance. You can encourage them to push a toy pram or trolley. Once they’re confident walking around, you can set up an obstacle course with soft cushions or foam shapes to walk over or around.
- Make your home safe — as your baby starts to move around the house more, keeping the area around them clear ensures there are no accidents and creates lots of opportunities to walk and explore.
Do not use a baby walker — these do not help your baby learn to walk and can actually delay development of walking skills. They also cause thousands of injuries every year in Australia.
When should I seek help?
If your baby is 18 months or older and isn't walking on their own yet, or if you're concerned about any areas of your baby's development, contact your child’s doctor or a child health nurse for advice.
Speak to a maternal child health nurse
Call Pregnancy, Birth and Baby to speak to a maternal child health nurse on 1800 882 436 or video call. Available 7am to midnight (AET), 7 days a week.
Sources:
NSW Government (Munch and Move Resource Manual Birth to Five Years), Government of Western Australia (Child development 1-2 years), Government of Western Australia (Child development 9-12 months), Government of South Australia (Child development 6- 9 months And Child development 9-12 months), Child and Adolescent Health Service (CAHS) (Learning to stand and walk - why babies don\u2019t need baby walkers)Learn more here about the development and quality assurance of healthdirect content.
Last reviewed: June 2022
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Related pages
- Learning to crawl
- Keeping baby safe
- Your baby’s growth and development – first 12 months
- Toddler development - motor skills
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When Your Baby Starts to Walk
Written by WebMD Editorial Contributors
In this Article
- How Babies Develop Walking Skills
- Ways to Help Your Baby Start Walking
- Baby Products for Walking
- What’s Next After Your Baby Starts Walking?
Your baby learning to walk can be some of the most exciting and memorable moments of parenthood. From a very young age, your baby strengthens their muscles, slowly preparing to take their first steps. Usually between 6 and 13 months, your baby will crawl. Between 9 and 12 months, they’ll pull themselves up. And between 8 and 18 months, they’ll walk for the first time.
How Babies Develop Walking Skills
Your baby will develop many skills, including balance, coordination, standing up and supporting their body weight from one leg to the other. Each new skill will build upon the previous skills, making them more prepared to start walking.
Watching your baby take their first steps on their own is an experience you'll never forget. When your baby does start walking, it happens in stages, which include these big milestones:
6 months. Babies start to sit up on their own.
6-9 months. Babies start crawling.
9 months. Babies begin to pull themselves up on furniture like the couch or coffee table, so they can stand.
9-12 months. Babies may start to stand up, hold onto furniture and explore the room.
11-13 months. During this exciting time, you can expect to see your baby start to walk on their own.
Keep in mind that each baby is different and may start walking earlier or later than when the experts deem is "normal". There can be a lot of variation among children's development, and that's totally normal.
If your baby is 18 months or older and hasn’t started walking yet, or if you’re concerned about your child’s development, contact your pediatrician. Watch out for these warning signs of late walkers:
- Your baby doesn't roll over in either direction or sit with help
- Your baby doesn't support some weight on legs
- Your baby doesn't try to attract your attention through their actions
- Your baby doesn’t try to talk or babble
- Your baby shows no interest in games of peekaboo
Ways to Help Your Baby Start Walking
To help your baby start walking, you can try the following tips:
Play together. When you’re around your baby, you can help them feel safer during playtime. That way, they're more comfortable exploring and have higher confidence.
Encourage moving. Moving around helps your baby build their muscles, which will help them when they start walking and eventually running. You can do this by kneeling in front of your baby, holding out your hands and encouraging them to come to you.
While toddlers are beginning to walk, it's normal for them to take a few spills, that's just a part of learning. While you can't save your baby from every fall, you can reduce the chance of injury.
You can help them by "baby-proofing" your home by making their space as safe as possible:
- Put locks on doors and cabinets to help keep your baby away from unsafe items like chemicals
- Pad sharp corners of furniture
- Install a child-proof gate to prevent your baby from going down the stairs
- Keep items like pots and pans on the back of your stovetop
Baby Products for Walking
Baby walkers. Medical professionals do not recommend using baby walkers. Because a walker makes it easy for your baby to get around, your baby’s leg muscles may not develop properly. Also, when a baby is propped up on a baby walker, it can be easier for them to get into things they normally wouldn’t be able to reach, like hot items or poisons that could be dangerous. This makes baby walkers even less safe.
Baby shoes. Hold off on buying baby shoes right away. Walking barefoot helps your child to develop improved balance and coordination. Wait until they start walking outside regularly until you introduce them to baby shoes.
What’s Next After Your Baby Starts Walking?
Your baby's first steps are only the beginning of an exciting new phase in their life. Here's what else you can expect as they become a toddler:
- 14 months: At this age, your toddler will likely be able to stand on their own, squat, stand back up, and maybe even walk backwards.
- 15 months: Your child will be pretty good at walking and will likely enjoy push-and-pull toys and exploring new things.
- 16 months: Your baby will start to show an interest in going up and down the stairs, although they will likely still look to you for help with this one.
- 18 months: By 18 months, your child will probably have the walking thing down and enjoy moving around on their own. They’ll probably enjoy climbing on furniture and dancing to music, too.
As your child gains more confidence and independence, it opens up all kinds of new opportunities. It’s an exciting time, so don't forget to enjoy it.
Hiking 2023: routes and prices for tours
Hiking 2023: routes and prices for tours | Hiking with Adventure ClubOnce a hiker, always a hiker! Getting used to hiking is irreversible - every traveler will tell you that. It remains only to fold the backpack, pick up a sleeping bag, condensed milk and cheesecake and go explore a new route.
Adventure Club instructors have developed hundreds of steep walking routes for all connoisseurs. Short and long, hardcore and for beginners with children, one-day and two-week, with an overnight stay in tents and songs with a guitar by the fire and in stately houses, in the forest, in the mountains, along rivers and lakes - a hiker of any level of training, age, family status and preferences will be able to find an adventure to their liking. That's the beauty of hiking - they are for everyone!
In the lap of nature, away from gaming computers and juicers with a USB connection, during moderate exertion and a well-deserved rest, everyone can return to their roots. Many say that walking is a kind of meditation, during which you can learn a lot of interesting things about yourself, the world and your place in it. It's most likely true! You will definitely begin to enjoy every moment of life!
Adventure awaits!
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On snowshoes to Morevskoe quarry
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One-day trip "Journey to the submarine through the farm and museum"
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Comfort-tour “Active weekend on the Volga” (bathhouse, swamp carpet)
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Moscow box: a trip to the village of Fedoskino
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Paanajärvi National Park » Route 6 — Mount Kivakka (on foot)
The route is designed for people of different ages and different levels of training. The exception is people who, for medical reasons, are contraindicated in physical activity. Return route.
Arrangement and equipment of the route: at the beginning of the route - an entrance information stand, a parking lot, a gazebo, a fire pit, a woodshed, a toilet, a garbage container; on the route - kilometer posts, wooden decks in damp places, bridges over streams, stairs, ribbons on trees, benches, full houses with information in two languages, signs.
- Route length one way – 5 km;
- Estimated travel time - 4 hours;
- Way of movement of visitors along the route - on foot;
- Seasonality of route use - June - September;
- The maximum number of visitors on the route is 4 groups per day, 15 people per group.
Brief description of the route
The route starts from the dirt road. It is laid along the western (most gentle) slope of Kivakka.
After 200 m, the route crosses the Palojoki River, which flows out of Lake Kivakkalampi, goes around the Kivakka rock massif from the south and flows into Lake Pyaozero. During the ascent, there is a change of vegetation from taiga to birch crooked forest and mountain tundra on the top of the mountain.
Mount Kivakka is distinguished by the presence of "hanging" swamps and high-altitude lakes.
On the mountain there are trees with a flag-shaped crown: the branches on them grow only from the east side due to the prevailing westerly winds. On Kivakka there is the largest number of sanctuaries (clusters of seids). Seid is a place of worship for the first inhabitants of these places - the Sami.
Not far from the top of the mountain there is a huge seid, resembling the head of an old woman. Maybe he gave the basis for the name, because the word "kivakka" in translation from Sami means "stone guardian".
The top of the mountain is decorated with small lakes formed in tectonic faults. They are an interesting object of study for hydrobiologists and ichthyologists.
From the top of the mountain, there is a magnificent view of Lake Pyaozero, the rapids of Kivakkakoski, the peak of the highest mountain in Karelia, Nuorunen (576.7 m), and in clear weather, the mountain peaks on the Finnish side are very clearly visible.
Requirement to stay on the route
- The route is marked with red and blue ribbons;
- Tourists are instructed before going on the route. Movement along routes according to the rules of the park;
- Movement within the park strictly according to the route agreed with the administration. Changes are allowed only in case of emergency;
- It is necessary to move strictly along the path, as trampling is detrimental to many plants;
- It is forbidden to litter on the route;
- Campfires are allowed only in specially equipped places;
- Fishing only with permits and in designated areas;
- Picking flowers, cutting down trees is prohibited;
- All hunting is prohibited;
- It is forbidden to damage monuments of nature, history and culture, full houses and information signs, to harvest firewood;
- In rainy weather in summer appropriate clothing is required;
- Movement on the top of the mountain strictly along the paths;
- It is forbidden to create and destroy stone sculptures on the top of the mountain.