@neverbeenalone We switched at 15 months. And we’ll do it again with our second. Our choice was partially based in a desire to do it slowly and gently, rather than in a panic after she climbed out. We had zero issues with the transition. We spent a week role playing with the bed, talking about it, cuddling and reading stories in it but still having her sleep in the crib, etc. She got excited about it and did totally fine. We couldn’t have done that as gently and specifically chosen during a time where she was emotionally happy and not dealing with other issues if we had waited until it was an emergency. Also, transitions are a lot easier at 1, when they kind of just go “oh, this is what we do now,” than at 2 or 3, when everything is a battle of the wills. Waiting until she inevitably tried to climb out at 2 seemed pointless. Whenever people say “we waited until 3.5 and it was still disastrous,” I’m like… maybe it wasn’t “still” disastrous, maybe it was disastrous BECAUSE you waited.
I don’t really get the “crib till college” mentality. I like giving my kids more freedom and independence. My toddler is now 3 and I can’t even fathom the idea of lifting her into a crib. I don’t really see what the point is either - she’s still confined to her room, so it doesn’t make bedtime or nap time any more of a battle, it just gives her more freedom to get up and play in the morning. On days that she’s going to fight a nap, she could do it just as well in a crib haha. She’s had days where she’s ran to the door or fallen asleep on her play mat, yes, but she’s been 100% fine and is 100% the exact same sleeper she was before we transitioned.
From a safety perspective the 35 inch limit isn’t just about climbing, it’s also about tipping over accidentally. It especially makes me nervous when people talk about all the crazy lengths they go through to keep them from climbing - that really just makes the attempts to climb more dangerous. You’re also technically not supposed to ever have blankets or pillows or toys in a crib, that’s supposed to be introduced only once they’re in an un-enclosed bed - but nobody seems to follow that safe sleep rule either. And in terms of baby proofing, it seems much safer to put in the effort and babyproof, rather than just leaving the room hazardous and hoping that your kid doesn’t climb out one night and suddenly access it all.