I'm sure your DD will love L2 and do great! You'll have many great memories from watching her.
We tried a gym that competes L3, but are back at one that doesn't compete until L5. My DD is almost 4. We chose not to go to that gym because I didn't want her to compete.
To the dad that regrets not having his DD compete L3, she may be better off. In my experience of watching girls come up through the levels (husband is a coach), it doesn't matter where you start. It will have nothing to do with her being successful in gymnastics. Having waited may be to her advantage. A lot of the little ones who are 8 like your DD and have competed for 4 years are burnt out by age 8. Competing and training routines gets tedious and burns out kids. Not all of them, but a great majority. That is why we decided to not have our DD compete so young. I'd rather her have fun and come to the gym without worrying about competing. I also think 4 is too young to make such a committment. Just another opinion.
We tried a gym that competes L3, but are back at one that doesn't compete until L5. My DD is almost 4. We chose not to go to that gym because I didn't want her to compete.
To the dad that regrets not having his DD compete L3, she may be better off. In my experience of watching girls come up through the levels (husband is a coach), it doesn't matter where you start. It will have nothing to do with her being successful in gymnastics. Having waited may be to her advantage. A lot of the little ones who are 8 like your DD and have competed for 4 years are burnt out by age 8. Competing and training routines gets tedious and burns out kids. Not all of them, but a great majority. That is why we decided to not have our DD compete so young. I'd rather her have fun and come to the gym without worrying about competing. I also think 4 is too young to make such a committment. Just another opinion.