Go Bounce trampoline park
<p>The 8th generation of the Dinesen family at Kragerup Gods, Birgitte Dinesen, tells the story of Kragerup Go Bounce:</p>
<p>“In 2019, the climbing park Kragerup Go High turned 10 years old, and I thought the activity park needed something new. So I googled ‘fun and games in the trees’ and ended up on a Welsh website.”</p>
<p>“On my birthday, January 12, 2018, my daughter Regitze, Event Manager Simon, Jon Eriksen from Rope Reach and I went to Wales. Here we visited Zip World Forrest in the beautiful Snowdonia National Park.”</p>
<p>“‘The best idea in the world’, I quickly concluded and tried out the net trampoline park myself and then took an XL jump with free fall, which Kragerup Gods has now also been enriched with.”</p>
<p>“When we got home, we immediately started planning. Rope Reach and Kragerup were going to do the job together. The challenge was that none of us had done anything like this before.”</p>
<p>“We were going to make net boxes connected to running boards, but none of us knew much about nets. Jon therefore contacted old fishermen in Thyborøn who were able to teach us the old fishing craft of tackle and net tying. After 4 months of work, we were ready to open Denmark’s first trampoline park on May 31, 2019.”</p>
<p>“The long net passages lead you over lake and water to a universe of 7 net boxes 2-8 meters up in the treetops. There are also tarzan ropes, net slides and two platforms where you can take a break, play games and tie knots. The net boxes give the experience of jumping on a trampoline and are fun exercise and a challenge for the motor skills.”</p>
<p>“With Kragerup Go Bounce, the activity park has added another new attraction to its wide range of activities in nature where everyone can be active and have fun.”</p>
<p>“I wish you a lot of fun and ask you to be considerate of each other – big and small.”</p>
<p>The picture shows 9th generation Regitze Dinesen trying out the net meshes herself shortly before the opening in May 2019.</p>
Go Bounce trampoline park
<p>The 8th generation of the Dinesen family at Kragerup Gods, Birgitte Dinesen, tells the story of Kragerup Go Bounce:</p>
<p>“In 2019, the climbing park Kragerup Go High turned 10 years old, and I thought the activity park needed something new. So I googled ‘fun and games in the trees’ and ended up on a Welsh website.”</p>
<p>“On my birthday, January 12, 2018, my daughter Regitze, Event Manager Simon, Jon Eriksen from Rope Reach and I went to Wales. Here we visited Zip World Forrest in the beautiful Snowdonia National Park.”</p>
<p>“‘The best idea in the world’, I quickly concluded and tried out the net trampoline park myself and then took an XL jump with free fall, which Kragerup Gods has now also been enriched with.”</p>
<p>“When we got home, we immediately started planning. Rope Reach and Kragerup were going to do the job together. The challenge was that none of us had done anything like this before.”</p>
<p>“We were going to make net boxes connected to running boards, but none of us knew much about nets. Jon therefore contacted old fishermen in Thyborøn who were able to teach us the old fishing craft of tackle and net tying. After 4 months of work, we were ready to open Denmark’s first trampoline park on May 31, 2019.”</p>
<p>“The long net passages lead you over lake and water to a universe of 7 net boxes 2-8 meters up in the treetops. There are also tarzan ropes, net slides and two platforms where you can take a break, play games and tie knots. The net boxes give the experience of jumping on a trampoline and are fun exercise and a challenge for the motor skills.”</p>
<p>“With Kragerup Go Bounce, the activity park has added another new attraction to its wide range of activities in nature where everyone can be active and have fun.”</p>
<p>“I wish you a lot of fun and ask you to be considerate of each other – big and small.”</p>
<p>The picture shows 9th generation Regitze Dinesen trying out the net meshes herself shortly before the opening in May 2019.</p>