- A bounce house needs an air blower for continuous airflow.
- Check that floors are big enough and strong enough to handle your party.
- Party requirements: parental supervision, consideration to inflatable bounce house capacities, and 1,000 pit balls.
- Parties are planned weeks in advance with no weather guarantees. Outdoor ball pit parties have few restrictions; parties moved indoors or into garages can be restricted by the dimensions of the commercial ball pit.
- Keep the food light; serve food after the children have played hard. Tummies filled with hot dogs, baked beans, greasy chips, and carbonated drinks can be a disaster in a ball pit or inflatable bouncer.
- Balls create the fun. Fill the bottom of an inflatable water slide with colorful balls for a fun-filled landing. Make a ball pit for tiny tots using an inflatable pool.
- Planning a theme party? Castle bounce houses, sports bounce houses, and Disney bounce houses are party favorites.
- Allow playtimes by age groups. All preschool kids care about is being in motion. For school-age children, throw a rubber duck and a few other small, lightweight toys into the ball pit and have a scavenger hunt. Teenagers will turn the ball pit into a bombardment of colored balls shot at one another.
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And, if at the end of the party your inner child is aching to escape into the ball pit, surrender, and find out what the fun is all about.
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