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Bounce house recommendations
I am on the neighborhood committee that is working on our August community day which will have some free activities. This year we have some money that has been donated and we are deciding what to do with it. The donation was unexpected and there is no way to tell if it will repeat in the future.
One idea is to buy a bounce house. I have seen some on Amazon for around $250 and I know people that have bought them for their kids birthday parties because it seems more MM than renting.
We have one quote to rent and it is $300 for the day but it will be bigger and sturdier allowing more kids at one time. Plus I think it comes with a person to set it up and monitor it.
We don't have a ton of kids in the neighborhood and most are pretty young. I wouldn't think more than 10 kids total would be bouncing or in line at any one time so I think we could be ok with buying something smaller scale that doesn't fit a ton of kids.
For reference our other activities that kids will do include: face painting, lawn games, bingo with prizes, a dj, and possibly a craft area.
Does anyone have a bounce house recommendation for purchase? Or other ideas on what we might want to spend a few hundred on to enhance the day?
Re: Bounce house recommendations
And yes, I know it's been like this for awhile. Only in America....:(
-Liability is a concern and would be the major blocker to doing this. Possibly to renting as well because I haven't see enough evidence (in my limited looking so far) that our local rental places are properly insured...and then there is always the issue of the suing party going after our group anyway. Anyway, I'm looking into this because yes it is a concern on both the buying and renting options.
-It would be owned by the neighborhood group and stored in our building which is only accessible by the person with the key (the president). Electricity comes with the building and wouldn't be an issue because it can be run to the grassy area outside of the building.
-Only the group would use it at our limited events. If it became damaged or unusable then that would be the end of it, but that isn't a huge concern because whatever we spend the money on will likely have a limited life span anyway....such as an alternate form of entertainment that can only be used one time. But assuming the other potential issues are solved for, the best case scenario is we get a few years of use out of it.
@mommyliberty5013 how big/what ages are your kids? Would you say 3-4 little kids at once is the limit for your size house?
I don't know if I've ever mentioned this here, but my wife is from Bangkok, Thailand. When we went over to visit, there's a pedestrian walkway just outside where her parents live. Right next to the side of the walkway, there's a huge bundle of what look to be electrical cables running down the street.
I asked her how somebody doesn't do something about that. Especially with kids going up and down the stairs. Like wouldn't somebody sue over that? She told me the courts would laugh you out of there for being stupid and wouldn't even allow you to file the case.
Depending on the size of the bounce house, my friend rented a good sized one for a Superbowl party and...let me tell you...there were a lot of adult guests jumping around in it also. Myself included, lol.
On the subject of lawsuits, my property insurance agent told me that more and more insurance companies are refusing to insure homes that have a broken up/damaged sidewalk in front of the house. In our city (and I think most), the sidewalk is city property and their responsibility. It has zero to do with the homeowner. But, that has not stopped many lawsuits from being filed from people tripping over a sidewalk. They'll include the homeowner and their insurance carrier for the house that is closest to that part of the sidewalk.
It is rare the damaged party is ever awarded anything to be paid by the homeowner/insurance in these cases (according to my agent). But that doesn't mean people don't try, which forces the insurance company to use their and/or hire attorneys to fight it.