![]() Don’t forget we were there during Kid FreeFall- there were so many younger kids and toddlers there jumping AND crawling, I was having trouble finding why she seemed to have singled out my son. She again told me, “If he can’t stand, he can’t do anything in the park.” I again told her this was all okay with the owner and she said, “well I guess then he can stay and that’s fine, I guess it’s fine.” By this time, my heart had sunk, the joyful time I was having with my son vanished. I was so taken back by her question and replied, “Because he can’t.” She then told me, ”Well, if he can’t stand then there’s really nothing in the park for him to do.” I went on to tell her we were there for his birthday party, and I had talked about his condition with the owner, and he said it would not be a problem. About 20 minutes into the party an attendant came over to me and asked me why my son was not standing. I was so happy seeing the smile on his face and hearing his screams of excitement and giggles as he went up and down. We started going from section to section in the park with me helping him walk and jump and he was having a blast. When I booked the party with the owner – he stated this would be the best time (Kid FreeFall) to come with him so he could have the best experience and told me it would be no problem to have my son “walking” & “jumping” on his knees on the trampolines or me helping him jump. ![]() My son has special needs secondary to a traumatic brain injury and cannot stand or walk without assistance from someone or his walker. ![]() We booked his party during “Kid FreeFall” hours- meaning the park was only open to children 6 years and younger and they could have one adult accompany them while they jumped. We checked in, his guests arrived, and it was time to start jumping. I was looking forward to it for weeks and my son was so excited to be celebrating the day with his friends, he would talk about it every night before bed. Saturday was my son’s 5th birthday party at FreeFall in Bethlehem, PA. You crushed a 5 year old congratulations Freefall. ![]() My daughter did not understand why she wasn't allowed in the space she has ALWAYS jumped the past year! Either enforce the rules consistently or be quiet. I will never step foot in this place again and will take my business to Urban Air where there is plenty more activities and kids can jump together. We always jump with her and I was actively jumping with her when all these Employees started harassing us. Employees have never given us a hard time with allowing her to jump with her peers or cousins. We have been there many times with family and friends and my daughter has always jumped in the regular section in the afternoon on the weekends (NOT during their kid hours or whatever they kept telling me). Except according to staff and owner they wanted them to go jump together in the dodgeball court where there were much bigger kids and a lot of kids actively playing dodgeball so not sure how that was a solution. So they went over to the other side and my daughter wasn't allowed there. First the girls were in the younger section and my daughters friend wasn't allowed there because she was too tall. My 5 year old her 5 year old friend and I were harassed the moment we got there. If you want to consider it, head over to our free fall with air resistance calculator.Don't bother coming here if your kiddo has friends a little taller. In this free fall calculator, we neglect the influence of air resistance. According to Newton's first law, at that point, the falling body stops accelerating and moves at a constant speed. At some point, the two forces become equal in magnitude. However, the force of air resistance increases with increasing free fall speed. What is the terminal velocity? As you have seen above, the free-fall acceleration is constant, which means that the gravitational force acting on an object is constant, too. In reality, though, a falling object's velocity is constrained by a value called the terminal velocity. Without the effect of air resistance, each object in free fall would keep accelerating by 9.80665 m/s (approximately equal to 32.17405 ft/s) every second. g g g – Free fall acceleration (expressed in m/s² or ft/s²). ![]()
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