Bazsites.com Trampolines
Directory Topics
On the Web
- All About Trampolines - A comprehensive resource containing information about the sport of trampolining and buying a trampoline.
- Night Flyers Trampoline Club - Nottingham based competitive trampolining club catering mainly for children and teens. Club information, competitions, calendar, news, photographs, and trampolining.
- Find A Sport - Trampolining - Children's site giving an introduction to the sport of trampolining and what it is all about.
- Trampolin Ruck - Das Unternehmen vertreibt Gartentrampoline, Mini-Trampoline, Therapietrampoline, Reboundere und Bouncer und stellt die Produkt- und Dienstleistungspalette vor.
- Trampoline City - They offer a range of trampolines, including water trampolines.
- DT Trampolines - Providing the public and the entertainment industry with trampolines, trampoline parts, mats and pads for over 20 yeasrs.
- Gymnastics Australia - Trampoline Sports - Official Australian Gymnastics trampoline and tumbling page, with details on the sport in general, events and results, management committee and technical information.
- Trampoline - Trampoline sales and parts. Including mats, pads, and springs.
- Super-Fun Trampolines - Offers a variety of sizes, as well as parts.
- Super Tramp Trampolines - The UK's leading supplier of trampolines and accessories.
Wikipedia Articles
- Attractive nuisance doctrine - ... by a hazardous object or condition on the land that is likely to attract children, who are unable to appreciate the risk posed by the object or condition. The doctrine has been applied to hold landowners liable for injuries caused by abandoned cars, piles of lumber or sand, trampolines, and swimming pools.
- David Ross (trampolinist) - David Ross (born April 30, 1950) is a Canadian trampolining coach and manufacturer of trampolines and trampoline equipment. Ross is probably the person most responsible for Canadian trampolinists becoming competitive on the international scene.
- Ladder (computer game) - Ladder is a clone of Donkey Kong, written for the CP/M operating system. Since the screens on these computers only accept text characters and not rendered graphics, the game uses letters, numbers, and symbols lined up to create walls and platforms, pits/traps, characters, trampolines and goals.