Thank you for being interested in the No1. adventure park in Croatia. We are open every day from 9.00 to 17.00. If you wish to climb then please arrive before 15.00. The best experience is had by those who arrive in the morning, this is a very big park and most people are here a minimum of 4 hours. We are extremely safe and a wonderful experience will be had by all. Occasionally we are not in the park during working hours, please just call 00385 91 896 4525 and we will be with you in minutes. See you here :-)
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Rome wasn't build in a day
During 2009 Nevenko
and Nigel were given the idea of building a high ropes course on land just up
from Nevenko’s house by a German couple who were staying in Nigel’s
accommodation.Once the rental season was over
then Nevenko Bulić and Nigel
Simpson (plus Nevenko’s son Marko),
traveled to Wales and England experiencing
the very best parks available.
Thanks to these parks for the photos/videos
which we used to make our original compilation video.It was our aim to combine all
the very best experiences and place them all here in Glavani village in
the council of Barban, Istria for your adventure and enjoyment.We wanted to supply the very
best in excitement, leisure and relaxation and we wish to feed and refresh you
with our excellent
local food, wines, rakias all produced naturally.We returned to Istria full of
plans and ideas! It was November 2009 and we set our sights on opening for June
2011.
In December 2009 we had our
architect design the park on our, already, urbanized land. Later in December
the Barban council
told us how excited they were by our plans and we put in for permission to
expand our urbanized land and to change all the other land into "sports and
recreation” land which will enable us to expand in the future.The real
work begins!
The outlying land, currently
registered as woodland, measures about 4 hectares, 10 acres, in total. We
immediately started clearing all the scrub leaving the healthier and larger
trees so that they can grow and in the future provide much needed shade, a
haven for the birdlife, and to conserve the natural woodland.The land had huge piles of
limestone rock on it and we spent days crushing this to use for roadways and
pathways.
We needed the rock to be very dry for this and the wind had to be in
the right direction to avoid covering the local village in dust! So we had to
wait for the right times to crush.We were fortunate then to
have a rock crushing
machine (we later scrapped this to help pay for further
construction of the park 2012), large diggers, front-loaders (JCB) and a large
lorry. Huge amounts of work could be done by us which would normally have cost
a great deal. Because we have so much land we also had a supply of materials
which would normally have increased our outlay substantially.We were given well over 1000
small juniper trees in a nearby village which we were asked to remove as it is
registered building land. We were busy sawing these down in the winter
2010(leaving the nicer trees and different varieties for future landscaping)
and, after cleaning the bark off the stems, we had plenty of posts to use for
all the fencing we required. This was a very laborious process but – better
than paying for it!We also cut down 9 large oak
trees which we took to the sawmill to make into planks.
This we seasoned for
the spring and summer before being used to build the platforms for the high
ropes games and for other purposes around the park. The logs from all the
branches were used for a variety of purposes too. We have kept some 4 metre
long 30 cm diameter branches for use as benches, posts, and carpentry. The sawn
logs will be used for heating and for the barbecue which we plan to have for
evening cooking for park guests.
Rain
Of course, sometimes it rains
and we have to continue working. So we have a workshop with carpentry machines
ready to make the childrens rides, climbing frames, tables, and so on…We started with some simple
animals which are now on large springs so that the children bounce and wobble
much to their parents delight.During 2010 we found
a family who had some very big pine trees in their garden which they wanted
removing for safety reasons and in order to build a house there in the future.
We cut these down ourselves and got them ready for transport.We soon realized that the standard straight lorry of the
length required to transport the (upto) 20m pine trees for the posts would not
be able to approach or move about on the land where the trees lay. We had to
convert a large trailer to fit behind the lorry which we already had. This was
the only way to take such long cargo back to the adventure park site.Fortunately, we had only a very small
distance to travel and we were able to stop traffic at both ends of our journey
so that the transporting was carried out very safely. We were able to load,
transport and unload all the 32 trees in just 2 days.Talk about
needing a lift!
All the posts were up and
looking very high by the October of 2010! The team of constructors were going
to be coming to Istria to put up all the platforms, wires and games in the next
couple of weeks and we needed a way of getting them up the posts with the heavy
oak planks! Usually, on trees, they are happy to climb with ropes and do all
the work in their harnesses, however, these "trees” have no branches, no rough
bark, are smoother with the preservative and the oak is definitely a lot
heavier than the fir wood they are used to using.So, as is usual for Nevenko and Nigel, it was agreed
to build a "lifting platform”.
It had to be a lot cheaper than having to hire
one, we thought, plus we would be able to use it again and again in the future!Of course, Nevenko, the
engineer, knew how to make it and as time went on the plan got even better as
we could put the platform on the back of the old lorry he still had. And, the
hydraulic piston on the lorry could lift one half of the platform whilst the
second piston he had in his garage could be used to lift the second half.So all the steel required was
bought in Pula along
with two lifting motors and work began.The welding of the two six
metre long "arms” and of the "platform” was very quick and efficient.
Two coats
of paint were applied. The lorry was brought back to life and driven close to
the electric point as soon as the container was removed. We had a week to go
before the arrival of Charles and his workers, the constructors of the high
ropes and games for our "Glavani Park.”And then the problems began.
Actually there was only one problem but it was a big one. The second piston
half way up the lifting platform required the steelwork to be immensely strong
and the angles very precise. When the platform was brought down in order for us
to move the lorry from post to post we needed an angle of approx 30 degrees
between the arms. When fully extended the angle is, of course, 180 degrees.
This is a large arc for one piston and presented a big challenge.The team arrived and started
preparing and cutting all the oak planks into the 33 platforms, they cut up
loads of the juniper we had earmarked for the fencing to use them for games,
they prepared and cut all the lengths of wires for the games and zip wires.All the time Nevenko and Nigel worked
on the lifting platform. Unfortunately the team became ready for the platform
before the correct strength and lifting angles had been successfully found! The
team returned to their homes in Montenegro and would return once we succeeded.
Perseverance
brings success!
It took ten days of extreme
determination and a conviction that we would succeed to finally get this
lifting platform to pass the tests we had set it in order to allow the team to
use it. Please watch the video to understand the scale of the challenge. The
final maximum height of the platform is nearly 14 metres, over 40foot!Up we go!
Charles and
his team returned from Montenegro one week later, witnessed first hand the
stringent tests we applied for the lifting platform, agreed that they would use
it for their assembling of the platforms and started!Unfortunately the weather was
atrocious for the first two days with seemingly never ending rain but we all
worked through it.
Maybe the resulting mud for the next five days was even
worse!Little more can be said
except for a huge thanks to Charles and his hard-working Montenegrin employees.
All the wires and platforms were erected within the "spider’s web” construction
area within the week and we even got to put up the tower posts either end of
the line of olives so that when Charles returned in the new year we could
construct the huge towers and suspend the 113 metre zip line between them,
stretched over the top of the olives!
So Nigel, for the new year
was hard at work cutting more oak planks for these platforms and Nevenko was
busy clearing all the land of machines, stored (for years) materials and
leveling the "mud” so that, once the land dried, we could landscape the park,
fence off all the areas for safety and security and, once we had insurance and
"European standards Certificate” we could start to "use” our park!We also had to erect our
first fence around the 2 metre high platforms area where the steps up to the
higher platforms were also found.
We would use "the church of st. germany”, our
entrance gate constructed by our German friends, as part of this fence. This
finally was taken down in September 2014 as it had become "ugly” and out of
place but we will never forget that it was because of our German friend that the
park existed!
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