How Bobbejaanland warned guests about maximum weight
After controversy over scales at water attractions, Bobbejaanland stressed that guests would only be weighed when staff had doubts. Bootvaart remained one of the four rides covered by the measure.
More context
Ten days after the first report about scales at water attractions, Bobbejaanland was back in the news. Looopings showed how the park warned guests about maximum weights, using a prominent sign in the station of Indiana River. The earlier story had sparked international attention, prompting the park to explain the purpose of the measure more clearly.
A spokesperson stressed that Bobbejaanland did not intend to weigh everyone. Checks would only happen when staff had doubts about whether the weight limit of a boat had been exceeded. According to the park, the reason was purely safety. The policy still applied to four water attractions: Indiana River, El Rio, Bootvaart and Wildwaterbaan.
For Bootvaart, that matters because the ride is known as a quiet boat trip. The news shows that even a gentle attraction can be part of the same technical and operational safety framework as larger water rides. Nothing about the story or scenery changed, but an extra, visible layer of safety was added around the way the boats were operated.
The article also placed the issue in a wider context. Sister park Slagharen had installed scales at several water park attractions as well. That made clear this was not just a one-off local decision, but part of a broader policy within the park group.