REVIEW · SALOU
Bosc Aventura Salou: Explorer Pack
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Bosc Aventura Salou · Bookable on GetYourGuide
A kid-sized thrill, minus the guesswork. The Bosc Aventura Salou Explorer Pack is built for young adventurers, with a safety-first warm-up and then short, fun runs that work well for ages 3 to 6. Two things I really like are the chance to practice the harness system one at a time, and the way the zip-line portion is designed around quick, repeatable tries.
The main thing to think about is pacing. The session is only valid for 1 hour, and one review note says it can feel like it moves a bit fast for smaller kids. Also, plan on having the adult requirement handled up front—at least one adult needs to stay on the ground with the child.
In This Review
- Key takeaways before you go
- Where Bosc Aventura Salou Fits in Your Family Plan
- The Safety Harness Warm-Up: Practice Before You Fly
- Salou City-Center Zip Line: The Green Course for Ages 3–6
- Trampoline Park Time: The 14-Trampoline Course
- Mini Golf, Archery, and the Crazy Jump: Pick Your Extra
- Instructor-Led Guidance and Languages You’ll Actually Use
- Price and Value: What $24 Covers for Families
- Who This Fits Best (And Who Might Feel Frustrated)
- Practical Tips to Get the Best Hour Possible
- Should You Book the Explorer Pack for Salou?
Key takeaways before you go
- Green-level zip lines are the focus, with 2 ziplines and two times per person
- Harness training first, so kids (and you) aren’t thrown into gear without practice
- 14-trampoline course time to burn off the wiggles right after zipping
- Optional add-ons like mini golf and archery, plus the Crazy Jump
- Instructors speak Spanish, French, English, Russian, and Catalan for easier safety guidance
- $24 per person for an instructor-led, structured hour (value comes from the coaching, not just the rides)
Where Bosc Aventura Salou Fits in Your Family Plan

Bosc Aventura Salou Explorer Pack is the kind of family activity that works when you want something active without turning your day into a logistics puzzle. You’re in Catalonia, Spain, and the zip line is described as being in Salou’s city center, which matters. It’s easier to plug into a day in town than if you had to travel far outside the area.
This pack also has a smart “kid-first” vibe. It’s aimed at very young flyers—3 to 6 years old—so the structure leans toward comfort and short bursts rather than long, intimidating runs. You’ll start with instructor-led safety practice, then move into the green level zip line portion, and finish with trampoline bouncing.
You’ll also see the business model behind the fun: you pay only for activities you want to participate in. That’s a win if you’re traveling with kids who get excited, then tired, then excited again. It lets you avoid paying for every single attraction if your child isn’t in the mood.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Salou.
The Safety Harness Warm-Up: Practice Before You Fly

The experience is divided into two activities, and the first part is a big deal: an instructor shows you how to manage the safety harness, gives quick training, and helps kids get used to the carabiner system. The key detail is that training happens one at a time. That gives you a calmer rhythm. It also helps the instructor spot who’s ready and who needs a little extra explanation.
If you’re a parent, I think this part is where the value really lives. A zip line isn’t just about adrenaline—it’s about how confidently your child can do the basic steps while staying calm. When the session starts with hands-on harness practice, you’re less likely to feel like you’re rushing from zero to high excitement.
Instructors are listed as speaking Spanish, French, English, Russian, and Catalan, so you’re not stuck guessing what a safety instruction means. And because you’re learning the system together, you’ll feel more in control—especially if your kid is nervous at first.
Tip for parents: dress your child in comfortable clothes and closed-toe shoes. This isn’t just a rule; it makes the harness setup and movement more comfortable for little legs and feet.
Salou City-Center Zip Line: The Green Course for Ages 3–6

Once the training is done, you move to the green level. This is the “starter” setup on the course and it includes two ziplines. The structure is kid-friendly: each person gets two times per person during this green section, which is basically your built-in chance for a first try that doesn’t feel like pressure.
The city-center element is also worth noting. Being in Salou’s city core can make this feel less like a remote theme-park mission and more like a simple, nearby activity you can fit around meals and rest time. That matters with toddlers who don’t always want long drives.
One review highlights that a child got to go around the zip line part twice, and they loved it. That lines up with the “two times per person” detail in the info. So if your kid needs repetition to feel confident, this format is a good match.
One consideration: because the whole pack is built into a 1-hour window, you might feel like you’re moving from harness setup to zip line to trampoline pretty quickly. If your child is shy, plan to arrive ready to settle fast. The better the start, the less likely the timing will feel like it’s skipping ahead.
Trampoline Park Time: The 14-Trampoline Course

After the zip line portion, the focus shifts to pure bouncing: the 14-trampoline course. This is the part that’s great for energy release. If your child has that “I’m excited and I need to move” personality, the trampoline section becomes the perfect payoff.
It also adds a practical benefit. Zip lines work for thrill in a narrow window; trampolines give you a longer physical outlet. In kids’ terms, it’s the same day’s story with different chapters: zip line for the thrill moment, trampoline for the keep going moment.
A review described a 4-year-old bouncing and having fun, which fits the idea that the trampoline course is meant for this young age range. The result is that even if the zip line is the main highlight, you still have a big energy outlet right after—so you’re not left waiting for the fun to start again.
And here’s the parent-friendly angle: trampolines are the kind of activity that often feels easier to understand from watching others. If you’re on the sidelines, you can usually tell quickly how to take turns and what the rules feel like once you see it in motion.
Mini Golf, Archery, and the Crazy Jump: Pick Your Extra
The Explorer Pack isn’t just “zip line then trampolines and done.” The highlights mention that you can bring the whole family along for mini golf and archery, and there’s also a Crazy Jump to check out.
What this means for you: you can build your hour around what your family likes best. If one child is all about climbing and launching, you’ll probably lean trampoline-heavy. If another family member wants something steadier and skill-based, mini golf or archery can balance the energy level.
The big advantage is choice. The experience description says you should feel good paying only for activities you want to participate in, and leaving the rest for someone else. That is exactly how you keep family outings from turning into wasted tickets.
A small caution from real-world experience: one unhappy review points to a ticketing mismatch—someone ended up buying extra tickets even though only one child was the real participant. That’s why I’d recommend you double-check your booking details before you go, especially if pricing treats adults and children differently. And remember: at least one adult has to be with the kid from the ground.
Instructor-Led Guidance and Languages You’ll Actually Use
One reason families feel safe here is the coaching style: an instructor is included for most activities. That’s not just a nice-to-have. When safety equipment is involved, clear guidance beats guesswork.
The listed languages—Spanish, French, English, Russian, Catalan—also matter more than you’d think. For young children, a calm explanation in the right language helps the harness practice and the transition to the course. Even if your child doesn’t understand every word, they can usually pick up the tone and the steps.
A review praised staff as friendly and knowledgeable, with a positive experience around the zip line portion and the trampoline bounce. That lines up with what the info promises: you’re not just buying access to a course; you’re getting support to use it.
For you, that means less time trying to decode instructions while managing a kid who’s doing their best to stay brave. And it often means fewer hesitations when it’s time to get harnessed and go one at a time.
Price and Value: What $24 Covers for Families
At $24 per person, the Explorer Pack feels positioned for short attention spans and “do one activity well” days. It’s not a giant all-day attraction, and that’s part of the value logic. You’re paying for an organized hour with instruction, not for an all-day pass.
Here’s what you’re really buying:
- Instructor support for most activities
- Structured safety training before zip lining
- A clear sequence: harness practice → green zip lines → trampoline course
- Optional extras like mini golf and archery if your family wants them
In other words, the price isn’t just about “time in a venue.” It’s about getting your child set up and supervised while doing activity that can otherwise feel intimidating.
Is it perfect value? Only if your child is within the target range and enjoys the active format. If you’ve got older kids who want bigger thrills or longer sessions, this one might feel short. But for the 3–6 age group, the short, repeatable structure plus the trampoline payoff is exactly the kind of compromise that works.
Who This Fits Best (And Who Might Feel Frustrated)

This is strongest for:
- Families with kids aged 3 to 6
- Parents who want a structured, instructor-led activity rather than “figure it out” fun
- Groups where you want at least one physical, high-energy outlet (the trampoline part does that)
It may be less ideal if:
- Your child needs a lot of time to warm up and you’re stressed about the pace of a 1-hour window
- You’re expecting a long, immersive adventure—this pack is more focused and time-boxed
- You use a wheelchair. The info says it’s not suitable for wheelchair users, so you’ll need to look for another option
Also, keep the adult involvement in mind. Since at least one adult needs to be with the kid from the ground, make sure you can realistically handle that during the session. If you’re traveling with a single adult and multiple very young kids, you’ll want to plan carefully.
Practical Tips to Get the Best Hour Possible
A one-hour activity can either feel smooth or feel rushed. These small choices help you land on smooth.
- Wear comfortable clothes that let your child move freely for harness time and bouncing.
- Use closed-toe shoes. It makes everything safer and more comfortable.
- Arrive ready for quick transitions. Harness practice starts the momentum.
- Decide your priorities early. If you think your child will prefer bouncing, you can treat the zip lines as the “brave moment,” then enjoy trampoline time more fully.
- Bring patience for repetition. Green-level zip lining is designed for short tries, and repetition is how little kids get confident.
And if your family is mixing ages, remember that mini golf and archery are listed as options. That can help keep everyone engaged even if one kid is less interested in the trampoline at a certain moment.
Should You Book the Explorer Pack for Salou?
I’d book this if you want an age-appropriate, instructor-led thrill for small kids and you like the idea of getting the main highlights in a tight time window. The green zip line format (two ziplines, two times per person) plus the 14-trampoline course is a strong combo for young energy.
Skip it or think twice if your child isn’t in the 3–6 range, if you need long activities, or if mobility needs make it hard (it’s listed as not suitable for wheelchair users). Also, double-check your ticket selection because there’s evidence of confusion when extra tickets were purchased unnecessarily.
If you want a practical family win in Salou—something active, structured, and easy to understand once you’re there—the Bosc Aventura Salou Explorer Pack is a smart choice.























