Tuesday, June 8, 2021

Worlds of Fun and Oceans of Fun second weekend 2021 season review

Several months ago I made a comment that with 8 months off the park had no excuse not to have everything running for opening day.  You might expect some harsh words after opening day to that extent too.  But I have none to give.  May 29th was simply… REFRESHING.  Because let’s all be honest… 2020 was horrible.  And for those of us that visited the park during that “season” it was plain surreal, one friend of mine even called it “Worlds of Fun Lite”. 


Photo from 2020 to illustrate the differences between the two seasons.  Masks were required all of 2020.


I have learned through 2020 though that you can only truly appreciate normal, until things have been decidedly abnormal for a while.  And if that means the best new attraction for 2021 is “normal”, even with all the speed bumps, I think I can handle that. I don’t think I am alone.


A lovely thank you sign that was right outside of the main gate in 2020.  The park seems to have transitioned entirely back to using the term Ambassadors for employees!


Of course, I know I am not alone. 


Traffic backed up on Parvin, this is right outside of Waffle House.

Thousands upon thousands of others obviously agreed with me.  They were there too.  I really should have known.  There was pent up demand for over a year of huddling in their houses with nothing open, and the weather was beautiful.  It was what I often call a “perfect storm”. I had an inkling of this when we were sitting in Waffle House that morning and cars were backing up both directions on Parvin Road and onto 435. 


Walking into the main gate from the back lots.


So, we arrived around Noon on Saturday May 29th. To give you an idea of how crazy traffic was It took us about 30 minutes to get from Waffle House to the parking lot.  I have to commend the park though, they had security out there directing traffic, and they did something I was floored by.  They opened up and used the auxiliary toll plaza for the first time I’ve seen in decades.  The auxiliary toll plaza is typically one of the parking lot exits, but also has a small roadway connecting it to the entrance to the park, allowing it to be used as both an exit and a secondary toll plaza.  There used to be a tiny booth out there too that was removed years ago.  I’m not even entirely sure they were aware that that particular roadway had that use, but regardless of whether they knew or not they used all options available.  


Lines to get into the park Saturday May 29th


We parked in H lot, and had a little bit of a line to get into the park but it wasn’t too bad.  At this point lines weren’t extremely long but unlike most we don’t always go to ride a bunch of rides.  We are much more atmosphere people and that’s pretty much true with almost all parks.  Though we do ride SOME rides.  For those that didn’t go in 2020, there have been a few updates to the International Plaza area, first the old Silver Maples were replaced last spring entirely by new more mature trees.  They seemed to have really filled out compared to last year when they were still brand new.  Also, sadly Chickie and Pete’s has been completed boarded up.  Chickie and Pete’s is an original restaurant and opened in 1973 as Smorbord.  From what I have heard the inside is still used for offices or storage but it does seem rather a waste of prime space and location.  I always loved the view it had overlooking Voyager’s last drop!  


As a comparison the new trees in 2020...



And similar views in 2021.


Unlike opening weekend Voyager was pretty much operational from the get go, and had a decent line the whole weekend.  The trees that were replaced in 2016 right outside the queue line have grown in very nicely and are providing good shade now which is nice to see!


The "new" trees by Voyager are looking nice!


Moving onto the Orient, the whole park looks beautiful, lots of new topiaries!  Last year the park made some cosmetic changes to the Orient too, including decreasing the size of the concrete pad for Bamboozler (it was still using the same pad as Octopus), which allowed for some expanded landscaping. The park added the topiary “Orient” last year and it looks good again this year.  Also a minor change but the exit for Bamboozler was moved last year too, so when you exit you actually exit out the opposite side of the station as opposed to past years.


The "ORIENT" topiary, which was new in 2020.


Spinning Dragons and Panda Express were both open, and by this time had lines just barely outside of their queue.


Spinning Dragons received grass in the fountain area back in 2019 and it still looks great!


Skyliner, the Ferris wheel, was closed when we walked by (from what I heard it opened soon afterwards), but Patriot was in operation and ran two trains all weekend.   A quick word on capacity: this is something we saw at every coaster and drove us absolutely nuts.  Before I continue this isn’t an attack on the Ambassadors themselves but on how I am certain they are trained.  On nearly every train we saw loaded and unloaded the loading gates were held until the exiting guests had disembarked from the station.  This might not seem like such a big thing.  However, that 30 seconds of hold time can greatly add to the time between dispatches, and also leads to stacked trains.  (trains that sit in the holding brakes while the train ahead of it is still being loaded).  This as a whole leads to markedly lower capacity, or the number of riders per hour.  What does this mean for me and you?  Longer lines and longer waits.  All by simply pausing to open the gates.  Another advantage of opening the gates sooner rather than later?  Loading guests will in some ways “push” the exiting guests out of the cars faster.  End vent.


Skyliner WAS closed but was open soon afterwards.  


Patriot as a whole looks great with its new paint job, I STILL over a year later can’t get over the detail involved in repainting that white stripe!   SteelHawk next door was testing when we arrived at the park around Noon, and from what I heard did open to guests later Saturday and was open all day Sunday.  As it was one of those rides that didn’t open at ALL last year, that was a pleasure to see!


This is a photo I shot in 1998 of the Henrietta just prior to its "removal"



A similar view back in 2019.



History moment:  For those that don’t know, SteelHawk is located exactly where the original Americana gate was.  The two wooden bridges are nearly identical to those 48 years ago that guests crossed to enter the park and cross Henrietta.  As far as the Henrietta herself goes, the original concrete hull is still there!  


A nice anchor topiary between Cotton Blossom BBQ and Patriot.


Patriot's paint job looks great!

On Sunday we did eat at Cotton Blossom BBQ, and had a great experience there.  We both had the chicken strips which were excellent (they tasted slightly different than last year and I think it’s an improvement!). I have to commend food service for having both sides of the food lines staffed and ready to serve, there was no line what so ever on Sunday around 11:30 and we were impressed!


Front Street Plaza area with the new trees growing in well (trees were replaced in 2018)


Those yellow things all throughout the fountain are flowers...

Front Street Plaza looks great, the trees are growing in and I think will be providing good shade in just another year or so!  One moment of commentary.  Usually, I discuss concerns about the park but for once I am going to discuss GUEST conduct.  Please, please, please don’t let your kids tear up the park flowers!  I get picking one or two blooms, we all did that as a kid, its not a big deal.  But seriously when your kids are destroying dozens of flowers and tearing them apart and dumping them in the fountain for fun?!  How is that even acceptable? And if you are offended by that I am not sorry.  You are the parent, control your kids.  


Anyway.


Bar Menu at Front Street Tavern.




If you need a nice drink after that commentary Front Street can now provide.  The Front Street Tavern has now opened in the spot most recently occupied by Guest Services, and was many moons ago known as Brims and Bonnets.  I know many feel that the last thing a park needs is more alcohol, but the park survived with Blue Bronco bar for years, and with now even Disneyland not being dry, I can’t complain.  I have to say overall the conduct of guests on both days, even with the crowds, was commendable, I didn’t see or hear of any fights or scuffles, and most people just appeared happy to be there, even with the lines.  


The line for Sam's on Saturday 


Sam's supposably has received some lighting and effects upgrades.  I can no longer ride it, so I cannot confirm but it looked good when I snuck a peek from the exit.


The fence for Bicentennial Square is still up so that the exit for Timber Wolf is still over by Planet Snoopy.  This seems to be confusing a LOT of people, with many thinking that the exit is also the entrance.  I’m not sure what the park can really do that would really assist with that, but well there it is.  Of course two good things in this neck of the woods though.  Cyclone Sam’s is back open!  YEAH!  It was one of several rides that never opened in 2020. Second, Timber Wolf was open Saturday and Sunday, and it’s running well.  Funny thing with Timber Wolf is that we were standing over near the exit for completely unrelated reasons (and I can’t really even remember why? Old person brain I guess). Around 12:30 or so and I heard the employee in the station yell to call down to entrance to tell them to drop the chain.  Well I already knew the situation with lines that day and I also knew the best time to avoid a line is to get it line right when it re-opens or opens for the day.  I ran like crazy over to the entrance, and I was on the third train out.  Later that day I saw them using not only the whole normal Timber Wolf queue but the overflow queue too (which is between Timber Wolf and Sam’s).  


This return run on Timber Wolf received some new track.



Ok so opinion on Timber Wolf.  Overall it is far smoother than it has ever been since I have ridden Timber Wolf (the first time I rode it was 2004). It is fun, no question, it makes Timber Wolf in my opinion a better overall ride experience for the general public than it has been in a very long time.  But it’s fun in the same way Screamin’ Eagle at Six Flags is.  In that it’s fun but not the holy terror that it was in it’s first few years.  That is not a bad thing, it just makes for a different ride.  At this point in my life, I would personally like to see coasters that are enjoyed by the guests of the park, and have fewer people complain about how rough the Timber Wolf is, and as that seems to be the general consensus, I am glad.  If this gives Timber Wolf an extended longevity, that makes me even happier.  Timber Wolf is already the longest operated coaster in park history now at 32 years old.   


Check out the new retractable seatbelts on Timber Wolf!

And on Prowler.



A newely themed light pole, one of many in the Timber Wolf queue.


There were a couple of other minor changes to Timber Wolf I noticed. First, new faux wood paint lights have been added to the queue line and surrounding area.  Second, is the addition of retractable seatbelts, this seems to be the case on Prowler as well.  If I was going to guess I would think that this might be a carry over from the old Paramount Parks (Kings Island, Kings Dominion etc.) who operated their coasters with retractable seatbelts as well.  Overall I like them, it makes it easier to find the end of the seatbelt for sure!  Interesting side note Jeff and I will be touring PTC (Philadelphia Toboggan Company) who manufactured the trains for Timber Wolf if anyone would like to see photo coverage let me know!


Planet Snoopy looks nice, and had all rides in operation except Cosmic Coaster (Wacky Worm) and Peanut's Yacht's Club.

Lines were long here too. 

Planet Snoopy has several new bunny topiaries.


Up from Timber Wolf is Planet Snoopy, and while we briefly walked though, there did not appear to be any changes.  Cosmic Coaster (Wacky Worm) was not operational the entire weekend, though the park was definitely actively working on it all weekend long.  Cosmic Coaster is Worlds of Fun’s oldest steel coaster, as it opened in 1994 it turns 27 years old this year!  The only other ride we didn’t see in operation was Peanut’s Yacht Club but that was it.  Back in 2019 the old Peanut’s Playhouse was transitioned into a petting zoo (Pigpen’s Petting Farm), but it’s still sitting empty. It was used as a relax zone in 2020 and still has benches in it if you are looking for a somewhat quiet place to relax in Planet Snoopy!


The old Funtier Arcade is completely closed but its porch area is being used for Social Distancing character photos!  You can also see the topiary liberty bell in the background too.

Snoopymobile makes its way through Americana.


For those looking for character meet and greets, which are usually in the Peanut’s Showplace Theater, they are not there.  However, the park is still hosting a few “socially distant” totally awesome meet and greets, or photo opportunities with various Peanut’s Characters.  This is a direct carry over from 2020 too, so if you visited in 2020 it’s pretty much exactly the same.  For those that didn’t there are photo opportunities both in Scandinavia at both the Tivoli Music Hall and nearby stage, and also in Americana in front of the old Arcade near Timber Wolf’s main entrance.  You can also sometimes catch Snoopy roaming around on his appropriately decorated Snoopymobile (I have no idea if that’s its real name, but it’s adorably cute).  The characters themselves rotate, The main ones are Snoopy, Charlie Brown, Linus, Sally and Lucy.  I believe I saw Franklin in there too. As far as other live entertainment, right now there are no other options,  However!  Muttallica, the dog sport and comedy show at Country Junction theater has posted on their Facebook page that they are returning on June 11th!  So there is a light at the end of the tunnel.  Hopefully soon there will be a train there too amiright?  


If you follow the brown steel pole up you can see the original truss system for Flying Circus.



The polygon Flying Circus theater can be see in the right hand corner.


History moment:  The Peanut’s Showplace theater has quite the history, as the original structure of the theater (not counting the attached shop) dates ALL the way back to 1978.  For those that remember that far back might remember a theater there called Flying Circus Theater that opened with the Aerodrome.  That theater DOES still exist as part of the Peanut’s Showplace.  If you stand inside the shop at the perimeter between the shop and theater and look up you can still see the polygon shape and structure of the original Flying Circus.  Flying Circus might have gone through a variety of facelifts from Pandamonium to Bear Country to Camp Snoopy but the base structure has remained unchanged.  


The shade trellis added to Forum Road in 2019 offer some nice shade in a very unshaded area of the park.


The Worlds of Fun Railroad coaches sit alone still...

A small change in the station as well as around the rest of the park is the addition of these themed exit and entrance signs.


From Planet Snoopy we bypassed Europa via Forum Road.  The pass through from Europa to Forum road is closed. As many remember it opened up partway through 2019 and was open in 2020. I am going to take this as a good sign about the train coming back. The coaches were also sitting in the station but that doesn’t appear to be as much of a change. 



Prospector's Burritos, (previously Blue Bronco) received new shutters and replaced decking.

A closer look.

Nearby is Prospector's Burrito's (I still call it Blue Bronco) and it has received some minor changes including the addition of new shutters, as well as replaced decking and wood trim, it looks nice!



Boomrang is open...




Boomerang is closed.  Notice the addition of the new orange seatbelts.

When we arrived in Africa, Boomerang was trying to get started, it seemed to be up and down the entire weekend.  I guess Boomerang is still trying to get over that extended vacation time as it did not operate at all during the 2020 season.  One minor change to Boomerang is the addition of seatbelts to the ride, it buckles at the bottom of the shoulder harness to the train itself.  I guess knowing Cedar Fair I shouldn’t really be surprised as it seems to be happening at all Cedar Fair parks. 


Some work has been done to the old Africa trellis.


New giraffe topiary near Big Jack's


And the Floral Clock.



Onto my favorite topic, Landscaping!  Landscaping looks AMAZING.  Tons of new topiaries, I saw several new bunny topiaries over in Planet Snoopy, new elephant and giraffe topiaries in Africa, the flowers look great, the trees look great, and of course the Floral Clock looks great too.  A few minor changes in Africa.  First I noticed the old trellis between Moroccan Merchant and the old Dino’s Alive building has had the wood replaced.  The base structure is steel, but it has wood caps on the end that I had noted didn’t look especially brilliant last year.  Looks great this time around, it’s missing some hanging baskets, but I am assuming those are coming soon. Another minor change I noticed was the addition, or re-addition of thatching to the entire poles on the Africa bridge. There is a little history with the thatching, as originally the poles were completely thatched, I remember this back in the ’90’s. By 1999 or so what was left was falling off in big sheets.  By 2008 it was entirely gone and with Prowler’s addition they added the new masks and a little bit of thatching at the top.  So now we are back to the way it originally was, and I love it!



A look at the Africa bridge from 2020.

A similar view in 2021.  Notice the addition of thatching to the poles.



SO at this point it was around 2 pm, the temperature via weather.com was around 63 so we decided to head over to Oceans of Fun.  Now we had heard prior to entering the park that we might have to exit Worlds of Fun and drive over to Oceans of Fun to get into the park.  I had made reservations for Oceans of Fun opening day the moment reservations were available to book, so I knew I was going. Hell or high water.  When the weather reports were coming out during the last week, and people were cancelling their reservations to go a different week… I didn’t have that luxury.  So I bought a wet suit on Amazon and figured I would tough it out.  Icicles or not I was going in!


Check point for Oceans of Fun between Nile and Mamba.


So to get into Oceans of Fun, they do check to make sure you have a reservation. You may enter Oceans from either the normal Oceans gate, OR there is a check point in Worlds set up on the walkway to Oceans of Fun between Mamba and Nile.  


Crocodile Isle 

The old walkway to Bucaneer's Bay, the fence closing it off is a new addition.  

Oceans didn’t open at all in 2020, which means next year, 2022, Oceans will both be 40 years old and be celebrating 40 seasons, during the same year.  There have been several small changes.  First, all attractions we noticed APPEARED to be open, there has been some commentary online that some children’s play areas were not open, and that may be the case, but all areas had water flowing and life guards staffing them.  As noted on the 2020 map Buccaneer’s Bay appears to have finally been retired, this is the lake that in the past has had kayaks and paddle boats.  The dock has been fenced off and all signage removed.  It was never a major attraction but I always saw it as the one link left to the old Neptune’s Lagoon, sand lake and for me it was a little bit of a loss, but I get it.  It offers some land for expansion too which is nice.



Coconut Cove


It's 63 degrees but there are still kids in the water!


Coconut Cove had a few small groups of families swimming, and I believe one of the small water slides have been removed.  If I didn’t know it was there I wouldn’t have missed it though.  Aruba Tuba was open from what I could tell.


Subway is open at Oceans of Fun

Surf's Up menu at the old Coco Palms Pavilion at Oceans of Fun

Burnt Ends sandwich




Unlike Worlds of Fun, Subway IS open on the Oceans of Fun side, and the old Coco Palms Pavilion, most recently Chickie & Pete’s has re-opened as Surf’s Up BBQ.  For those of us that remember Asylum Island’s back area its a little odd to see the kitchen being used as a kitchen!  You can also see on the ground around the pavilion where the old “yard” (fog, strobe lights, bars maze) was located.  We did end up eating here, and found the food good, we both had the BBQ chicken sandwich, but they also had a pulled pork and burnt ends sandwiches as well.


Entrance to Riptide Raceway

Looking up the hill at Riptide Raceway and Typhoon on the left.


Next we headed over to the new Riptide Racers slides.  Riptide replaced the old Diamond Head slides, that had been original to the park but were really showing their age.  Typhoon was running next door, and while I didn’t see it, Jeff took photos of a rider on it so he can verify it was in operation. Typhoon opened in 1983 and with Diamond Head’s removal is now the oldest water slide in operation in the park.  SO onto Riptide.  

Looking at the steps leading up to loading on Riptide Raceway.




I rode it twice, once in the yellow slide and once in the orange slide.  From commentary from other guests and the lifeguard at the top the only difference between the four slides is that the yellow slide is the brightest (meaning you can see where you are going), while the purple slide is nearly completely pitch black. (in that you can’t see where you are going).  Other than that the four slides are identical.  Since it is a mat slide I wasn’t really sure how wet you get. You don’t get really all that wet except for the big splash that slows you down at the end.  Personally, I loved it!  It’s definitely an experience I can see returning to, and it was a lot of fun!  Since it was chilly the day I rode it I did not experience any line whatsoever.  I imagine that will NOT be the case going forward with warmer weather coming up!  



Entrance to Riptide, from left to right is Fast Lane Entrance, Stand-by Entrance and the attraction Exit.

There are two separate lines, one for Fast Lane and one for stand-by waiting.  You get your mat near the entrance and have to carry it up to the slide complex.  That part kind of reminded me of Python Plunge a bit.  The hillside and walk up to the tower is nearly identical to Diamond Head, so yes there is still a nice hill walk there.  Many of the old trees that surrounded Diamond Head are still there, which I can appreciate, and I like the extra effort to preserve the natural site.



New fish topiaries at Caribbean Cooler.


Caribbean Cooler, the water sprayers are running too.


So after Riptide we headed around the rest of the park to check things out. Caribbean Cooler was also open, it looked cold!  There were still a fair amount of guests in the attraction though! I also noticed several cute fish topiaries around Caribbean Cooler too!


New entrance to Surf City Wave pool.


Fenced in Surf City Wave pool.


We next made it up to Surf City Wave Pool.  There have some big changes here. As many remember a child drowned in Surf City Pool back in 2019 so I think it’s total expected to see some changes. The biggest change is that the maximum depth of the wave pool has been changed from 8-feet to 6-feet. I believe this has had a major impact on the size of the waves as the pool is simply not as deep as it was. The other big change is the addition of fencing to the entrance to the wave pool. You now have to go through a small queue area, and have kids checked for height (those under a certain height are required to wear a life jacket).  There is also your typically attraction warnings sign that all rides and attractions have, but now its front and center. 


The waves are going!


If you zoom in you can see the maximum depth of 6 feet.



One last commentary on the Wave Pool.  When did the park discontinue playing “Wipe Out” at the start of the waves?  Now it just beeps.  I know its been doing that for a few years, but I guess I don’t get why they couldn’t play the music? Is there something I am missing?   





Shark's Revenge slides were open.


The only attraction that I was for certain wasn’t in operation was right next door, the Predator’s Plunge slides.  So just to clarify, the Shark’s Revenge, non-drop slides were open but Predator’s Plunge drop slides were closed.  Considering how concerned I was regarding staffing issues, I didn’t notice any major issues at Oceans of Fun, even with the frigid temperatures.  I might also add that Six Flags St. Louis Hurricane Harbor was closed the same day because of temperature.  I don’t know if that makes Worlds of Fun staff more crazy, or just more… watch this weather we don’t care we are opening up anyway!  Maybe both.  I like it.





Jeff wasn’t feeling well so we headed out around 4:30 with plans to return to Worlds of Fun the next day.  I did check out Plaza Gifts on the way out (because I am a girl and shopping is in my DNA),  I loved the new shirts, especially the ones for Voyager and Nile.  I also loved the price $19.99.  I went back and bought the Voyager shirt the next day and I am wearing it right now as I am writing this!


Voyager was in operation both Saturday and Sunday.


On the way out we checked out the parking lots and found the park had parked every single back lot including K. K wasn’t obviously full (it’s a very large lot), but it had about 20 rows worth of cars.  From what I have heard some lines reached 3 hours long, so the day that I knew going in would probably be a little busy, turned out to be just a bit more than that.  Good for the park. :)


I always loved how they re-used the old lights from the Orient Express queue line.


The line for Spinning Dragons spilling out onto the midway, this is from Sunday early afternoon.


Sunday, with it being the middle day of a holiday weekend made me cautious hoping it wouldn’t be Saturday the sequel.  It turned out to be almost as busy. We arrived around Noon again, and headed towards the Orient.  Jeff loves to time capacity of rides, and also loves to study loading and unloading procedures, so we spent some time around Spinning Dragons. Dragons has the added problem of being a naturally low capacity ride anyway, which makes even a short line a long wait, and the line was already out of the queue by Noon. 





Unlike the prior morning, SteelHawk was in operation when we arrived. We ate at Cotton Blossom BBQ as I mentioned earlier and then continued our stroll around the park.  Boomerang also was in operation when we headed over to Africa, but as I previously mentioned it was up and down seemingly the entire weekend.  





One section we hadn’t visited at all the prior day was Europa, and one ride that was on my short list of riding this trip was Flying Dutchman.  I always try to get a ride on it, at least fairly frequently because it’s a favorite of mine and it and me have quite a history.  As a park historian I love the fact that it is quite literally old dependable. In 48 years, it’s never moved, never been re-named and ALWAYS seems to be open.  From the stand point as a fan of the park it’s even more important.  After my debacle with the Riverside, Mo. kiddie coaster as a 4-year-old and with Octopus in 1987 as a 9-year-old I really had been terrified of trying anything new for years.  Flying Dutchman I think in 1993 was the first ride I was nervous about trying, that I liked. And when I worked at the park in 1994 and went back into the park while waiting for my mom to pick me off after work, Flying Dutchman was always one of those rides I almost always rode.  Of course that was back when it had no seatbelts, and there was no separate control panel.  But really other than that, Dutchman has changed very very little.   




While I was on Dutchman Jeff was out monitoring Taxis. Taxi’s seems to be running a combination of the original Arrow Taxi Cars along with a smattering of other park “hand me downs”.  At this point it was only running five cars.  At its peak Taxi’s could run 20 cars at a time, officially.  I have to wonder if this is an issue with number of cars that are even functional, because if you realize Taxis is almost 50 years old, meaning the cars themselves are just as old, and Arrow, their manufacturer hasn’t existed for a number of years.  This really limits options. The Le Taxi Tour course, with its hills and tight turns also limits the type of cars that can run on it.  One option that’s available to the park, is from the neighboring Six Flags St. Louis which just recently permanently closed its Moon Cars attraction, which not surprisingly ran near identical Arrow cars.  That seems a prime opportunity to either expand the Worlds off Fun fleet or at the very least… obtain parts for the original cars that are left.  

 




13 cars on Autobahn


On the flip side was Autobahn, which seems to be doing better than usual, at least usual in recent years running 13 cars on the course.  It also seems that there have recently been some roof repairs too which I am sure were desperately needed.


Europa and Le Taxi Tour hill with a topiary bull.


On the other side of Europa is Falcon’s Flight which was one of the few rides that never even moved all weekend, along with Mustang Runner in Americana.  Both were additions in 2017 and both were used Huss rides, which makes me wonder if the two issues are related.  Maybe.  After all Huss is as it has always been based in Germany and that is where all the ride parts come from.



Mamba signage looks nice!


Mamba queue lines at around 5:30 PM on Sunday.


We spent some time with friends at the restaurant that has more name changes that I could fit in a short paragraph… Today it’s known as Let Them Eat Cake.  Afterwards it was getting later in the afternoon and we decided what we wanted to do.  I really wanted to ride Mamba, but the app was showing a 90 minute wait.  I couldn’t believe that, so I talked Jeff into waiting with me.  The queue unlike the prior day was back in the regular queues, but for anyone familiar with Mamba’s queue, all three sections were full.  One staffing issue we had noticed is that there was no one typically monitoring the Fast Lane entrances.  We saw several guests at several rides entering Fast Lane that did not have the wristband.  Which is one of many reasons I refuse to support it.  With that being said I have to commend one specific Ambassador at Mamba.  The Ambassador in charge of the loading side actually leaned over on multiple occasions and attempted (fairly successfully) to enforce the FastLane entrance.  It wasn’t even his job, I doubt he was even told to do it, and for that, I was impressed.  The line really was pretty close to about 90 minutes long, even with Mamba running two trains.  By the time we got off it was after 7 PM and the park was closed.  





The restaurant formerly known as Chickie and Pete's is boarded up now.  

We walked by Norma’s Funnel Cakes and it again had a line WAY out the door. I have to think maybe something should be done to correct the shortage of funnel cake places in the park especially with Grandma’s Funnel Cakes gone for a few years now.  Could even All Stars (or Chickie and Pete’s or WHATEVER), be modified and re-opened just for that purpose and have it be two separate serving lines kind of like Cotton Blossom BBQ?  Anyway just my thoughts.  


Personally though I may critique Worlds of Fun and its decisions, I always hate to leave.  Some may argue it’s not the Worlds of Fun they grew up with.  I have never felt that way, for me regardless of what may or may not be open, or if weeds are growing in the gutters (years ago), or rides may still be in pieces (again years ago), or whether its Worlds of Fun lite or not (last year.) There has always been something special about the place.  I can’t stay angry there, and often times when I am upset it never ceases to make me smile.  One final story.  This year is Patriot’s 15th anniversary. It opened on April 8th 2006.  One night, 15 years ago, probably at least a few weeks before Patriot opened, I was upset about something.  I can’t even remember about what.  This was back when we still lived in Independence, MO.  And for some reason I decided to go take the 20 minute drive to Worlds of Fun, obviously not to go into the park, because it wasn’t open, but just to see it, because as I mentioned it always made me happy.  As I made my way down 291 I saw a sight I hadn’t seen before, red-colored chaser lights.  At this point we didn’t expect any great lighting on Patriot, so I didn’t know.  This was my first time ever seeing the chaser lights on Patriot, they were on, and it was dusk, and for just a brief moment I felt the contented unworried happiness it seems we only ever feel as children.  Worlds of Fun has always been more than just a place on the map, or just another theme park, or micro park as a friend of mine calls it.  It’s home.   And I for one am glad to be back home once again.  


Special Thanks to John Hunter for proofreading this blog!


Sunday, April 4, 2021

From Voyager to Express to Mamba the Legacy of Arrow at Worlds of Fun

A few months ago I wrote a blog following the brief but important history of Schwarzkopf at Worlds of Fun. As my friends can attest I love to look at how things are interconnected, and no company is more interconnected at Worlds of Fun, or any theme park or amusement park than Arrow Development/Arrow Dynamics. The Arrow heritage has, at least in some small way, touched almost every ride at the park. And it wasn’t started with that intent at all.

Karl Bacon and Ed Morgan.  Photo from Roller Coasters, Flumes and Flying Saucers by Robert Reynolds.


A very brief history of Arrow starts in 1946 when Karl Bacon, Ed Morgan, Angus “Andy” Anderson and Bill Hardiman opened a fabrication shop in Los Angeles, California. There wasn’t any original intent to build amusement park rides, and they almost became a footnote in history if it wasn’t for Walt Disney who happened to like one of the antique cars being built by Arrow at the time. Similar cars were later used as the original twelve cars for Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride, and Walt Disney would go on to hire Arrow to built almost all of Disneyland’s original attractions. In addition to Mr. Toad, Arrow would also build: Dumbo the Flying Elephant, Snow White’s Adventure, Mad Tea Party, and the Matterhorn Bobsleds just to name a few.  Karl and Ed went from two small time steel fabricators to becoming the one-stop shop for the amusement-park world by simply having new ideas and the fortitude (and financial backing) to see them through.


A postcard of Shoot-the-Chutes at Electric Park in Kansas City.  Postcard from author's private collection.

Another view of Shoot-the-Chutes at Electric Park Kansas City.  Both postcards are from our private collection.


Many of the Arrow concepts weren’t new, but instead updates on very old amusement park attractions.  Case in point, the Shoot-the-Chutes ride, a ride that was popular at the turn of the 20th century for taking guests, seated in a flat bottom boat, plunging down a drop and into a large lake of water below. Arrow would update this clunky classic and create something new: the log flume. Arrow’s first log-flume foray was in 1963 at Six Flags Over Texas with El Aserradero. They also used a similar concept on the Disneyland originals It’s a Small World and Pirates of the Caribbean.  When Viking Voyager opened with Worlds of Fun in 1973 there was virtually nothing original about it, except for its unique Viking Dragon head boats.  


An original Arrow advertisement for it's various flume ride vehicles, one of which is the unique Viking Boat design from Viking Voyager.  Thanks to Adam Yerdon for allowing us to use this.

El Aserradero at Six Flags over Texas.  Photo by Jeff Mast.

Viking Voyager at Worlds of Fun, photo by Jeff Mast.

In 1957 Arrow built the Midget Autopia ride for Disneyland, and again it wasn’t the first drive-yourself ride in the country; the first was almost as old as the car itself, dating back to the 1920’s.  Arrow would once again take an old concept and make it new, and introduce its own version of this classic car ride, but this time with a center rail.  Arrow called this simple new revolution the “guide-limited automobile”. Whatever you call it though this small change would make the ride safer, and easier to operate and the concept spread like wildfire. Arrow would go on to introduce its French-styled taxi cars, at Astroworld in 1968 called Le Taxi, Kings Island would follow in 1972 with Les Taxis;  Worlds of Fun was already late to the party when it opened Le Taxi Tour in 1973.  

It looks a lot like Le Taxi Tour, but not only is this ride no longer in operation but neither is it's entire park.  This was Le Taxi at Astroworld in Houston, Tx.  The entire park closed in 2005. Photo by Jeff Mast.

This one IS Le Taxi Tour.  Photo by Jeff Mast.

There really was nothing original about Worlds of Fun’s old Arrow rides. However, what hasn’t been mentioned is that while at the time Voyager and Taxis were one of many in operation, today this is no longer the case. Astroworld no longer exists, and the Arrow French Taxi cars, while common in the 1970’s, are rare today.  The same could be said for Arrow flumes which are falling victim to newer and flasher land-tenants as the years progress by.  Voyager and Le Taxi Tour have become important not because they were landmarks at the time they opened, but instead because they continue to operate when so many of their brothers no longer do.  The survivors are the legacy. 


Concept art for Screamroller,  which is artist's rendition of the original Corkscrew.  Photo from Worlds of Fun's collection.

Screamroller when it first opened with it's all white color scheme.  Pay attention to the supports over the actual corkscrew elements, they were changed between the original corkscrew and the copies.  Postcard from the author's private collection.

Worlds of Fun wouldn’t stay in the background of Arrow history.  Arrow would take its revolutionary tubular steel track it created for Matterhorn Bobsleds and build the world’s first modern coaster to take riders upside down, Corkscrew.  The first corkscrew-model opened at Knott’s Berry Farm in 1975, and less than a year later Worlds of Fun would open the fifth copy of the corkscrew-model, on April 10, 1976.  Dubbing their version as Screamroller, it was the first coaster in Missouri, to take riders upside down.  The second inverting coaster in Missouri was Worlds of Fun’s own Orient Express and Six Flags Over Mid-America opened the third in 1981. 


Loch Ness Monster under construction at Busch Gardens Williamsburg.  Photo from Worlds of Fun's collection.


A few years later the second and last coaster actually built with interlocking loops was under construction at Worlds of Fun.  Photo from the Worlds of Fun Collection.


Worlds of Fun opted for a custom-designed thriller a few years later when it unleashed Arrow’s tour de force at the time, the Orient Express on April 4, 1980.  Orient Express was never the biggest, or the fastest, or the loopiest, but it would follow tried-and-true park tradition and certainly be the best. Loch Ness Monster which had opened at Busch Gardens Williamsburg in 1978 introduced the world to the interlocking loops, and Express would continue on that same legacy. Express would also build on the Arrow legacy though by introducing the first coaster element outside of the corkscrew and vertical loop, with the Kamikaze Kurve; or as it is better known the boomerang-element.  Express would operate for 23 years at the park, and would accomplish a true amusement park feat of going out just as popular as it went in. The ride never had to languish and slowly fade away, and that in itself made it memorable.


Shockwave, at Six Flags Great America (now defunct) had seven inversions one of which was a boomerang very similar to that on Orient Express. Photo by Jeff Mast.

A near identical view of the original boomerang (Kamikaze Kurve) on Orient Express.  From the Worlds of Fun Collection.


Viper at Six Flags Magic Mountain which opened in 1990 also has seven inversions but is still in operation. Photo by Jeff Mast.

Orient Express wouldn’t be the end to Arrow entanglements at Worlds of Fun, and only a few years later, most likely building on the success of Express, Arrow would again partner with Worlds of Fun on a new project.  This time a concept was conceived during the short-lived merger of Arrow with German ride manufacturer Huss Rides. Arrow Huss together in 1983 came up with the idea to modify an existing Arrow coaster into something that had only been accomplished in Japan at this point, a coaster ridden not sitting, but standing up instead.  They began the transition process for two Arrow coasters, Screamroller at Worlds of Fun, and River King Mine Train at Six Flags Over Mid-America near St. Louis.  Sceamroller would open first, May 31, 1983, this time re-named to Extremeroller or E.X.T. for short.  Railblazer, the re-named stand up version of River King Mine Train would open in 1984.


Railblazer would open at Six Flags Mid-America in 1984.  Railblazer was the second track for the existing River King Mine Train that still operates at Six Flags St. Louis to this day.  Postcard from the author's private collection.


Extremroller was first though, and opened May 31, 1983 as the country's first stand-up coaster.  Postcard from the author's private collection.


Probably one of the most commonly repeated urban legends with Worlds of Fun comes from this very coaster.  First the true story: Extremeroller was re-converted to a sit down in June 1984 due to stress on the lift chain, as with the significant change in the center of gravity it applied a significant increase in stress on the ride-structure.  In July of 1984, a Railblazer rider was thrown from the car and died from her injuries.  The accident occurred one month after Extremeroller had been re-converted to a sit-down experience. Railblazer also lacked one of the seatbelts that crossed the body that Extremeroller had, which means this type of accident may not have even been possible on Extremeroller.  The fact is though that no life-threatening accident ever was to occur on the short lived stand-up Extremeroller. But the pervasive urban legend incorrectly attributes the Six Flags accident to Worlds of Fun.  Extremeroller would operate as a sit down coaster until the 1988 season when it was removed and sold, and then shortly thereafter replaced by Timber Wolf.  In its brief 12 year run at Worlds of Fun no one was ever killed in the operation of Screamroller or Extremeroller.


Python at Busch Gardens Tampa (now defunct), from around 1990. Photo by Jeff Mast.

Extremeroller from 1988, they look so similar because they were identical, both were Arrow Corkscrews. Photo by Jeff Mast.


So with Screamroller back to a sit down in 1984 that was the end of Arrow at Worlds of Fun correct?  Yes and No.  Arrow itself would go through a series of mergers, bankruptcies and re-organization which would see it re-introduced in the mid-1980’s not as Arrow Development, or Arrow Huss, but Arrow Dynamics. 

Vortex opened at Kings Island in 1987, it was removed after the 2019 season.  Photo by Jeff Mast.

And the original, Orient Express.  From the Worlds of Fun collection.

Arrow Dynamics would go on to continue building its progressively loopier, and taller coasters, Vortex at Kings Island (actually based off Orient Express in design), Shockwave at Six Flags Great America, Great American Scream Magic at Six Flags Great Adventure, and Viper at Six Flags Magic Mountain just to name a few.  In 1989 there was something new on the horizon for Arrow.  Arrow designer Ron Toomer’s newest inspiration came to a park in Ohio called Cedar Point and would launch its climb to be the “roller coaster capital of the world”.  Magnum-XL 200, a coaster with no loops, but instead built for speed and for height became the first coaster to drop riders 200 feet down.  It was even given a new definition: the hyper coaster.  Magnum was a hit out of the box.


Park World August 1990 Advertisement

At-The-Park January/February 1990 advertisement

Arrow would continue to produce coasters and rides following Magnum, some in the “breaking the mold” style of the great Arrow rides that came before it, the first 4th-dimension coaster at Six Flags Magic Mountain comes to mind. There would be still others that would be truly unique, requiring time and tweaking to make into a masterpiece, the 1991 Steel Phantom which became Phantom’s Revenge at Kennywood. In 2001 is a great example.  Many though would be just following the same rutted road that Arrow had already tread for decades.  And that was the problem.  Arrow didn’t innovate as it should have, and when another company did, and produced smooth coasters that lacked the abrupt, head-pounding transitions that were the Achilles-heel of all Arrow coasters, that was the death knell of Arrow. 


X2 at Six Flags Magic Mountain was a nightmare for both the park and Arrow.  It is still in operation at Six Flags Magic Mountain.  Photo by Jeff Mast.

A view of X2 from the parking lot at Magic Mountain.  Photo by Jeff Mast.

Arrow would declare a final bankruptcy in 2001, and its assets would be bought by another amusement park company, S&S Power.  S&S is famous for its own unique thrill rides, shot towers, and air launch coasters, like Detonator at Worlds of Fun and Powder Keg at Silver Dollar City. Today, S&S continues on the tradition of Arrow with its 4th-dimension coaster and their popular newer, yet more compact version, the 4D Free Spin. Nearby Adventureland in Des Moines, IA. is opening Dragon Slayer for 2021 which is the most recent 4D Free Spin model installed in the United States. 


From Media Preview of Mamba, Paula and Dana Morgan in the front row with Laura Keller (wife of General Manager Dan Keller) and Steve Okomoto in the second row.  Photo from Roller Coasters, Flumes and Flying Saucers. Also notice the lack of gates on the queue lines behind them. 

Another photo from the same day, of the exact same train, coming in for the final turn over the station plaza.  You can see Dana and Paula Morgan in the front of the 2nd car, with Daniel Keller in the front row of the 1st car.  Photo by Jeff Mast.

There is also a great deal of Arrow legacy left in two coasters at Worlds of Fun.  If you will recall one of the founders of Arrow Development was Ed Morgan.  Ed had a son named Dana, who served as President of Arrow Huss for a short period in the 1980’s before he went on to form his own company Morgan Manufacturing.  Cedar Fair, wanting to clone the success of Magnum at their other parks across the country turned to Morgan instead of Arrow to build hyper coasters inspired by Magnum.  With help from former-Arrow Dynamics designer Steve Okamato, Morgan created Wild Thing at Valleyfair, Steel Force at Dorney Park, and Mamba at Worlds of Fun. Although Mamba is not an Arrow by name, it is a worthy successor of the great Arrow legacy.

Mamba is on the left, Magnum is on the right.  The familiar traits are undeniable.  

The backside of the same collectible cards.  

The other coaster is Boomerang.  If Mamba keeps alive everything that was great about Arrow, Boomerang… well it tries.  Vekoma, which started its relationship with Arrow as their international distributor in the late-1970’s started producing several varieties of “off the shelf” Arrow-like coasters.  These coasters were intended for smaller parks, ones that could not afford a custom Arrow.  Vekoma would also be used prolifically by larger parks to help beef up their coaster line up during the coaster-wars of 1990’s and early-2000’s.  There was their Suspended Looping Coaster (SLC), the less-common Invertigo model, and then there was the original, the Boomerang.  By itself, Boomerang offers a decent thrill, but has tainted its reputation simply by being repeated, over, and over, and over again, 55 times to date.  That’s 55 different installations of the EXACT SAME ride, at different parks across the world.  And they operate and ride just like the old Arrows.  In fact, the ride is so similar to the old Arrows that a boomerang train, and say a train from Orient Express could swap places, and still operate on the opposite coaster with very little modification being required. 


Boomerang at Worlds of Fun opened in 2000.  Photo by Jeff Mast.

What is fascinating about Vekoma though is that through all the years that Vekoma was spinning out Boomerangs and SLC’s they never changed the formula.  They in all honesty got a little bit of a bad rep among coaster enthusiasts for trudging the same old road and producing the same old rough coasters, that is until recently.  Recently, Vekoma has changed, drastically.  Their new coasters seem far removed from the old Arrows, smooth, but yet still Arrow-like.  In the past handful of years Vekoma has changed its image, and may yet be the new upcoming coaster manufacturer for the future.  I’ve often wondered what would have happened if Arrow had figured out how to make their ride experiences smooth, but still create coasters with that unique, intense Arrow identity. Maybe they have.  Maybe the legacy of Arrow will continue, and who knows maybe its not done at Worlds of Fun either.  Only time will tell.  


Abyssus at Energylandia in Poland testing in early 2021.  Pay attention to the boomerang element!  The legacy of Orient Express continues to live on!

The idea for this blog originated after watching the ACE Legacy of Arrow documentary.  It is absolutely worth a watch and covers Arrow history very succinctly.  It just doesn't mention Orient Express.  :)



Special Thanks to Todd Swetnam, Nicholas Laschkewitsch and Adam Yerdon for Proofreading this story.