Re: Columbus Zoo
Speaking of the tigers, God forbid that glass ever shatters... there's one hungry guy that paces back and forth every time I'm there, looking for a toddler-sized snack, lol.
I think I've only made it onto the flying scooters in the dry ride park once or twice, but I watched my 7yo charge snap them earlier this summer. I'm not sure he'd ever been on flyers before, so it's not something he was taught to do, so they have to be relatively snappable.
The rest of the flats are 'eh.' Personal bane of my existance is a matterhorn-style ride, shaped as safari cars, which can be ridden at any height but must be accompanied by an adult until 46" or some such. When you have four preschoolers in your group, this means that you ride it forwards, then backwards, four times in succession... and have one seriously nauseated caregiver at the end. LOL... The flume is unusual... last season I found the second hill to be VERY forceful (left bruises on my forearms from the impact at splashdown) but this year it seemed to be toned down a bit.
I was most unimpressed by the waterpark last year. Daycare kids and I bought season passes, sight unseen, and we only went enough for me to not feel guilty about asking their parents to buy the passes. You could buy passes to Kings Island for what it costs to buy the Zoombezi Bay/JJL combo pass, and get a ton more for your money (albeit a longer drive.) Part of that was that it's hard to mind a group of kids in a waterpark (and dangerous, besides,) but most of it was that something new would be added to frustrate me every.single.time we went. (How can the price on a veggie wrap go up .20 between EACH visit?!) I didn't even make it out there this year, despite having a zoo membership and thus being eligible for a $20 day pass.
The zoo itself is awesome; we usually go one way or the other (the zoo naturally divides into 'left' and 'right') and cover those areas in a day visit. The manatees are really cool, as are the lorikeets and kangaroos in the Australia/Pacific Islands area. You can tell the 'newer' areas from the more original ones, and while the original parts are fine, the newer ones are phenominal. AsiaQuest also has a very cool, very striking, conservation element to it as well. I haven't been to too many zoos, but I've seen enough to know that we're incredibly lucky to have this one in Columbus.
Waterpark is closed for the season, but signs at the zoo note that JJL is open weekends through Oct 31. Zoo is, of course, open year round. They have an excellent "wildlights" display over the holidays, complete with later hours, if anyone is considering going then.