Posted
The wooden roller-coaster in Dania Beach visible from the Interstate-95 since its opening 11 years ago has closed, according to Boomers, the entertainment company that shared the property with the ride. The GM of Boomers said owners informed him “a couple of days” earlier about plans to halt operations of what was billed as the tallest wooden coaster in Florida.
Read more from The Sun-Sentinel.
rollergator said:
...most importantly by far - better road signage and access from the adjacent interstate, because driving through the run-down industrial area near the "park" isn't really a bonus... ;)
Gonch tells me quoting yourself is the highest form of self-flattery... ;)
rollergator said:
Gonch tells me quoting yourself is the highest form of self-flattery... ;)
Well, quoting yourself in from the same thread is ok, I guess. But when you can quote yourself from month or years earlier and have it be totally relevant to current conversation, then you're winning.
Drachen Fire is one of the canonical Big Streakers that I remember. Over the years of it being SBNO, it seemed to get better and better (well, it went from God Awful to I'd like to give it another try).
Hobbes: "What's the point of attaching a number to everything you do?"
Calvin: "If your numbers go up, it means you're having more fun."
Perhaps. But you have to look at Drachen Fire when compared to the coasters that were operating at the time. It debuted way before most people knew what it was like to ride a B&M- most loopers at the time were other cookie-cutter Arrow rides so Drachen Fire was completely unique and thrilling. No doubt it would be one of those coasters we loathe today if it were still operating (SFMM's Viper, KI's Vortex, etc.) but I know that when I rode it in 1992, it was an unbelievable experience and since I never rode it after that, I continued to believe that was the case... and maybe still do to this day.
I liked Drachen Fire for the one day that I got to ride it. It was new then, and had both corkscrews. It's uniqueness from other rides set it apart. The first drop with the inversion was awesome. The trains were very open. I don't doubt for a second that it became a bad ride after a few years though.
-Travis
www.youtube.com/TSVisits
It is an interesting observation, and Drachen Fire and The Bat are kind of opposite examples. Drachen Fire got better while it was SBNO, while The Bat turned into a mass-murderer. I mean, everybody in Cincinnati knows somebody who knows somebody whose cousin was in the park the day The Bat hit a tree and killed six people. Which, of course, never happened.
--Dave Althoff, Jr.
/X\ _ *** Respect rides. They do not respect you. ***
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/XXXXX\ /XXX\ /XXXX\_ /X\ /XXXXX\ /X\ /X\ /XXXXX
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Rob Ascough inadvertently described my experience with Drachen Fire pretty accurately. Back when it debuted, it was a ground (and arguably neck) -breaking coaster with few comparable modern steel coasters in existence. Also, my count was minimal, having only been to 3 or 4 major parks. My memory of it is all I have, and back then it was my favorite coaster until I think the year Alpengeist debuted.
At the same time, even back then I knew I was in the minority since I never saw a line for the damn thing, so I kind of understand the oddity of it becoming this legend that everyone seemed to adore.
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