Ride the Roar-O-Sarus... debuting Spring, 2014, at Story Land, NH. "Kiddie coaster" my eye...
You still have Zoidberg.... You ALL have Zoidberg! (V) (;,,;) (V)
Me like. Is this an exact duplicate of WW?
And.
I. Love. That. Train.
The amusement park rises bold and stark..kids are huddled on the beach in a mist
http://support.gktw.org/site/TR/CoastingForKids/General?px=1248054&...fr_id=1372
It's a really beautiful train. I was really impressed! I haven't been on a ride with Timberliners yet, but they impress the crap out of me. And from what I hear from people who maintain the rides, they sure help a lot to reduce track maintenance.
Jeff - Editor - CoasterBuzz.com - My Blog
Another advantage I see that the Timberliners have, based on my experience on Wooden Warrior, loading is easier and quicker. No seatbelts for the guests to sit on and/or fiddle with and also don't need check by the ride ops. Ride ops needn't bend over so far to reach and check the lapbar. (And they're not reaching towards your private zone).
jameswhitmore.net
Yes, please.
The amusement park rises bold and stark..kids are huddled on the beach in a mist
http://support.gktw.org/site/TR/CoastingForKids/General?px=1248054&...fr_id=1372
Yeah, it's been a coupla years since those wonderful rides on WW, so I wasn't sure. After watching this animation a coupla times more...and reading the responses contained herein from you and Tek...I realize they're not one and the same.
The amusement park rises bold and stark..kids are huddled on the beach in a mist
http://support.gktw.org/site/TR/CoastingForKids/General?px=1248054&...fr_id=1372
bjames said:
Why do all dinosaur themed rides rip off the logo of Jurassic Park?
Because ever since 1923 when the Neuland font was created, people have used it for expressing the ideas of "primitive" in nature. Including Gary Goddard and the Landmark group who did all of the imaginary "theme park" stuff for the movie, and eventually the theming for the real life theme park attractions. I presume that included the generation of the logo and use of the "inline" variant of the Neuland font for the "park logo".
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