Sunday, March 2, 2025

A Visit to Busch Gardens Tampa: Phoenix Rising review & thoughts on the park's elite coasters

So we finally got the chance to visit Busch Gardens Tampa and midweek in February is definitely the way to go. 

Most coasters were a walk on and we managed to hit Cheetah Hunt and Cobra's Curse right off the bat since we figured they would be the longest waits, but even later in the day, those would show as 20 minute waits. We loved our first time at the park, but it definitely seems like the park is in flux at the moment. The Sky Ride, which looks like it would have been awesome, sat closed, along with Kumba. 

Sheikra was also closed, though they were working quite hard on it, with workers on cherry pickers and using cranes throughout the ride with others working and diligently repainting the ride. 

It was tough seeing a Schwarzkopf beauty in Scorpion standing, but not operating, in the middle of the park. Though they say the ride is retired, it has sat there since its closure last September. Large portions of the back of the park are cordoned off. The train ride is currently a one way loop around the Serengeti Plain. Some of the animal enclosures are kind of depressing, including the kangaroos and the elephants, which I think could use significantly more natural space to move around. 

With all of that said, it is still a lovely park and we had a great time. Most of the animal enclosures offer ample space and have thoughtful placement around the park for exciting and relaxing places to walk around. Montu, Cheetah Hunt, and Iron Gwazi are all excellent and top tier rides in my opinion, Tigris and Cobra's Curse are very good. and Phoenix Rising has a great layout, but would be way better without that newer B&M rattle. The brand new family invert feels terrific until the last part of the ride, where the vibration presents itself in feeling it reverberate almost vertically as opposed to side to side like you find on their wider tracked rides. Montu rode smooth as glass here in its 29th year. I am not sure what is going on with B&M since about Banshee, but that rattle is odd and headache inducing. They need to look at their older coasters and figure out what is going on with their new ones. 

Montu is an absolute top tier ride. Every time I have stated that Alpengeist is my favorite invert, people usually state that Montu is their favorite. I finally rode Montu and was not disappointed. It is a fantastic and perfect ride. I still like Alpengeist a bit more, since I really love the high flying acrobatics of that ride, but Montu is the best of both worlds and feels like B&M hitting the next level on inverts after the construction of Raptor, improving upon the rougher spots that I still really enjoy, like the corkscrew after the MCBR of Raptor and instead having a beautiful little Batman style loop. 

Montu is the natural progression after Raptor, with having more height and larger inversions and speed than the Batman clones, but still having some of the smaller and snappier elements and inversions, and it is just a terrific ride all around. My favorites list on inverts is now (all of which I love except for Banshee), off the top of my head of the ones I can think of riding: 

1) Alpengeist

2) Montu

3) Afterburner

4) Raptor

5) Silver Bullet

6) Batman Clones

7) Talon

8) Great Bear

9) Both Dueling Dragons

...and the only one I don't really care for is Banshee because of its transitions being long and drawn out instead of snappy, and the vibration of the train through the course of the ride.

Montu is a terrific ride and my overall favorite coaster at the park. An absolutely perfect ride without a single complaint about it. The layout is relentless, intense, fast, and just an absolute onslaught of greatness. It rides smooth as butter, which is impressive after 29 years of service. I love how they created a bunch of underground areas like you are going down into a pyramid or temple. It adds so much to the ride having that kind of visual theming, something I would love to see more parks do to up the experiences of their rides. As far as any genre goes, I really feel like B&M inverts have the most consistently great quality of any of the genres of coasters. They are typically such a spectacular centerpiece of whatever midway they are. They are interactive between the riders and the guests on the midway. They are just visually spectacular in a way that no other ride really accomplishes. Their capacity is terrific with multiple train operations and adequately speedy ride operators. Inverts consistently have the highest seasonal rider throughput in any park they are installed in. I would love to see large custom inverts make a comeback again, especially in the Six Flags parks that have Batmans. 

Cheetah Hunt is the first ride we rode as we entered the park, since we figured the line would be the longest later in the day, knowing how slow the throughput is on its closest Intamin launcher sibling, Maverick. It does not seem to have as slow a throughput as Maverick. Intamin appears to have improved upon that design in regards to efficiency with Cheetah Hunt. I would classify this coaster as a family launcher, especially when compared to the extreme intensity of other Intamin launchers of that era like Maverick and Storm Runner. Cheetah Hunt is an absolute blast. We laughed the whole time. Not intense, gentle elements, and really scenic. A smooth and graceful ride with several great pops of airtime. The limited intensity of this ride made the lousy old horse collar over-the-shoulder restraints not too uncomfortable, with minimal neck banging, though the ride would benefit with the newer style belt shoulder restraints they have added to Storm Runner and Maverick. Otherwise, I would say this is a perfect ride. 

I love the first launch into that gentle overbanked turn and then that second launch into that spectacular set of turns at the top. As I look at RCDB, apparently that element is called a "Windcatcher Tower." I love it! High flying and slow maneuvers like that are something I really like on coasters. 

You don't often see high flying elements like that, especially ones that go slow like that. It really builds anticipation and excitement on the ride. Then the rest of that layout is so much fun! 

I really like where it goes down into the water. They took so much great care on this ride aesthetically in every way, right down to the large and shaded station that is kept cool, which was apparently repurposed from previous attractions. You just don't see huge signature stations like that anymore, especially ones that take cooling off from the heat into consideration. This is a perfect centerpiece coaster for the park. One that most guests can enjoy.

I really liked the signature 00s and early 10s signature Intamin, low to the ground set of zig zag urns like you see on both Maverick and El Toro. It goes through them more slowly so they are not quite as intense, but they are so much fun. The third launch section also seems to come out of nowhere. You seldom see such a large attraction get built gently enough to be a great family ride like this. I really feel like Busch Gardens and Intamin hit it out of the park with this one. Not many coasters come to mind when it comes to being both family coasters and large rides like this. I can think of rides that seem to have been unintentionally built as gentle family rides, like the latest generation of RMC single rails like Jersey Devil,  but they are not nearly as smooth as Cheetah Hunt. Overall, this coaster is such a winner. 

I don't usually buy into the hype that the RMC fanboys have, since most of their rides are generally a letdown for me, but Iron Gwazi is the exception. Just like Montu and Cheetah Hunt, this ride is pretty much perfect. The only complaint I have is the god awful trains and restraints that RMCs have. I saw several people get turned away from riding on each ride, and these were not large people. Their restraints are so miserably uncomfortable and not very accommodating for guests. When you have 2-3 people turned away from each ride, you have a problem. I do not understand how RMC built so many rides like this yet never worked on improving their lousy trains. Aside from this gripe, this ride has a perfect layout. This is something I have never said about an RMC before. The only RMCs that I really enjoyed are Twisted Colossus and Goliath at Six Flags Great America. I enjoy Steel Vengeance but there are numerous sections that are pretty uncomfortable and sections where the layout feels pretty uninspired. 

I was so busy riding Iron Gwazi, running two trains with no wait, that I realize I did not take too many pictures of it.

This one, dare I say, is top tier. Mind blown. Pure perfection in a layout. Unlike Steel Vengeance, Iron Gwazi has airtime throughout the entire first drop in every row. The entire layout offers extreme airtime, with the best being in the backseat. The layout is relentless. No forceless inversions like every other RMC I have ridden. The zero g thing on this one is not boring like it is on most of their other installations. The second drop is probably my favorite element aside from the first drop on the ride. The sideways airtime hill is so sweet. Most elements provide terrific airtime and visuals. Most of the elements are high flying, which is what I like most about RMCs designs. What blew my mind the most about the ride were the abundant head and arm chopper elements with seemingly endless crossovers and additional wooden structure providing unexpected close interactions near the crests of hills. 

Ridiculously tall, fast, and intense. It actually lived up to the hype in my opinion. It is my favorite of the RMC steel coasters, by far. I rode it in most rows with only the front row having a wait and the rest either being walk ons or re rides, which was the case for most of the rides on this visit. My first ride on the thing was a walk on for the backseat. This coaster blows away pretty much every RMC for me. Ranking is tough here. It is definitely top 15 ish. I clearly hold coasters like Fury 325, Magnum, Phantom, Superman at SFNE, Nitro, both Supermans at SFA and Darien, Alpengeist, Montu, Tatsu, and Lightning Run over it, but this is one heck of a coaster. 

I am a definitely a fan of Premier Sky Rocket II models, so I naturally enjoyed Tigris. I really enjoy this fun design. I would love to see them create a custom extended layout of these, but as they are, they are like having a really fun flat ride. The new Premier custom launcher coming to Canada's Wonderland this year looks terrific. I think these Sky Rocket II coasters are so much fun. I would love to see more of them come around to some smaller parks, these and the S&S launched models like GaleForce at Playland's Castaway Cove in Ocean City, NJ. The footprints on these are really small and they pack in a lot of thrill into that. 

Cobra's Curse is a really quirky coaster that is a ton of fun. Its placement along the Serengeti Plain gives awesome views of the animals. The elevator lift is disorienting, and the straight track sections are a ton of fun. Then it spins and locks you in backwards and then free spins. 

It is a really fun ride and I would love to experience the other spinners that Mack has out there. I believe this is the second of their spinning designs that we have ridden after Shredder at Nickelodeon Universe in Jersey. The whole layout is so creative, fun, and thrilling. Such a thoughtful layout in a really tiny footprint Also, extra props to the park for creating an indoor queue with cooling aspects and displays. It is great to see parks take guest comfort into consideration in creating a place to stand that it out of the sun and heat. 

As for the park's newest coaster, Phoenix Rising,  I thought the layout was perfect. Zippy with cool elements that pack a lot of thrill for something labeled as a family coaster. The problem though, as mentioned earlier, is that it has that phantom rattle that newer B&Ms have had over the last 10 years or so. With the trains hanging from a single point on the train instead of being spread out, the rattle manifests itself in vertical manner in the last third of the ride's layout, and it is immediately headache inducing. 

I do not know what the issue is here, but Montu, B&M's 29 year old invert across the park, is riding as smooth as a ride can possibly run, smooth as glass. This is a brand new ride and it is having the same problem many newer B&Ms have been having lately. I do not know if it is an issue with track fabrication, changes to trains, parts, wheels, or whatever, but something is not right here.  

As far as highest quality steel coaster collection goes, Busch Gardens Tampa has to be in the conversation with a top three in steel coasters that tops most or all parks that I can think of. 



Sunday, November 17, 2024

Our 2025 Roller Coaster Calendar is Now Available! Thank you for your support over the years

 Thanks for your support again this year! We are sold out of this year's edition! Our book on Pennsylvania Amusement Parks is still available through the dropdown menu at the top of the page. 

Our spiral bound 2025 Roller Coaster Wall Calendar is available now! It is our 13th annual Roller Coaster Calendar and it features roller coasters from many amusement parks, including: 

-Knoebels in Pennsylvania 
-Belmont Park in San Diego 
-Funtown Splashtown USA in Maine
-Waldameer and Water World in Erie, PA
-Six Flags Magic Mountain 
-Kentucky Kingdom 
-Indiana Beach 
-Six Flags Great America 
-Lakemont Park
-Six Flags Great Adventure
-Six Flags New England
-Kings Island

These calendars are custom made by us with photos taken by us. The calendars open up to be 17 inches tall by 11 inches wide (8.5 by 11 per page)

Also available is our book on Pennsylvania's historic amusement parks, Great Pennsylvania Amusement Parks Road Trip. It features Knoebels, Kennywood Park, Hersheypark, Dorney Park, Waldameer, DelGrosso's, Lakemont, Dutch Wonderland, Idlewild, and the gone, but not forgotten, Conneaut Lake Park.

Purchases of both items can be made through the PayPal menu at the bottom of this page, and at the top of this page. Thank you for all of your support over the years!


Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Waldameer Trip Report: Ravine Flyer II First Turnaround Retracking

Got our first visit of the season in at Waldameer last weekend, along with some beach time at adjacent and beautiful Presque Isle State Park. Erie is our favorite day trip in the summer, especially with our pups. Sitting out on the beaches, dipping into the water. Dogs are allowed on the unguarded beaches, of which there are plenty, along the seven miles of beach that the peninsula into Lake Erie has to offer. We usually wrap up the day with a few rides on Ravine Flyer II. This is also one of the few parks that allows you to bring dogs in, although the dogs are unable to ride anything like they are at Knoebels, which allows dogs to ride on the trains, carousels, and antique car ride. Waldameer does not allow this, though you can bring the dogs in, which is still pretty awesome. 
This is a relatively quiet year in regards to additions to the park this year, at least compared to other years. Each year they have done really ambitious things for more than a decade, such as pretty much tripling the size of the waterpark into a facility with an excellent collection of waterslides, including a water coaster that was added last year. This park has added to its collection pretty much yearly with the addition of new rides, revamped areas of the park, and so much more. This year looked like more of a maintenance year, adding a few more cabanas, and rebuilding the track first turnaround section of Ravine Flyer II.
There is something pleasant about waiting for the train to pass by on the midway.
CeCe chilling on the midway
Waldameer's main midway has so much of the charm I love about these old time amusement parks. Games, a sky ride running over the midway, concessions, and happy and relaxed people. Waldameer is now the sole survivor in this entire corner of the state, and one of only two remaining traditional amusement parks in all of western PA, with Conneaut Lake Park gone, Lakemont Park in limbo, and all of the parks of Northeast Ohio, aside from Memphis Kiddie Park, being gone. Not only has Waldameer survived, but it has flourished, with innovative attractions being constantly added to the park. 
Ravine Flyer is running great! They rebuilt the first turnaround section this past year, so it is super smooth, while still giving you those terrific lateral forces. This coaster has aged so gracefully, and really feels like it tops it self out in quality each year. 

Last year the back half was rebuilt. Now it really hauls through the end, no momentum loss going into that last airtime hill. Endless pops of out of your seat ejector air, to the point of being brought to standing position. All of this in addition to having some of the most scenic views of any coaster, with a view from above of Lake Erie and Presque Isle State Park before you get launched to the moon on the first drop. After all of these years, it remains the best coaster on Lake Erie. 
There is nothing like a well maintained coaster running PTC trains. Nothing comes close to it. The early era Gravity Group coasters and the CCI coasters with PTCs are the pinnacle of wooden coaster construction in my opinion. Between this and CCI's Silver Comet up at Niagara Amusement Park, you have two terrific coasters from this era that are only two hours apart. 
Be sure to check out Waldameer and Ravine Flyer II every chance you get. 

Wednesday, May 22, 2024

Niagara Amusement Park: Silver Comet is a CCI That Cannot Be Missed

Niagara Amusement Park has a seriously great coaster that cannot be missed. I rode Silver Comet last Labor Day weekend and adored it, yet I forgot to make a trip report, so here goes. Silver Comet is a fantastic CCI masterpiece. A zippy layout with terrific laterals and airtime, the kind of experience you should expect to get on a CCI, especially one with PTC trains. It is a perfect ride and there is no reason you should not stop at this park if you are in northern NY. There is a solid chance that you could ride this coaster for a long time, non-stop, if you really wanted to. This coaster would definitely be worth residing for hours. It is a really great coaster. 

The layout is purely airtime, lightly banked turns with terrific laterals, and a really nice and compact layout with a ton of action. It is a great counterpart to Ravine Flyer II, about two hours southeast down the Lake Erie coast. 
The park itself is in flux. It has a nice layout with a small lake, woods, and a rebounding collection of rides. This is a big task for the park, since Apex parks took out most of the rides when the old Martin's Fantasy Island was closed in 2020. Gene Staples, the same guy that purchased and saved Indiana Beach and Clementon Park, purchased the park, got the coaster back up and running, and has brought in some other rides to fill in. An SDC Galaxi is in the midst of construction, a small family coaster is also under construction. 

An old Schwarzkopf shuttle loop, which was Kennywood's Laser Loop, is sitting in pieces in the parking lot. I would be surprised if they are able to get that rebuilt, but it would be great if they could.

The park has a main midway that is western themed, and they have regular western shows, which is strange, but cool at the same time. It was better than expected, though I did not hang around for it since I did not have the time. I have never seen a small park like this have an immersive themed experience like this, and I was pretty impressed. 
Silver Comet was designed by Larry Bill and opened in 1999. It sat from 2020-2022 and was brought back to life. It is a terrifically underrated ride. A real gem. 
It surprises me that Silver Comet is often overlooked. A strong argument could be made that this is the best coaster or at least amongst the best coasters in New York State. The only major park I am missing in the state is Great Escape. This ride is at the same level of quality as the other standouts in the state, including the Coney Island Cyclone, Rye Playland's Dragon Coaster, Seabreeze's Bobs, and Darien Lake's Viper and Ride of Steel. It is great doing this park in conjunction with stunning Niagara Falls, which is only 15 minutes from here. 





 

Monday, October 9, 2023

Our 2024 Roller Coaster Calendar is Available Now

This year's edition is sold out! Thank you for your support again! Our book on Pennsylvania Amusement Parks is still available though!

Our spiral bound 2024 Roller Coaster Wall Calendar is available now! It is our 11th annual Roller Coaster Calendar and it features roller coasters from many amusement parks, including: 

-Knoebels in Pennsylvania 
-Belmont Park in San Diego 
-Busch Gardens Williamsburg
-Knott's Berry Farm 
-Six Flags Magic Mountain 
-Morey's Piers in New Jersey 
-Indiana Beach 
-Six Flags Great America 
-Casino Pier in NJ
-Six Flags Great Adventure
-Playland's Castaway Cove in Ocean City, NJ
-Niagara Amusement Park

These calendars are custom made by us with photos taken by us. The calendars open up to be 17 inches tall by 11 inches wide (8.5 by 11 per page)

Also available is our book on Pennsylvania's historic amusement parks, Great Pennsylvania Amusement Parks Road Trip. It features Knoebels, Kennywood Park, Hersheypark, Dorney Park, Waldameer, DelGrosso's, Lakemont, Dutch Wonderland, Idlewild, and the gone, but not forgotten, Conneaut Lake Park.

Purchases of both items can be made through the PayPal menu at the bottom of this page, and at the top of this page. Thank you for all of your support over the years!


Book Purchase Option

Sunday, July 2, 2023

Waldameer Trip Report: New Water Coaster Update & Continued Epic Ravine Flyer Trackwork



I will start things off by saying that Waldameer is a perfect amusement park. The park is continually adding and improving with every chance that they get, which is rare within the industry, let alone within the tough economic headwinds that this region of the Rust Belt has faced for more than 40 years. They get some kind of addition annually, no matter what. Whether it be a flat ride, park improvement, or a new slide or attraction in their booming waterpark, they are constantly improving and perfecting the park. 

Brand new track through the back portion of the coaster.

They have one of the best wooden roller coasters in the world with Ravine Flyer II, and have maintained it perfectly since it debuted. This Gravity Group creation with PTC trains is pure perfection. Somehow topping itself each year in excellence. They have track work down to a science, utilizing ride timing and data in direct conjunction with the Gravity Group to target areas of the ride to build new track for each offseason. The end result is a perfectly maintained wooden roller coaster that breaks in and shines in perfection every single season. 

There is nothing quite like a wooden roller coaster with PTC trains for a feeling of absolute perfection. I've ridden this almost every season since it was new, and can say that this year the coaster was so twisted and out of control that I did not even know what was coming. Extremely fast, full of airtime and laterals, perfectly placed tunnels, and views of Lake Erie and Presque Isle State Park that are unmatched. 

The other thing that really impresses me as well is that they have retained the classic feel of the park along the main midways. It feels like a step back in time when you walk through the main midway of the park as you head to Ravine Flyer. It is perfectly shaded, there is a sky ride that extends for the length of the midway, and there are old midway games, arcades, and snack stands that remind me of parks that have either completely closed, or other parks that have been gutted to the point of no longer being recognized on older midways, like Dorney Park has. None of that sanitized feel along these midways, and I am glad the park has retained that character. 

The expansion of the waterpark has transformed it from being a really fun regional waterpark into a world class player. No waterslide exists within 5 hours of this park that is remotely like this new waterslide. The growth of this waterpark has also been pretty incredible. Rocket Blast is the yellow slide within this view. The other thing the park has done to maximize space is through utilizing pads on the older slide towers to pack as many slides into the space as possible.

It is hard to believe that most of the things in view here were parking lot about ten years ago. 

The waterpark has about tripled in size, with 32 waterslides, with the bulk of these added in the last ten years, in addition to a wave pool, water play areas, and more. Water World is a bonafide world class waterpark contender now. The clip at which they have expanded is spectacular. 


Sunday, June 25, 2023

Playland's Castaway Cove in Ocean City, NJ: The Most Thrills Per Acre Anywhere

The building under construction out front will be the platform for yet another coaster in the next few years!

I have no idea how they pack this much awesome in such a small spot. They had more operating full size coasters than Lake Compounce did earlier in our trip, in a space that could be contained within the front entranceway and midway to that park. To top all of that off, they have two signature coasters that cannot be found anywhere else or even remotely close in style. Strange and awesome coasters, and a flat ride collection that most parks should be envious of. All while managing to have wide open midways that do not feel overcrowded and spectacular lighting packages on all of their rides, making it really pop in a beautiful boardwalk setting. 

I got a major case of "dirty lens" on this evening, and I left my equipment behind and did not have an extra battery, but you get the gist of it. Their custom Miler coaster is unique and wild at the same time. with a ride, airtime, and lats that are reminiscent of a wooden roller coaster. The photos in the second half are phone shots, though there is minimal difference in quality, to be honest. 


Pano mode on the phone was pretty weak, but it is what it is. How they manage to fit a log flume in this space is just amazing. This park and Indiana Beach are just masters at packing in the thrills per acre, this park especially though. You could easily fit it within the entry plaza of most 70s era suburban amusement parks. 

Riding the Ferris Wheel and seeing what they have accomplished is really amazing.

They even manage to fit a small train ride within the park.

I get a smile just thinking about this park. It is such a treat to visit this joyful park. GaleForce is just phenomenal. Between the extreme airtime and inversions, this ride has it all. On this trip I had ridden Premier, Intamin, and S&S compact vertical launcher coaster creations, all in the matter of a few days. S&S and the epic design of Joe Draves hit out out of the park. This ride is absolutely bonkers and there is really nothing else quite like it. Then they run it 2-3 times through the cycle and the thing is just wicked. Wild airtime and hang time that leaves you wondering what happened at the end. This ride alone is worth a visit to Jersey, all the other boardwalk parks and Great Adventure are just icing after this. Highly recommend checking out this park and relaxing down at the Jersey Shore. For more info on the park, check out our last trip report from there.