Day 1 - Efteling 1
So cutting to the chase I'm not happy with how my Belgium report came out in the slightest. I went into those parks with too much of a "how does this ride compare to the other stuff I've done?" instead of a "let's enjoy and have fun on the theme park attraction!" mindset. I read my Kondaa review and just sigh in despair every time I make a comparison, or any other ride on that trip that I ranked immediately after riding - most rides on that trip I wasn't even past the ride's exit before opening up the spreadsheet and declaring that my initial thoughts were final.
In this trip, everything changed. I went into the rides with a "let's enjoy and have fun on the theme park attraction!" instead of a "how does this ride compare to the other stuff I've done?" mindset, and didn't even look at the spreadsheet for the whole trip. And needless to say, this has been far better.
Anyway whatever. I took a train down from Eindhoven Centraal to 's-Hertogenbosch (Den Bosch) before catching a 400 bus "via Efteling" to the park, and there's the house of the five senses. Pretty neat.
Hello Pardoes.
And after rope-dropping the bathroom, my first actual attraction of the trip is
#273 Baron 1898, the park's dive coaster and my (finally) 10th coaster from Bolliger & Mabillard. I've heard this is one of the weaker B&Ms, and while it certainly is, I honestly still kinda loved it.
The preshow is cool, the inversions are fun & floaty, the helix is decent and you get a good few surprising pops of air out of your seat especially on the drop and during one of the inversions. While the theming quality drops significantly past the drop, I forgive it for the layout being pretty fun for what it is. I like it.
Something I didn't like as much was
#274 Vliegende Hollander. New manufacturer cred for me in KumbaK who are universally hated among coaster enthusiasts alike as they break everything they touch but Hollander is often regarded as the best thing they've ever done (though they did have to call in the engineers at Intamin because they didn't know how to make a lift hill, so go figure).
I've heard this dark ride section is world class, let's find out.
So we're in darkness. I can't see anything. We continue to not be able to see anything. Then in the dark there's some smoke in the complete darkness. That's a cool drop in the dark, and a neat Medusa thing on the second lift. Oh, the dark ride bit's over and we're outside now. Coaster section's... fine, splash, aww it's over.
A bit of an anticlimatic ending to a bit of an anticlimatic ride. I'm mildly disappointed by the dark ride section being a little less than I thought it could've been, it ended very quickly, and waddling around in pitch black does nothing for me and parks seem to be overly joyous with doing exactly that all the time. I get why people like it, I guess, but it didn't click with me. A shame when this happens, I hope I get to ride this again and see if anything changes.
Next,
#275 Joris en de Draak (Vuur) and
#276 Joris en de Draak (Water). As days continue I start to get overly questioning of myself on whether or not it's a silly idea to count separate-tracked duelling coasters as a plus-two to the count. On one hand, they're separate tracks and can operate individually of each other. On the other hand, they're advertised by the park as one attraction and the ride has one entrance. So there's plenty of arguments on both sides, and over time this thought replays in my head more often than ever.
Anyway whatever. Joris is a FANTASTIC ride. It's full of incredibly varied forces, an even mix of positives, laterals, and airtime with that classic Great Coasters shaping that doesn't really exist on Wicker Man or Heidi. A remarkable load of enjoyment that put a huge smile on my face. Easily one of my new favourite wooden coasters (not difficult), and made me even more excited for my upcoming visit to Toverland later in the week for Troy which was essentially a super-scaled version of this. It'll be just as good, right? Right????
After getting carried away with more than a few rides on either side it was time for
#277 Python. Somehow, SOMEHOW, I got front row despite queuing for single rider. After the world's slowest lift hill for some reason the loops are surprisingly forceful and then the corkscrews turn you over before ending on a helix.
It's alright, but I feel like the park's just hanging onto this ride now. I get sentimental value and all that, and I appreciate that it's glossy smooth, but it obviously doesn't fit in with the rest of the park.
I saw the world's smallest pirate ship before moving on and seeing some ducks.
#278 Vogel Rok is yet another indoor
roller coaster where nothing happens inside. Yeah, there's some bird statues that whizz past too quickly for you to take a proper look, but that's it. Yeah the ride pulls some decent positives and the layout's fine, ended a little soon for me, but I am so unbelievably over that happening in pitch black darkness. It's just "feel positives for two minutes simulator" and I'm bored to death of it. Is it really that difficult to just theme the inside of your building?????
Eh.
Dark ride time now.
Carnaval Festival is generally frowned upon by most enthusiasts I meet due to its questionable depictions of the people of the world, but in all truth I quite liked this thing. It's better Small World with a more likeable tune, and while I did think "damn, they really went there" with some scenes, it was a fun time.
So far two of the three madhouses I've done have let me down. Haunted House Monster party was pretty eh, Haunting just sucked, Palais du Genie was pretty good though. I wonder if
Villa Volta will tie the record and become the second madhouse for me to enjoy?
And after that absolute drag of a preshow, I'm in.
Oh. It's one of the bad ones. I guess that's that then.
Up next was
Droomvlucht, arguably by far my most anticipated ride of the whole trip. And boy did it deliver. One of the shorter dark rides of the trip at "just" five-ish minutes and five scenes to it, it was a beautifully made ride with gorgeous scenes where the music fit perfectly with each one, and every scene was full to the brim of new things to look at every time. I knew I was going to love it from the very beginning before even the first scene where you ascended the lift in darkness with this ultra-low pitch trumpet playing, to kinda build tension or something. The reveals of every scene are expertly done, and everything has such tiny details that simply ooze happiness and pleasure in this magical fairy world.
You're then sent into darkness as you see these wonderful floating castles in space orbiting around each other as shooting stars soar through the galaxies, then a pleasant finale you suddenly speed up as you spin down a huge helix that gives all views of a massive scene in the center with things to see and do all the way from the top to the bottom, and then it's over as you return to the station which is oddly reminiscent of a public transport stop. The extreme juxtaposition of the train stop-type station and the whimsical fairy world was... quite something, and I came off.
Despite all my praise, I don't think it's my favourite dark ride, but it's absolutely up there with the top.
Next, I found
Diorama, which was a cool and highly impressive model village thing. Awesome, big fan of these things.
Then I found
Symbolica which I went into knowing nothing beyond "there's a whale". Before I became cultured on Efteling's lore and storytelling, when I saw Pardoes in the (very amusing) preshow I thought this is the ride where he came from and his popularity kinda sprung from there. He opens the stairs much to the old guy's dismay, and we go into a secret underground passageway. Being a single rider I got the back row of the trackless vehicles so I didn't get to do the whole interaction thing that the people in front were doing, so I was kinda watching what was going on instead.
In all honesty I didn't really get Symbolica. I think the whole premise is that Pardoes gave you some magical powers, "Illumina Fantasi" and all that, then you bring some things to life or something, I don't know. It's all extremely technically impressive with detail to the edges of the walls, but nothing was really leaving a lasting impression on me. I saw the whale, it came to life, then tried to break out, oh it's done now and off to the next scene. There's so much to Symbolica, and I kept wishing that I was the one in control of the vehicle where you were telling it what to do and where to go. There's a room with planets, one with butterflies, one with instruments, one with Pardoes, one with wine bottles, a storm, some instruments that end up breaking, a mirror, a dance scene... it's a lot to take in.
I got off not entirely convinced by it all. It's difficult; it is one of the most impressive pieces of dark ride technology I've seen, but I just wasn't understanding what we were doing or why. I'll come back to it.
Now it was time for the
fairytale forest, and I think I'll let the photos do the talking here. It's all so impressive, with every single set moving, and even some short shows. I saw the one with the Indian water lillies, and one about a girl who dies in order to meet her dead grandmother (I think) which was nice.
By now it had started raining hard, and it was coming up on closing time, but I was at the exact opposite end of the park that I needed to be to get some final rides in. I almost-ran over to Joris where I snuck two rides in. The first of the two were absolutely fantastic with the ride flying through the layout and the forces I felt before were essentially amplified quite significantly. It was an amazing ride.
Then I ran over for a second, and it started raining even harder, but unfortunately this was a mistake on my end as while it was obviously running just as good, the harder rain dampened my enjoyment a little as I had to put focus into holding my hood over my face as the feeling on my face was getting quite unpleasant. I knew I should have left it at that one ride, but whatever, it's an incredible ride either way.
Due to the rain I decided against staying for the Aquanura fountain show, so that closed out my first day at Efteling. It is an absolutely wonderful park, instantly a classic, the food is consistently fantastic, and just good times all around. There's bound to be a couple rides that don't hit, but not everything can be a winner. I'll be back for day two shortly.
Tomorrow - rain