witchfinder
Giga Poster
Like our trip to Sweden earlier this year, this was another trip postponed from 2020. Originally we were flying to Chicago to go and see my wife’s favourite Country singer Chris Stapleton at Wrigley Field, then having 8 days to hit Cedar Point, Indiana Beach and Six Flags Great America.
As with the Sweden trip, when it came to rearranging this one we added some days on and made it a (sort of) circular road trip that encompassed Cedar Point, Kings Island, Dollywood, SFGAm and ended up in Milwaukee where we would fulfil the wife’s original requirement of seeing Stapleton. With the trip taking place in late September/early October we had the added bonus of seeing the US in the autumn for the first time and checking out all the parks Halloween/Fall events.
Before all that though we had to get there, and due to faff I won’t go into, we had to use our American Airlines flight credits from 2020 on a flight from Dublin to Chicago. Since the flight we chose departed at 9am, we had to fly from the UK to Dublin the day before and do you know what’s just a short car journey from Dublin Airport? Tayto Park!
After arriving into the airport at lunchtime and picking up the rental car, we drove to the park for what was effectively just a cred run, as we only had about 3 hours by the time we’d got there and gone through some faff to get discounted entry with our RCCGB membership cards.
The park was busier than expected and most queues were around 30 minutes so the idea of getting lots of rides wasn’t going to happen. First stop was obviously this beast that you can see from the car park – Ch Chulainn or however you spell it.
First ride was on the second row and this was my first big-scale Gravity Group Woodie, having only ridden Mine Blower and Twister before. First drop was great, and overall the ride was wild without being too rough. Highlights on that first ride would be a couple of modest airtime pops and the big over-overbanked turn (not an inversion, Tayto Park). It was fun but didn’t really stand out as anything special, so more rides would be required later on.
Before that though, there were three more creds of varying quality to mop up. Next up was Dino Dash, the park’s new-for-2022 addition and one of a new design of Vekoma junior coasters.
The winding queue line was crazy long and once we got to where there were actually people it was was slow-moving, as befits a one train family ride. Theming was pretty good although the dinosaurs were a bit run down in places so I suspect they had been transplanted from an older attraction.
We finally reached the front of the queue and managed to snag the front row which meant we rode in the jeep!
This was a pretty fun ride for a junior coaster. It had some low to the ground banked turns and even some very mild airtime, and if it ran a little bit faster you’d probably get some genuine air from it. The interaction with the dinosaurs was fun, so overall it was a good ride for kids and childish adults like ourselves.
Next up was Flight School, the Zierer Force. Again, there was a fairly decent effort at theming on this one.
The ride itself was pretty similar to Dino Dash, though slightly inferior – banked turns and the mildest hint of airtime. In a word – fun.
The final cred was over in the kids area, which involved navigating a maze of pathways with limited signage, but eventually we found it – Ladybird Loop.
This was to be my first and only SBF Visa spinner of the year, though I could’ve ridden a couple in the States. I’ve decided though that I am now only riding crappy kiddie creds if they are in a park that I’ve already paid to enter, or I’m on a specific crappy cred run. I’ve passed 300 creds, there’s no value in paying to specifically ride this kind of junk
You know what you’re getting with these things – 3 laps, mild spinning, tedious loading times. At least this one had an effort made with the theming!
With all the creds ticked off we pondered riding Viking Voyage, but having seen how wet people were getting on it, we decided against it since we didn’t want to risk having wet footwear for our ongoing journey to Chicago the next day. So instead we had a wander around the zoo.
Coatis!
I then headed back to get two more rides on Cu Chulainn before the park closed. Both rides were near the back and that made for a much more impressive ride than the earlier one. It’s certainly rougher at the tail-end of the train but not significantly so, and the improvements to the airtime were well worth some minor discomfort as there were some great ejector pops compared to riding at the front and I was out of the seat all the way down the first drop. It does have some slow spots and a lot of left turns, but this is easily the best woodie in the British Isles and was destined for a place in my top ten wooden coasters.
What's in the she... Oh hang on, wrong park. That's coming up later
That was it for Tayto Park - a quick visit and a nice warm-up for the bigger and better parks to come. Overall the park seemed pretty nice. Operations were so-so, there was quite a bit of queue jumping from the local teens and it was a bit of a maze in places with a few dead ends, but the ride line-up is pretty decent for a park of its size and it should be well worth another visit under its new name of Emerald Park when the two new Vekomas are opened.
After that we headed to our AirBnB close to the airport, grabbed some food and had a quiet night in as we had to be up at 6am the next day to check-in for our flight to Chicago. We were soon to find though that we were taking an unwelcome guest with us…
As with the Sweden trip, when it came to rearranging this one we added some days on and made it a (sort of) circular road trip that encompassed Cedar Point, Kings Island, Dollywood, SFGAm and ended up in Milwaukee where we would fulfil the wife’s original requirement of seeing Stapleton. With the trip taking place in late September/early October we had the added bonus of seeing the US in the autumn for the first time and checking out all the parks Halloween/Fall events.
Before all that though we had to get there, and due to faff I won’t go into, we had to use our American Airlines flight credits from 2020 on a flight from Dublin to Chicago. Since the flight we chose departed at 9am, we had to fly from the UK to Dublin the day before and do you know what’s just a short car journey from Dublin Airport? Tayto Park!
After arriving into the airport at lunchtime and picking up the rental car, we drove to the park for what was effectively just a cred run, as we only had about 3 hours by the time we’d got there and gone through some faff to get discounted entry with our RCCGB membership cards.
The park was busier than expected and most queues were around 30 minutes so the idea of getting lots of rides wasn’t going to happen. First stop was obviously this beast that you can see from the car park – Ch Chulainn or however you spell it.
First ride was on the second row and this was my first big-scale Gravity Group Woodie, having only ridden Mine Blower and Twister before. First drop was great, and overall the ride was wild without being too rough. Highlights on that first ride would be a couple of modest airtime pops and the big over-overbanked turn (not an inversion, Tayto Park). It was fun but didn’t really stand out as anything special, so more rides would be required later on.
Before that though, there were three more creds of varying quality to mop up. Next up was Dino Dash, the park’s new-for-2022 addition and one of a new design of Vekoma junior coasters.
The winding queue line was crazy long and once we got to where there were actually people it was was slow-moving, as befits a one train family ride. Theming was pretty good although the dinosaurs were a bit run down in places so I suspect they had been transplanted from an older attraction.
We finally reached the front of the queue and managed to snag the front row which meant we rode in the jeep!
This was a pretty fun ride for a junior coaster. It had some low to the ground banked turns and even some very mild airtime, and if it ran a little bit faster you’d probably get some genuine air from it. The interaction with the dinosaurs was fun, so overall it was a good ride for kids and childish adults like ourselves.
Next up was Flight School, the Zierer Force. Again, there was a fairly decent effort at theming on this one.
The ride itself was pretty similar to Dino Dash, though slightly inferior – banked turns and the mildest hint of airtime. In a word – fun.
The final cred was over in the kids area, which involved navigating a maze of pathways with limited signage, but eventually we found it – Ladybird Loop.
This was to be my first and only SBF Visa spinner of the year, though I could’ve ridden a couple in the States. I’ve decided though that I am now only riding crappy kiddie creds if they are in a park that I’ve already paid to enter, or I’m on a specific crappy cred run. I’ve passed 300 creds, there’s no value in paying to specifically ride this kind of junk
You know what you’re getting with these things – 3 laps, mild spinning, tedious loading times. At least this one had an effort made with the theming!
With all the creds ticked off we pondered riding Viking Voyage, but having seen how wet people were getting on it, we decided against it since we didn’t want to risk having wet footwear for our ongoing journey to Chicago the next day. So instead we had a wander around the zoo.
Coatis!
I then headed back to get two more rides on Cu Chulainn before the park closed. Both rides were near the back and that made for a much more impressive ride than the earlier one. It’s certainly rougher at the tail-end of the train but not significantly so, and the improvements to the airtime were well worth some minor discomfort as there were some great ejector pops compared to riding at the front and I was out of the seat all the way down the first drop. It does have some slow spots and a lot of left turns, but this is easily the best woodie in the British Isles and was destined for a place in my top ten wooden coasters.
What's in the she... Oh hang on, wrong park. That's coming up later
That was it for Tayto Park - a quick visit and a nice warm-up for the bigger and better parks to come. Overall the park seemed pretty nice. Operations were so-so, there was quite a bit of queue jumping from the local teens and it was a bit of a maze in places with a few dead ends, but the ride line-up is pretty decent for a park of its size and it should be well worth another visit under its new name of Emerald Park when the two new Vekomas are opened.
After that we headed to our AirBnB close to the airport, grabbed some food and had a quiet night in as we had to be up at 6am the next day to check-in for our flight to Chicago. We were soon to find though that we were taking an unwelcome guest with us…