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Theme Park News


by Candyce H. Stapen

For guaranteed family fun, theme parks never go out of style. One reason: constant new rides and attractions that up the thrills and add to the fantasy. As always, coasters are among the big, bold, dare-you-to-do-it debuts. The new season's models not only zip the fearless down tracks at dizzying speeds, but also twist riders in new ways. Both Dollywood's Mystery Mine and Busch Gardens' Griffon add Immelman loops, a heart-pounding combo of a loop and a roll. The Disney parks take wish fulfillment to a new level and Hersheypark adds the nostalgia of a seaside getaway with its new water-themed boardwalk.


Walt Disney World, Orlando, FL and Disneyland, Anaheim, CA

The Disney theme parks have always been in the business of selling dreams and never more so than through December 2007. During the 15-month celebration "Year of a Million Dreams," which began October 2006, the parks add special experiences designed to maximize the magic.

The wishes-come-true items include being guest of honor in a parade, becoming a pirate of the Caribbean, and sleeping overnight in the new Mickey Mouse Penthouse at Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim (begins December 1, 2006) or bedding down in the Cinderella Castle Suite in Walt Disney World, Orlando (beginning late January 2007).

Other possibilities: winning a 15-day, 14-night tour of the worldwide Disney parks or a ten-day Disney Cruise Line Mediterranean cruise. The lucky are either chosen at the parks or by entering www.disneyparks.com/rules.

New attractions at the Orlando park include The Seas with Nemo and Friends, a ride through a coral reef in Epcot (fall 2006) and "Finding Nemo-The Musical," (opening late 2006 in the Animal Kingdom). California's Disneyland debuts Finding Nemo Submarine Voyage, in (Tomorrowland, summer 2007 (www.disneyparks.com).


Busch Gardens Williamsburg Williamsburg, VA

Land of the Dragons Busch Gardens Williamsburg, a pastiche of faux European villages with thousands of flowers and beautiful landscaping, frequently wins the "Most Beautiful Theme Park" title. The park combines roller coasters and other fun rides with German, French, Italian, and Irish villages.

For spring 2007, the park unleashes Griffon, billed as the world's tallest-205 feet high-and only floorless dive coaster. This monster plunges riders 90 degrees straight down at more than 75 miles per hour. The gut-wrenching thrills also include loops, rolls, twists, and turns. Griffon joins such other park coasters as Apollo's Chariot, which hurls riders down nine drops totaling nearly 1,000 feet at speeds up to 73 miles per hour and Alpengeist, which flips the fearless six times, dropping them a dizzying 95 feet.

Little kids especially like the child-friendly Land of the Dragons play area and the kid-sized rides. The park's shows provide welcome breaks from all the walking, especially for little feet. At Jack Hanna's Wild Reserve see gray wolves and hand-feed lorikeets, colorful, tiny birds. Don't forget to visit the Clydesdales and board the Rhine River boat for a scenic ten-minute cruise (800-343-7946; www.buschgardens.com).


Cedar Point Amusement Park Sandusky, OH

Cedar Point, a frequent winner of best amusement park, also takes the title of home to the world's largest collection of roller coasters-17 with the debut in 2007 of Maverick. The steel scream machine features two launches-one in the dark-plus a 400-foot tunnel, a 95-degree drop and a top speed of 70 mph. Among the park's other coasters are Top Thrill Dragster, a 420-foot-high monster that propels riders at speeds of up 125 miles per hour; Magnum XL200, which rises 205 feet tall and races along at up to 72 miles per hour, as well as Mean Streak, a 161-foot-tall wooden wonder with dips and drops calculated to make you shriek.

For little ones, there's Camp Snoopy whose highlight is the Woodland Express, a 38-foot-tall family coaster. At Castaway Bay, an indoor waterpark attached to a hotel operated by the park, splash in the 100,000-gallon wave pool, slither down slides, get propelled upstream on the water coaster, and get doused by a giant tipping bucket and interactive sprays at the family funhouse (419-627-2350; www.cedarpoint.com).


Hersheypark, Hershey, PA

Lightning Racer at Hersheypark There's an old-fashioned sweetness to Hersheypark, from Chocolate World's ride through look-at-the-candy factory to real hugs from Reese's Peanut Butter Cup and the rest of the characters. The 110-acre theme park celebrates its 100th birthday by debuting the Boardwalk at Hersheypark on Memorial Day. Along with eateries, arcades and shops, the new 4.6-acre site pays tribute to a day at the beach with five new get-wet attractions.

With East Coast Waterworks, the centerpiece, kids can slip down seven slides, crawl through two tunnels, cross 225 feet of bridges and play with nearly 200 interactive water toys. Families can zoom down Coastline Plunge, a slide complex that will bring the board game Chutes and Ladders to life, swim at Bayside Pier, the new pool, and try hanging ten on Waverider. Tots can splash at Sandcastle Cove, a new wading area.

The park's Midway America, a nostalgic nod to traditional amusement parks, features a 100-foot Ferris wheel. Other park favorites: Lightning Racer, a wooden roller coaster that shimmies and shakes as it zooms down the track, and Storm Runner, a high-speed coaster that zips riders at speeds of up to 72 miles per hour, dropping them 150 feet (800-HERSHEY; www.hersheypark.com).


Dollywood, Pigeon Forge, TN

Dollywood, the theme park begun by megastar Dolly Parton in the hills of her hometown just five miles north of the Gatlinburg entrance to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, debuts a mega-coaster for the spring/summer 2007 season. Mystery Mine, set in an abandoned coalmine, plunges riders into the dark, then drops them a stomach-churning 85 feet at 95 degrees. Along with half-loops, rollovers and other gut-wrenching twists, the ride features special effects. The coaster joins the popular Thunderhead, a wooden coaster with 100-foot drops and speeds of up to 55 miles per hour and the Tennessee Tornado, with drops of 128 feet at speeds up to 65 miles per hour.

Mountain heritage--crafts and music--is as important in Dollywood as monster rides. The park offers daily demonstrations of blacksmithing, hand-blown glass making and other skills.

There's plenty of music at Dollywood. All the sounds aren't country, although the "Kinfolks Show," a tribute to Dolly, has plenty of twang. "Dreamland Drive-In" is a toe-tapping fifties and sixties rock n' roll revival and Naomi and the Wood Brothers put on a lively bluegrass show (800-DOLLYWOOD; www.dollywood.com).




 
Great Places, Great Deals
 

New York City: Discover the charms of Manhattan in winter with Apple Core Hotels' Super 8 Hotel Times Square's Picture Perfect in the Park package. Along with lodging, enjoy a complimentary 20 minute ride in a horse-drawn carriage through Central Park, get $10 worth of free digital prints from the Kodak Picture Maker in the lobby, and complimentary daily breakfast and in-room coffee. Rates from $159 per night, available through February 28, 2007 excluding December 31, 2006 (800-567-7720; www.applecorehotels.com).

-Caribbean: Wyndham Getaways by Request. Shake off the cold by taking to the beaches at three popular Wyndham all-inclusive resorts with complimentary children's programs. At Wyndham Sugar Bay Resort & Spa, St. Thomas, rooms start at $201 per night; at Viva Wyndham Maya, Playa del Carmen, Mexico, from $218 and at Viva Wyndham Tangerine, Cabarete, Dominican Republic, from $153. With some exceptions, rates are valid through April 30, 2007 (800-WYNDHAM; www.wyndhamgetaways.com).

 

*****


– Candyce H. Stapen is the author of 27 books, including National Geographic Guide to Caribbean Family Vacations.




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