Category Archives: News and Updates

Save & Scream For Two More Weekends

The last two weekends of HalloWeekends are here and so are some terrific savings.

Grab your friends and save with our on-line 4-pack of regular admission tickets for just $148.  Save nearly $32! Or plan a trip this Sunday for only $25 regular admission if you buy on-line before midnight Thursday. Visit Cedar Point’s Online Deals page for more info.

The best deal is for Season Pass holders to Bring-A-Friend for only $14.99, Fridays and Sundays of these last 2 weekends.  Just show your valid 2009 Season Pass at the front gate to purchase your Bring-A-Friend ticket. (Not valid on Saturdays.)

We’re open Friday nights, Saturdays & Sundays through November 1. Plus, enjoy all the family-friendly spooks and the in-your-face scares around the “World’s Best Amusement Park.”

HalloWeekends at Cedar Point – All You Fear Is Here..for a limited time!

Knott’s Berry Farm to add 1980s-era thrill ride in 2010

From the Los Angeles Times

Knott’s Berry Farm’s new attraction for 2010 is an aging hand-me-down thrill ride that’s older than many of the Buena Park theme park’s patrons.

The Demon Drop attraction will be relocated from sister park Cedar Point in Ohio, where the ride debuted in 1983 — when Ronald Reagan was president, Michael Jackson introduced the moonwalk and leg warmers were in fashion.

Knott’s officials confirmed that the installation of the drop tower ride will begin in January with a grand opening scheduled for Memorial Day Weekend 2010. Knott’s will keep the Demon Drop name, color scheme and theme.

The 131-foot-tall tower features a four-passenger ride vehicle that rises up an elevator shaft, slides forward and falls down a curved track at 55 mph. Riders experience 2.5 seconds of weightlessness during the 99-foot drop.

Cedar Point has been trying to sell the $2.5-million Demon Drop for years as a used ride on the secondary market, with no success.

The recycled ride replaces the Screamin’ Swing, a pneumatically powered pendulum ride with a separate up-charge fee which rarely drew a crowd at Knott’s.

The Intamin Freefall thrill ride, which was popular through the 1990s, was replaced in many parks by the newer compressed-air tower rides — such as Knott’s own Supreme Scream, which debuted in 1998. Six Flags Magic Mountain in Valencia dismantled its aging Freefall ride in 2008.

Knott’s has had its share of problems with Intamin rides. In 2001, a 40-year-old woman fell out of the Perilous Plunge shoot-the-chute water ride and died. In September 2009, the launch cable on the Xcelerator roller coaster snapped and injured two riders.

Screamscape broke the news of the ride relocation after spotting the premature announcement in a city of Buena Park newsletter.

Cedar Point’s Shoot the Rapids planned for years

From  The Sandusky Register

SANDUSKY

As Cedar Fair’s corporate vice president of planning and design, Rob Decker helps Cedar Point chart its destiny for years to come. But Decker says his wife finds out about new rides at Cedar Point the same way anyone else does — when the news is announced in the media.

“My wife never knows what’s going on,” he said.

It’s not as if Decker never speaks to his wife. Cedar Point’s plans for the future are kept quiet until the amusement park is ready to go public.

Cedar Point announced Sept. 3 it’s building a new water flume ride, Shoot the Rapids, that will be ready when the park opens in May. The ride, which will cost $10.5 million, is aimed at pleasing the whole family but has an element of thrills. Riders will drop down an 85-foot hill before making their big splash.

The announcement wasn’t the result of a spur-of-the-moment decision. Cedar Fair may have announced the ride only a few weeks ago, but it made the decision to build Shoot the Rapids after years of secret planning.

The decision was made three or four years ago, Decker said. When the economy sank, the ride was put off a year. Cedar Point built a cheaper new attraction for 2009, the $1 million Starlight Experience light show.

Cedar Point maintains a five-year plan for capital improvements, and some planning goes out 10 years. The park has plans in place for new attractions in 2011, ’12 and ’13, although Decker says they are “subject to review.”

Only a few Cedar Fair executives who serve on the company’s planning commission are allowed to know about the amusement park’s capital improvements plans.

The code of secrecy also extends to the companies that build rides for the amusement park. They are required to sign nondisclosure agreements, so word about the attractions doesn’t leak out prematurely to coaster fans or to rivals such as the Six Flags chain.

Shoot the Rapids will be built by IntaRide of Glen Burnie, Md., the same company that built Maverick, Top Thrill Dragster and Millennium Force.

The company’s president, Sandor Kernacs, answered questions about Shoot the Rapids last week, but said he was willing to talk only because Cedar Point had announced the ride and now wanted publicity about it.

Cedar Point executives planning new rides often try to excite coaster fans, giving them new reasons to travel long distances and return to the park.

Millennium Force, about 300 feet tall, was the tallest roller coaster ever built when it opened in 2000. Cedar Point officials wondered if they had gone too far, Decker said. Was it too scary, too tall? Would only teenagers dare to ride it?

No, and no.

“When we opened up, everybody got on,” he said.

That emboldened Cedar Point executives who went on to build the even more extreme, 420-foot-tall Top Thrill Dragster.

But aside from delivering the world’s top thrills — Cedar Point has 17 roller coasters, more than any other amusement park on Earth — park executives also have to worry about making everyone happy, not just the extreme thrill-seekers.

Water rides are second in popularity only to roller coasters, said Robin Innes, a spokesman for the park.

Cedar Point will have three water rides after Shoot the Rapids opens. The two incumbents are Snake River Falls, which puts riders in a big boat that takes a plunge into the water, leaving its passengers soaked, and Thunder Canyon, a river rafting ride.

Shoot the Rapids fills the slot for a traditional flume ride, a ride in which boats float along in a water trough, Innes said, although it uses a chain to get up the first hill. A vacancy for a flume ride was created when the last one, White Water Landing, was dismantled after the 2005 season to make room for Maverick, which opened in 2007.

Guests have been asking for another water ride, said John Hildebrandt, the park’s general manager.

“Our guests wanted another option to cool off on warm summer days,” he said.

It’s also meant as a ride that everyone can enjoy, including Grandma and little kids, Decker said.

“We are hoping we can catch families and not dissuade the thrill seekers from coming to the park,” he said.

You’ll SCREAM For $25 Tickets

Right now, purchase one-day Regular Cedar Point admission tickets for ONLY $25 when you stay at Castaway Bay, Cedar Point’s indoor waterpark resort, or Sandcastle Suites, our all-suite hotel at the tip of the Cedar Point Peninsula!

If that’s not enough, you won’t find a better hotel deal in the Sandusky area. Enjoy HalloWeekends and stay at Castaway Bay for JUST $79* plus tax per night or stay at Sandcastle Suites for $129* plus tax per night!

Oh, and not only are you saving massive amounts of money, but you’re also getting the benefit of EARLY ENTRY – enter the park ONE HOUR before the general public to ride some of our biggest scream machines.

Considering a trip to HalloWeekends? Now’s the time. Click here to reserve at these special rates and get ready to scream with all the fun you’ll have (and the money you’ll save!).

*Does not include waterpark passes. All discounted rates apply to standard rooms only. Subject to availability; available on limited number of rooms only. Rate subject to change. $25 tickets can be purchased at the Front Desk by registered guests of Castaway Bay and Sandcastle Suites only. Limit 1 ticket per registered guest.

Kirk Franklin headlines JoyFest Gospel Music Festival Saturday, September 26 at Cedar Point

Cedar Point Press Release

SANDUSKY, Ohio, – Some of gospel music’s best-known performers will take center stage at Cedar Point next weekend when the Sandusky, Ohio, amusement park/resort will host the JoyFest Gospel Music Festival on Saturday, Sept. 26.

During Joyfest, Cedar Point guests will be able to watch some of the most popular entertainers in gospel music and a family-friendly comedian. The first-ever JoyFest Gospel Music Festival at Cedar Point will be held from 4-9:30 p.m. in the Soak City parking lot. (Admission to Cedar Point is required.)

Performing at JoyFest will be:

Kirk Franklin whose album, Hero, won two Grammy Awards;
Dr. Marvin Sapp, the 2008 Best Gospel Artist award winner;
Crystal Aikin, winner of BET’s Sunday Best gospel competition;
Tye Tribbett who received a Grammy Award nomination for his Victory Life! album in 2006; and
Comedian Bone Hampton, who has appeared on BET’s Comic Views and Comics Unleashed, will emcee the festival.

Combo tickets to Cedar Point and the concert are available online until 5 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 25 and at Cedar Point on the day of the show. Concert only tickets for season passholders and deals for groups of 15 or more are also available. For more information and a link to purchase tickets, please visit cedarpoint.com.

Inside the park, Cedar Point will be hosting its annual HalloWeekends festival that combines the thrills and excitement of Cedar Point’s rides and roller coasters with the fun and frights of Halloween. New for this season are two haunted houses, three live shows and the Overlord, the powerful chieftain of all the creepy monsters who prowl the park during HalloWeekends.

HalloWeekends also offers a variety of entertainment for young families that includes the Monster Midway Invasion Celebration parade, the Magical House on Boo Hill, the Hay Bale Maze and Planet Spooky and Camp Spooky children’s areas.

HalloWeekends at Cedar Point will be held Friday nights, Saturdays and Sundays through Nov. 1. Cedar Point will be open 6 p.m. to midnight on Friday nights (only a portion of the park is open); noon to midnight on Saturdays; and 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Sundays. (On Sunday, Oct. 11, the park will be open from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.)

For more information about these events, please visit cedarpoint.com or call the park’s General Information Line at 419.627.2350.