Jump to content
  • entries
    43
  • comments
    59
  • views
    15058

Efteling - A weekend of Fairies, Dragons and Pancakes - Day 1


Benin

1072 views

Day 1

What better way to spend the UK closed season than by visiting a park that doesn’t close? Goodbye depressing Merlin situations and hello Efteling, who certainly are the opposite end of the ownership scale, what with being owned by a non-for-profit organisation who happily throw €42 million on a show.

So a blustery Saturday morning greeted us, with a flight to remember as the winds took hold of our plane throughout, providing an intense experience I never wish to repeat again in my life. But fortunately the flight was short and Rotterdam was reached (just). A bus to the train station, a train to Tilburg and another bus (Total of about 90 minutes travel time, especially if you get the connections right), and we had reached our destination of the Efteling Hotel!

1606229_10153856266620220_173440308_o.jpg

1961057_10153856266755220_132755176_o.jpg

1008713_10153856266780220_1175814941_o.jpg

We got our park tickets and through the super secret mini-gate we were in, greeted by a DJ Set-up in front of our first coaster, Vogel Rok. This Vekoma indoor variant is hidden behind a fantastic entrance background and a giant animatronic bird welcoming you into his giant building. A short indoor queue led us into the station and the cattlepen of death (Efteling LOVE hidden cattlepens of death, fortunately we used none of them), and before long we were sat on the ridiculously spacious seats (pros of lap-bars of OTSRs on a Vekoma, given the way Space Mountain at DLP is), and sent off into the pitch black.

1014707_10153856267035220_731246897_o.jpg

1899728_10153856268000220_381257284_o.jpg

The ride itself is fun, with a few laser effects and animatronics dotted around as you swoop around the building accompanied by some fantastic music. Very re-rideable (as we found out during the ERT sessions for hotel guests), and probably the smoothest Vekoma I’ve ever ridden. Solid ride and a solid start for Efteling.

7/10

1559364_10153856268190220_352839955_o.jpg

1960894_10153856268840220_1399467486_o.jpg

Next door was our first dark ride in Carnival Festival, which is a Small World rip-off in Omnimover form. A really fascinating dark ride; and something that seems to be an institution in Efteling as Bubbleworks once was to Chessington. Catchy theme music, bright colours, moving sets/animatronics, this ride has it all, even some good old-fashioned racism (bless Continental Europe) fill this tour of the world up, from Holland to France (complete with prostitute), London, Japan and Africa; certainly a classic example of a classic style dark ride.

1780954_10153856269075220_1920336738_o.jpg

1836630_10153856269280220_1343907010_o.jpg

1490705_10153856269930220_209356022_o.jpg

1957700_10153856270320220_948971081_o.jpg

1836836_10153856272685220_1476174817_o.jpg

1602187_10153856272995220_34924017_o.jpg

1658334_10153856273605220_533028181_o.jpg

1932522_10153856274585220_378929135_o.jpg

1655647_10153856274780220_451768048_o.jpg

1601990_10153856275295220_971769624_o.jpg

1966074_10153856276240220_891435663_o.jpg

Moving on from the area in search of other coasters, we wandered through the park to the opposite corner, taking in the lovely setting of lakes and woodland, before arriving at our second Vekoma, Python.

1798999_10153856277545220_1830521018_o.jpg

1801219_10153856277815220_1934371779_o.jpg

In classic Vekoma white and green, this ride is famous for THAT incident where during an evacuation on the lift hill the train suddenly moved forward due to the unloading procedure. Since then though, it’s had the new Vekoma trains added on with a sexy looking vinyl finish to it.

1799217_10153856278955220_2084113666_o.jpg

The new trains help this ride a lot though, whilst not as smooth as Vogel, it was certainly the best Vekoma looping thing I’ve been on in a while. Can all of the existing ones have these trains please? A decent helix finale too, but an amazingly bland layout cannot be held up by such an alright finish.

6/10

1015947_10153856278790220_1760881447_o.jpg

Efteling have a coaster corner, with Python, Flying Dutchman (closed for off-season maintenance during our visit, so didn’t get to ride it), and Joris en de Draak, the racing GCIs.

1898854_10153856279640220_1998556862_o.jpg

1796989_10153856281175220_1834991494_o.jpg

At the end of last year I thought Stampida was the best example of a well designed (at least, initially) racing style coaster, however, Joris has taken over that mantle exceedingly well, with a layout that is atypical of GCI, and adding in a finish that is often tighter than Merlin’s purse-strings. Even added onto that is the return of the trains to the station; where the winner returns to unfurling banners and cheers, whilst the loser trots in afterwards to boos and jeers. Simple additions that would be deemed as unnecessary in certain parks, but not here; and obviously capped off by a giant animatronic dragon that breathes fire.

1655647_10153856280000220_351242442_o.jpg

1939549_10153856280950220_1212333176_o.jpg

1596656_10153856284050220_98470364_o.jpg

The choices here are Water and Fire, and generally they don’t differ that much until after the journey back over the station. With the usual array of quick turns, airtime dips and near-misses, it was hard to determine which of the two was preferred to the other. Water tends to gain some lead, but the finale removes that as it goes on a longer journey around the lake next door, where Fire holds back into tighter turns and drops (arguable holding the best drop of both as it dives under the lift hills). In the end they are both excellent coasters, and certainly with the 1.1m restriction they fit into Efteling immensely well. I also get the feeling that Europa were inspired by it slightly, as the swampy queue-line looked very familiar.

9/10

1523449_10153856280225220_172127853_o.jpg

1614348_10153856280735220_1762793993_o.jpg

1596699_10153856281445220_990477880_o.jpg

1836744_10153856283460220_653245628_o.jpg

We continued our circuit around the park, walking the long way around due to the mass of construction happening at the Rapids, ending next at the final coaster of the trip, Bob, the Intamin Bobsleigh. I remember enjoying Disaster Transport before Cedar Point spited it so I was looking forward to riding another one. An enjoyable romp through the woods followed, with some surprisingly large drops and some fair amount of lateral Gs. Part of me thinks that these single car versions are better than Mack’s multiple car trains, mainly down to the speed this one achieved, but Avalanche at Blackpool is similar. Oh well, either way, a solid enough ride.

7/10

1962316_10153856290875220_1457948277_o.jpg

How to refurb your ride 101

1932731_10153856291365220_215892557_o.jpg

1559293_10153856299975220_1522847022_o.jpg

Pictures of Bob are extremely difficult

We were hungry at this point, so food was required, and there was a place I had been told (read, ordered) to eat at, Polle’s Keuchen. A pancake place of sheer and utter deliciousness that you so rarely see in a theme park. Heavily themed with a central feature that spun in time to music, open cooking area, waiter service and a bar, all for one little pancake place? Truly, this is the stuff of rare legend.

1655668_10153856292810220_616901659_o.jpg

1898833_10153856293510220_801853541_o.jpg

1888931_10153856294610220_1446788192_o.jpg

1911105_10153856294245220_1571035365_o.jpg

1556406_10153856295435220_176222628_o.jpg

1911215_10153856297470220_980323293_o.jpg

After stuffing ourselves full of pancake goodness, a dark ride was required, so step forward Fata Morgana, Efteling’s answer to Pirates of the Caribbean. From an unassuming queueline of relative blandness around the loading platform, into one of the most well themed dark rides I’ve seen. It uses the tow boat system to its complete advantage, making the scenes feel a lot more involving of the rider for the majority, yet still managed to pull off the impressive large set pieces off as well. Plus some excellent bonus effects were used throughout it.

I’ve never been so surprised by a dark ride since Gardaland’s pirate effort, but this is another level. This is truly Disney level dark ride goodness, which resulted in me sitting in awe of the entire thing.

1966066_10153856298815220_1020930056_o.jpg

1962333_10153856299245220_283994110_o.jpg

1602073_10153856299455220_13721975_o.jpg

Yay for random park entertainment!

We had a quick look at the main entrance building (House of the 5 Senses, the most impressive park entrance architecturally speaking) before moving along to the opposite corner of the park again, home to 3 of Efteling’s well-known attractions (unfortunately Ravelijn, the €42 million show, was closed, but the outside of it looks incredible).

1966240_10153856298340220_10300884_o.jpg

1801156_10153856298655220_307929102_o.jpg

1796809_10153856301245220_950380949_o.jpg

1798997_10153856301825220_974975503_o.jpg

From one amazing dark ride, to another, this time Dreamflight, an inverted dark ride with an extremely bland cattlepen queue of death (apparently it was once actually themed and didn’t use a side-door) and a station that shared its locale with a café (a very weird one there Efteling), so not the most enticing of starts.

1064701_10153856301600220_234913285_o.jpg

1966050_10153856302015220_929625684_o.jpg

Then the ride begins. And after the impressiveness of Fata Morgana, this continued the theme, I was once again blown away by the details, multiple animated characters, the size of the set pieces, and of course the infamous coaster-like finale. It had recently had a bit of a refurb, which did show, but still, my first ride of it, full of the unknown led to even more jaw-dropping moments as gigantic set-pieces revealed themselves. Again, this was some Disney level stuff going on, if not vastly superior.

1965553_10153856302310220_640116311_o.jpg

1920995_10153856302505220_1653966976_o.jpg

1597174_10153856302845220_334983910_o.jpg

1781218_10153856304150220_96286911_o.jpg

1957749_10153856304580220_394419371_o.jpg

1961918_10153856304725220_1864967783_o.jpg

1907729_10153856305740220_1168472475_o.jpg

This photo is blurry because it’s the coaster section

1899658_10153856305930220_913805515_o.jpg

After a second go on Dreamflight, it was time for another famous one in Villa Volta, the first Vekoma Madhouse. Said to be one of the best ones, it unfortunately suffers from the same issues as the rest, dialogue heavy story-telling. Granted, most Madhouse stories are reduced to “The place is cursed”, but the interesting part is always, “Why is the place cursed?” “Why did the Earl lock up a branch?” “Why is there a Pervy Wizard?” all important questions that rarely get answered if you don’t speak the local lingo.

Villa Volta’s first room is an exceptionally bad example of this, as the dialogue comes from speakers in the roof, so you have nothing but people talking about the feared Goat-Riders. The next room improves slightly with the addition of Hugo, the main character and his fabulous animatronic (again, Disney standard), but it still involves a LOT of dialogue. Hex is probably the only Madhouse which manages to get the balance right, as the first pre-show has the accompanying video to tell the story, and the second show has minimal dialogue and is obvious as to what is happening.

The ride room though is beautifully themed, and a slightly different (and more forceful) ride cycle to go with it. The music is another feather in the bow of the ride, with another catchy theme which fits the ride perfectly. I would easily say Hex is a better overall product that Volta, but that’s not to say it is bad, indeed, it’s better than its Italian cousins and Feng Ju Palace. But the dialogue is the issue more than the ride itself.

1655781_10153856306300220_1052294623_o.jpg

1900713_10153856306705220_550044881_o.jpg

Projection Mapping screens live here

1781848_10153856307010220_1430483518_o.jpg

1553407_10153856307260220_1182823155_o.jpg

1781010_10153856307435220_883411998_o.jpg

We had some time to kill so we wandered around to the Laaf Village and did their Monorail thing, which was alright, a very required sit-down attraction. Another go on Vogel Rok followed as we were nearby before walking back to the park entrance for Aquanura, Efteling’s answer to World of Colour, only without projections and just pure fountain action so amazing Amanda Thompson would never leave it alone.

Set to various classical music and some of the park’s own music (Villa Volta, Ravelijn, Carnival Festival), it really is a fantastic show, though the wind at this point was problematic and got us extremely wet in the “Optimal Viewing Area”. Nowhere near as bad as watching Disney Dreams in a blizzard that’s for certain, but the timing, colours and various fountain type (and FIRE, because it makes everything better) worked together to create an entertaining spectacle.

1926204_10153856308695220_1920577184_o.jpg

894053_10153856310265220_54255694_o.jpg

1890366_10153856310420220_551889807_o.jpg

1966116_10153856310635220_437264180_o.jpg

And that was it for the first day, finding an empty park was not what I was expecting, as was getting every major ride done in a few hours. But we still had 2 whole days, and a Fairytale Forest to visit, so we checked into the hotel, had a nice meal and looked forward to another day of pancakes.

1795871_10153856276955220_937836649_o.jpg

1 Comment


Recommended Comments

Guest
Add a comment...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...