After finally riding Fahrenheit and taking a needed bathroom break we headed, fast as we could, for the front of the park and the Carrousel. It would be exaggeration to say everyone in the freaking world was in our way --- the parking lot, rumor was, would be a great spot to see the fireworks from if you found a good spot --- and yet there we were. Our plan had been to turn back if we didn't get to the ride by 9:30 and time, you know ...
Well, I saw the carousel, slightly obstructed by other things, at a time when my phone still said it was not yet 9:31 and at that point it seemed foolish to give up on the ride over a matter of sixty seconds' more walk. The carousel was again (still?) playing the Beatles-and-Beach-Boys songs we remembered from our first trip the day before. My recollection is also we missed a ride cycle and had to get on the next one, eating up even more precious time. But we got our ride in, and our pictures, and now we just had to get to Lightning Racer.
We started off well, with me having the advantage of long legs and a fast stride. But you know my great sense of direction? That mental map I have of a place I've visited only briefly? It failed me here; I never got the hang of where stuff was in HersheyPark and I was left stumped for what way to go. The park signs weren't good; they would point toward a couple of attractions --- with good signs, showing the full logo, mind --- and Lightning Racer was not consistently one of them. And posted maps would only give some local features, not stuff way on the other end of the park. So I got the attention of a guy working carnival games --- annoying someone who thought I was trying to cut in on their game --- to ask what way to go. Turn off that way and go through The Hollow, sounds good.
The employee steered me wrong. So did another employee I asked a few minutes later when we didn't seem to be getting anywhere. I don't know how. Maybe they were as vague on the park directions as I was, especially if they get rotated around games and might forget just where they're facing. Maybe they were thinking rightly but we'd have to follow a path obvious to people familiar with the park and opaque to newbies.
But the nightmare was, we weren't getting anywhere near Lightning Racer, and we were getting near the end of the night. I describe it as a nightmare and that was the feeling; it was almost exactly what would happen if we were dreaming about missing a roller coaster. We would fail to get a night ride on this coaster, and I blame myself. If we'd waited for
bunnyhugger to load an online park map we would have had a chance. Heck, if we'd figured out the route while we were becalmed waiting for Fahrenheit, we'd have made it. But we didn't, and we settled for a ride on the nearest coaster instead, the Great Bear, a good ride but only an okay consolation.
But the park was closed, except for the people sticking around for fireworks. The question is where they'd come from and it turned out ``right over the fence from where we were'' was, if not right, at least close enough. We --- and a crowd of several dozen --- ended up standing by a little nothing part of the park, near one of the emergency exits used by ambulances, watching the Fourth of July show.
It was a good show. It was a big show, going on for maybe a half-hour. There was a moment about twenty minutes in that I thought was building into the climax and no, it was not. The false climax was just the new level of activity and it seemed like the show might never end. Then the true climax came and you'd think that would be the end of the show, right?
Of course, there are always a couple stragglers, fireworks that didn't go off during the show that are fired afterward to clear them out. There were a lot of stragglers, enough to seem like the show had decided to start over again. Like not just a couple fireworks but a dozen or so, some fired simultaneously. Ah, but then that was the end of the show, right?
No, because there was another round of stragglers, and most of the crowd we'd been watching with gathered again to catch another dozen fireworks. And that was the end of the show ... except that a minute later another round started, drawing more applause and laughter.
I lost track of how many times the show started back up again. At one point I called out, after a minute's silence, ``Was there anything else?'' and on cue, there were a couple more fireworks. I nearly fell over laughing at this.
bunnyhugger tells me some kids tried the same line and were rewarded with another short round. But eventually, finally, we saw what surely must have been the final fireworks, and if there were any more we didn't see it. We walked back to the front of the park, and the car, figuring to take our time and linger in the gift shop because the traffic jam to get out was enormous and slow-moving.
We had got past the front gate and diverted to our car when we heard a chilling cry: ``Does anyone know CPR?'' Neither of us do, but I now and then feel guilty that I don't. Someone had collapsed near a car and there was a moderate-sized, confused crowd around. Someone from another section of lot came running, moving like a superhero cartoon and jumping over a small fence, racing to the rescue. So we felt like we had no business sticking around any longer and ... well, goodness. We later on saw ambulance lights flashing, so we can hope there was a good ending there, and go on with our disappointment about Lightning Racer smacked hard back into perspective.
And this closed our Hershey visit. Saturday we looked forward to nothing but the long drive back across Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Michigan to home, with nothing to do but stop in Cedar Point as a waypoint. But then we also had planned on a night ride on Lightning Racer, so how good were we at executing our plans?
Back now to Halloweekends, on Thursday, as we dive into the night.
Here's a sunset picture behind Maverick that I think came out pretty well.
Here's the same sunset only in portrait.
And then here's Maverick's braking area, on the left, with a couple trains of riders. The queue is to the right and you can see the darkness settling on Frontier Town.
Looking up above the Frontier Trail bathrooms, once upon a time the receiving station for the other sky ride, at the setting sun and just a bit of a vapor trail.
bunnyhugger sitting down to rest near the Celebration stage; we were probably watching a bit of the show while having a snack.
Here we're peering up into Rougarou.
Trivia: Flying STS-41D in 1984, McDonnell Douglass payload specialist Charles D Walker used an electrophoresis experiment to purify a gram of hormone, drug purification being a big promise of spaceflight. On return to Earth, it turned out the sample was contaminated by pseudomonas microorganisms. Source: Shattered Dreams: The Lost and Cancelled Space Missions, Colin Burgess. Pseudomonas is a family of microorganisms that turn out to be responsible for a lot of hospital-acquired infections.
Currently Reading: Lost Popeye Zine, Volume 70: Deucedly Odd Goings-On, Ralph Stein, Bill Zaboly. Editor Stephanie Noelle.