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Playland Park in Rye opens this weekend with free admission, but there's a catch
Playland Park in Rye opens this weekend with free admission, but there's a catch

CBS News

time23-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • CBS News

Playland Park in Rye opens this weekend with free admission, but there's a catch

Playland Park in Rye opens for the 2025 season this weekend, but there's good news and bad news for visitors. Admission, parking and rides are free through Memorial Day, but only a handful of attractions will be operating. Playland Park will open in 2025 after contract dispute Even Zoltar couldn't predict Playland's future just a few weeks ago. The private firm operating Westchester County's amusement park for the last three years walked away, leaving the county scrambling to assemble a team to get it ready for the summer. County Legislator Katherine Parker said the Parks Department rose to the challenge. Eight of the 21 rides in Kiddieland will operate Memorial Day weekend, along with with the Carousel, Dragonator, Kite Flyer, and two other rides in the main park. The historic, wooden Dragon Coaster, Playland's premiere ride on every serious roller coaster fan's bucket list, is likely weeks away from being ready, officials said. "A little bit of Playland is much better than no Playland at all," Parker said. Free admission until more rides open The historic nature of many of the rides at Playland is complicating the opening preparations. "We have historic and much older rides that are wonderful [and] in great shape to operate, but their parts, the companies don't exist anymore. So we have to get the parts fabricated," Deputy Parks Commissioner Peter Tartaglia said. Leading a tour of the park, County Executive Ken Jenkins said admission to Playland will be free until later in the summer. "When we get to a critical mass of rides open, then we'll have the fees that'll be charged. But we haven't decided when that's going to be," Jenkins said. A limited number of food options will be available at Playland over Memorial Day weekend, the county said. All of the games and the arcade will be in "free play mode" through Monday. Click here for Playland Park's hours and more information.

My daughter drags us on to rollercoasters but is wary of the monkey bars. People are a mystery
My daughter drags us on to rollercoasters but is wary of the monkey bars. People are a mystery

Irish Times

time11-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Times

My daughter drags us on to rollercoasters but is wary of the monkey bars. People are a mystery

Here are my earliest memories of funfairs: I remember being in a bumper car with my father, and my mother being unhappy because we were doing a little too much bumping. After that, I'm a teenager, during the October fair in Ballinasloe . The ride, which was popular, consisted of a large circular frame, divided up into sections for each person to stand upright. No one was strapped in. The only safety feature was a flimsy chain across each section. It would spin furiously, until the centrifugal force had pinned everyone into position. Then it would rise on one axis, giving the customers a queasily rotating view of the ground and the sky. But on this occasion, one of the customers had (presumably) spent some quality time in the pub beforehand. The combination of a few pints plus the physical sensation of being hurled around proved too much. What was ghoulishly fascinating was the trajectory of the puke. It erupted from the person, but because we were still locked in a thunderous spin, it didn't go anywhere. It hovered in the middle of the ring. Everyone watched it: knowing that as soon as the loop slowed down, the laws of physics would cause someone to be splattered with regurgitated Guinness. READ MORE All I can remember is that it didn't land on me. It may have been this experience, but at some stage I came to the conclusion that I really don't enjoy funfair rides. I avoid them when I can, though for a lot of my life that hasn't been possible. I blame the children. Because of them, I've been hurled around the place and spun through the air. I usually pass the time by trying to calculate where I will land when whatever contraption I'm strapped into snaps off. [ Seán Moncrieff: The word 'old' has become an insult. If you're old, it's all over Opens in new window ] Daughter Number Four is particularly keen on this kind of thing. Because of her, myself and Herself had to board a swinging, rotating monstrosity on St Patrick's Day that jangled our nerves so completely we had to sit on the pavement for a while afterwards. She is a veteran of Emerald Park and has badgered us into taking rides that combine not just physical dislocation, but a thorough soaking. The last time we took The Viking Voyage, the drying machine was out of order. I spent most of the day looking like I had wet myself. No, I hadn't. It's got to the stage where myself and Herself are simply refusing to board some of these rollercoasters, but Daughter Number Four is quite happy to get on alone. And afterwards, she'll be shining with joy, her system pumped with adrenaline and endorphins. The experience triggers her fight-or-flight response, but not, it seems, to an alarming degree: deep down, she doesn't believe anything can go wrong. [ Nothing pushes my BS detector into overdrive more than a hotel spa Opens in new window ] What's curious about all this is if you bring Daughter Number Four to a playground, she can be nervous about climbing monkey bars, even though she's much closer to the ground, she's not spinning and she has far more control over the situation. She is aware of this contradiction – because we keep pointing it out – but can't explain it. We once brought her to Disneyland Paris , where many of the rides were physical rollercoasters, but also had a virtual reality component. And even though the experience was pretty much the same, I found them far less disturbing. I can't explain that either. Similarly, I'm not at all scared of flying, even though planes do crash occasionally. I'm convinced that even if the plane does crash, I'll survive it intact. No reason for that. Understandably, science tries to find mechanistic explanations as to why people are scared of one thing but not scared of another. Past trauma. Anxiety. Lack of control. But such explanations are usually insufficient and often contradictory. Perhaps it's better to accept that people are often a mystery. Especially to themselves.

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