They’re singing that song on TV again, sometimes three times in two minutes, but it’s a good reminder: vacation time is on the way, whether powered by Chevy, Winnebago or the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe. Intrepid Flying Pie reporter Gina Hawkins (secret identity—Regina Coeli) is headed west in late March in her trusty 2021 Subaru Crosstrek to sunbathe on the mesas and sniff out stories in 14 states. If you see her comin’, better step aside--a lot of men didn’t and a lot of men cried.
In July, Bill and Siobhan are headed for Paris to see their niece Kathleen Ellison and visit with the world’s greatest cartoonist Gilbert Shelton, if he’s still alive and crosshatching. The folks in France have a tendency to fawn over their funnymen---comic actors, comedians, illustrators who have them rolling in the aisles. Gilbert made the move decades ago and never even thought of coming back to take over his father’s Firestone store in Texas. It’s hard to see the Eiffel Tower from College Station, after all.
And where might you be headed this Spring or Summer? To the rockbound coast of Maine to climb Cadillac Mountain in Acadia NP? To the Florida Everglades to run through the trees from the Everlys? To see 30 major league baseball parks in 30 days, rain or shine? To play mini-golf in a former salt mine or pan for gold on the outskirts of Coeur d’Alene? The world is your bivalve…just don’t forget to bring along your oyster knife.
Escape To The Past In RetroWorld
“If it’s the real thing, the Del-Vikings will be there.”---Ron Thomas
Kathleen Knight, Flying Pie stringer from other dimensions, is off to Las Vegas to pry loose some secrets from the planners of RetroEscapes theme park, a very large blast from the past. We know a few things already. At the park entrance, guests will walk through a time-travel portal into a variety of lands based on American pop culture of different decades from the fifties to the nineties, plus a “Tomorrow Zone,” whatever that is.
The new park is still in the early developmental stage with no opening date announced. RetroEscapes is being designed by PGAV Destinations, whose previous work includes individual attractions such as Cosmic Rewind at Epcot, Manta at SeaWorld Orlando and Cheetah Hunt at Bush Gardens. Also full parks like Aquatica and Discovery Cove in Orlando and SeaWorld Abu Dhabi.
The world’s first ever nostalgia park will have such faded glories in new clothing as an Elvis diner, a rocket bar, a disco, a video game arcade and a skate park, just for starters. The entire atmosphere is intended to mimic street scenes and amusement park features from ancient times and the illustrations created by RetroEscapes are charming and seductive, but looks aren’t everything. Let’s hope the antique diner finds a chef who actually knows how to make meat loaf (don’t forget the ketchup). Anyway, we’ll be there with bells on Day One. There’s a rumor they’ll have pie.
Not Necessarily The Happiest Places On Earth
If you’d like to combine your theme park visit with a dose of reality, you’ll love, not like the Isgyvenimo Drama set in a Soviet-era bunker near the Lithuanian capital city of Vilnius. This park takes visitors several decades back in time to 1984 Soviet Lithuania, showing what life was like for citizens living in the USSR. Along the way, you’ll get to wear gas masks, have your belongings confiscated and learn the Soviet national anthem, among other annoyances. Like most Lithuanians at the time, you’ll likely be subjected to investigation, which is your best chance ever to say “We don’t need no steenking badges!”
Your prize for surviving a day is an authentic dinner of borscht, black bread and kefir. Pour a smidge of Stoli into that kefir and you’ll survive just fine.
If you’re a caver, you might look into Salina Turda (no untoward giggling, please) in beautiful Romania. It has all the ornamentals of an amusement park---a Ferris Wheel, putt-putt golf, etc., but everything is 400-feet underground, set within the grounds of a former salt mine that was excavated during the ancient Roman era and opened to odd tourists in 1992. Visitors can pamper themselves in a salt-focused spa and take a boatride across a tranquil underground lake which is guaranteed not to have many surly monsters in it.
In sparkling Ho Chi Minh City, you’ll get your kicks at Suoi Tien, an amusement park for all ages, or so they say. The management assures us you can go to Hell there---Buddhist Hell, that is, because the park is all about the wonders of Buddhism. Suoi Tien is not only about grotesque depictions of afterlife torment, however--no, indeedy. They have a zoo, a few Buddhist temples for the kiddies, many photo-worthy sculptures and a handful of small, unexciting rides. You can cool down at Bien Tien Dong water park, the site of Vietnam’s first artificial beach.
Some girlies like to swim with the dolphins but real men like to dive with the crocodiles at Crocosaurus Cave in Darwin, Australia. The park is home to the largest collection of Australian reptiles anywhere, but the crocs get top billing. Intrepid visitors can jump in with the big guys in the inviting Cage of Death, which consists of a clear chamber semi-submerged in the crocodiles’ enclosure. More civilized guests are invited to snap photos of themselves with the baby crocs.
Next time you’re in Singapore you’re invited to explore exciting Haw Par Villa, which walks you through Chinese folktales featuring the good, the bad and the ugly. You might want to fast-walk the kids past the beheadings in the 10 Courts of Hell section, which is aptly named, and into one of the friendlier historical tours.
How about a drive-by visit to Pripyat Amusement Park, never opened, in friendly Ukraine, where the iconic Ferris wheel stands abandoned in the Chernobyl exclusion zone. Maybe you’d like to see the rusted, toppled dinosaur statues of Spreepark in Germany, abandoned in 2001. Or, for a real thrill, take a slide at Siam Park’s Tower of Power in exotic Tenerife, which features a 28-meter vertical waterslide “that passes through a tank filled with actual sharks!”
And we used to think the Fun House was scary.
Swimming With Pigs
Attention Glenn Terry! By now just about everybody has had a swim with the dolphins, the manatees and The Creature From The Black Lagoon. Hold up on those vacation swim videos, folks, they’re a snore. But what if you could be the first in your neighborhood to swim with the pigs? Oh, you don’t think pigs can swim? Nobody told you about Petunia’s backstroke medal in the Olympics of 1952? Pigs, in fact, are excellent swimmers that can paddle and float with the greatest of ease, and they love it. Not having sweat glands, the porcine community often uses water to cool down. Swimming is also useful in protecting themselves from insects. Feral pigs, famous for their natatory skills, often greet boats in the Bahamas looking for burgers or fries. On one famous occasion, Philbert Desanex, a non-swimmer, was tossed into the ocean by a gang of varlets. He quickly morphed into Wonder Wart Hog, a champion stroker, who cast a trawler net over the whole gang and brought them to justice.
Anyway, now you, too, can visit Pig Beach on Big Major Cay in the Exumas to join your porky friends for a swim. Boats leave regularly from nearby islands like Stanley Cay or Great Exuma, and day trips are available from Nassau. You can even double your pleasure, double your fun by visiting nurse sharks at Compass Cay or snorkeling in Thunderball Grotto. Don’t forget to bring along a beach ball and some root vegetables.
If cats happen to be your cup of tea, you might want to grab your coat and get your hat and head for Cat Island in Aoshima, Japan. Though humans (and amenities) are few, the cats are many, numbering in the hundreds and depending on the kindness of strangers to keep Friskies on the table. You can catch the ferry at Nagahama Port near the train station at 8 am. No sneaking out any friendly kitties, they put you in jail for catnapping.
Disa & Data
You can visit with Chatty Belle, the world’s largest talking cow sculpture in Neillsville, Wisconsin, but you’ll have to carry much of the conversation. And hey---no politics, please. If you’d rather a buffalo, get yourself up to Jamestown, North Dakota to see Dakota Thunder, their 60-ton concrete marvel at the North American Bison Discovery Center. We always knew there must be some reason for visiting North Dakota—this could be it.
The Florida Keys have their own big critter, Betsy the Giant Lobster, an anatomically correct model measuring 30 feet high and 40 feet long holding forth in Islamorada. Don’t you dare miss her on your way to gay Key West.
If you’ve had enough of oversized animals, how about a bite to eat at the venerable Spam Museum in Austin, Minnesota? If you have neither the time nor the cash to visit Greece, you might like to stop in lively Nashville, home of the only full-scale replica of Athens’ famous Parthenon. England has its iconic Stonehenge but you probably didn’t know that Alliance, Nebraska has Carhenge, automobiles stacked up to imitate the mysterious stones.
The girly girls will go nuts for Barbie’s Malibu Dream House, all pink and beachy with a full-stocked clothes closet. They can stay overnight and hit up potential Kens at the chummy bar. They also have bedrooms at the Roswell, New Mexico Missile Silo/Bunker, originally a launch control center and 186-foot-deep missile silo.
If you’re in The City by The Bay in early April and you espy the cops busting a couple of good old girls out on the town, how about hustling over there and handing Officer Friendly a Get Out Of Jail Free card. It could be Gina and one of her hard-drinking cohorts one toke over the line. Anyone posting bond for the kids gets a free trip to the Spam Museum.
That’s all, folks….
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