Originally posted by gazag
sorry to say but we dont have the track in our exchange
What a shame. I'll try posting a comment on YouTube to ask if the creator is willing to share it.
If not, maybe when I have time to get into it, I'll have a go at recreating it myself in NoLimits. It may be a tall order, as I haven't designed a coaster before, and I'll I have to go on is the public videos and photos that can be found online. But I guess it's worth a try.
however
theme park review hava a video
and so do i
enjoy both please
Excellent! Oddly enough, the embedded YouTube videos didn't work for me here (I had to copy the links and visit YouTube directly to view them), but no matter. Both are well worth watching. Your own video is a nice piece of nostalgia about Pleasureland, whilst the other one is exactly what I was looking for: a good quality video of the whole ride, from start to finish, with no bits edited out.
So, great. Thanks a lot for those. Pleasureland (unsurprisingly) appeared to have changed a lot since I was last there (it's a long time; at least a couple of decades, maybe three), but there were a good few things I remembered. The 'kiddie killer' dodgems looked to be just the same as when I last went on them; I used to love those. And the suspended ride with cylindrical two-seater carriages, right by the entrance and overlooking the car park... I can't remember its name, but I do remember it going up. The years when I went to Pleasureland annually were before and after they constructed it. I'm pretty sure I remember that it broke down and suspended people in mid-air for a few hours, not all that long after it was opened!
I used to love Pleasureland. My only bad memory of it is of the 'motorcycle roundabout' - again, I don't recall its proper name. It was a really high-speed roundabout whose seats were vertical pieces of wood with a crude padded saddle on top, painted to look like motorbikes. Anyone here remember it? I seem to recall that it had a minimum age, below which you weren't supposed to go on it. I don't know what happened now (it's too long ago), but I do remember going on it, and maybe I was too young/small for it at the time. No-one stopped me, though, and boy, did I regret it. It was the most terrifying thing I've ever experienced.
I don't just mean that it was a scary ride; I'm not a total wuss(!), and generally, the more violent the ride, the more I enjoyed it. But in this case I was forced to combat the forces of nature, and it was almost a losing battle. Looking back, it was a shockingly dangerous ride: I'm sure there's no way it would be allowed these days. Basically, there were no restraints at all, and the roundabout went round so fast that the centrifugal force was horrendous. I had to hang on for dear life, and all the time I was being forced up and off the wooden bike. Aside from the metal tube masquerading as handlebars, there was very little to hold on to. Honestly, it took the whole of my strength to keep myself from being flung off at high speed, and I was a piece of quivering jelly by the time the ride was over (it seemed to last forever!) from all the muscle exertion. Really, really dangerous; I could so easily have been flung off and badly injured or even killed.
But it didn't stop me loving Pleasureland, or the rest of Southport. Thirty years ago, it used to be such a nice place: clean, interesting, well kept and with loads of good things to see and do. When I was very small, I used to love going around "Land of the Little People", which was a delightful model village. I've actually got a scan of an ancient photo that I could upload, if anyone wants to see it. That was demolished long, long ago in favour of yet another boring shopping centre. But there were all sorts of other good things in Southport back then. The last time I went, though, was about ten years ago, and it was quite a sad disappointment. I still liked the place (it brought back fond memories), but it had gone all seedy and was generally overgrown and unkempt. Lots of things had either gone or were due to be closed, and it was all rather sad.