Enter Valhalla
TS Member
To be fair to Flamingo Land staff, the park has some very odd operational processes, which really slow down the queues. It’s not really the fault of the staff members themselves.
I got told by a operator once that guests are only allowed to ride four ‘intense rides’ an hour, but they have no way of enforcing it across rides, and even on one ride, they don’t enforce it.To be fair to Flamingo Land staff, the park has some very odd operational processes, which really slow down the queues. It’s not really the fault of the staff members themselves.
I don't understand this policy at all... is it simply to keep the queues short?I got told by a operator once that guests are only allowed to ride four ‘intense rides’ an hour, but they have no way of enforcing it across rides, and even on one ride, they don’t enforce it.
It won’t be due to queue length. I assume it’ll be due to health & safety risks associated with constant re-riding. Like has been said though, it’s impossible for the staff to enforce.I don't understand this policy at all... is it simply to keep the queues short?
This is genuinely the first time that I have ever heard this!Alton Towers has a blanket no re-rides policy for this exact reason. That’s easy for the staff to enforce.
I didn't realise that constantly re-riding a ride was dangerous (didn't a guy in Blackpool ride for days on end?) - with the possible exception of spinning rides such as the waltzers and Air Race at Drayton Manor!
I don’t understand why it’s parks’ responsibility to stop people from reriding things.
I don’t personally see the harm in reriding within reason (people have done record attempts before, haven’t they?), and is it not somewhat down to personal discretion? People can choose whether to reride, and they can opt out if they feel like rerides are taking their toll; the park is not forcing them to reride.
In the case of Nemesis specifically, part of the problem is the exhausting walk around the queue itself (ditto for Oblivion). If you had stayed in the station itself then maybe it wouldn't have been so bad?I once backed out of an all day Nemesis challenge years ago at 24 consecutive re-rides. As I got to around the 20th I started to feel really unwell and it just got worse so I quit shortly after.
On this topic, Toverland has a policy where you can literally re-ride and swap seats as long as there's no queueIt won’t be due to queue length. I assume it’ll be due to health & safety risks associated with constant re-riding. Like has been said though, it’s impossible for the staff to enforce.
Alton Towers has a blanket no re-rides policy for this exact reason. That’s easy for the staff to enforce.
Chessington and Plopsland allow one re-ride but not two (in other words, if you’ve been on a coaster twice in a row without getting off, they make you get off after the second ride) This is much more difficult to enforce.
At Ferrari World, you have to wait 15 minutes between Formula Rosa rides due to its intensity, and at Gold Reef City in South Africa, they say you have to wait 10 minutes between rides on Tower of Terror and Golden Loop for the same reason, generally however after exiting, walking back through the queue etc, 10 minutes has usually elapsed anyway so no need to actually enforce it.
Then of course there’s Thorpe Park, who allow seemingly unlimited number of re-rides as long as there’s no queue.
Do you have to swap seats, or can you stay in the same one?On this topic, Toverland has a policy where you can literally re-ride and swap seats as long as there's no queue
I've done that with Troy about 6/7 times on a recent visit and did it with Fenix a couple of times.
You can stay in the same seat providing someone's not at your airgate.Do you have to swap seats, or can you stay in the same one?
Is there a reason for swapping - e.g. to force people to briefly stand up between rides?
What you are describing though, isn’t re-riding as such. You were getting off and going round each time. What Alton Towers doesn’t allow is for you to stay on rides, or jump back on empty seats. Essentially you have to exit the station every time. When Nemesis did have the SRQ it was possible to kind of abuse it at times because you could get off, run back around to the SRQ and they’d let you on the same train. The point is though, that Alton Towers don’t let you re-ride without leaving the exit. Many other parks do.This is genuinely the first time that I have ever heard this!
When I used the Spinball Whizzer single-rider queue, I walked straight back onto the ride seconds later and wasn't stopped (although not onto the same exact car).
I also remember the staff commenting when I kept using the Smiler SRQ, but - again - I wasn't stopped (although it takes at least 10 minutes to rejoin the queue each time).
I never used the Nemesis SRQ, but others on the forum have stated that it was often possible to keep leaving the ride and rejoin in the exact same seat mere seconds later, so should staff have prevented this?
I didn't realise that constantly re-riding a ride was dangerous (didn't a guy in Blackpool ride for days on end?) - with the possible exception of spinning rides such as the waltzers and Air Race at Drayton Manor!
I know I am right about it being for health and safety reasons. Several staff members at Alton Towers have told me that’s why they don’t allow re-rides.Now that I think about it, I remember a bunch of kids staying on Maelstrom at Drayton Manor during the 2025 Christmas event, when the queues were virtually empty (in fact, the ride itself actually then closed an hour early).
I'd assumed that Alton Towers wanted people to leave the ride each time simply in order to keep the station as clear as possible (and thus expedite boarding), but you may be right that perhaps it is also for safety reasons as well !
Chessington and Plopsland allow one re-ride but not two (in other words, if you’ve been on a coaster twice in a row without getting off, they make you get off after the second ride) This is much more difficult to enforce.
I’m sure we had 3 continuous rides on the Ride To Happiness, as specifically allowed by the ride ops. I guess with all the other stuff they have to do, keeping track of individual re-riders is difficult.Chessington and Plopsland allow one re-ride but not two (in other words, if you’ve been on a coaster twice in a row without getting off, they make you get off after the second ride) This is much more difficult to enforce.
Yeah it may have changed now. I last went to Chessington in 2018.I'm not sure thats true re Chessington. From my experience, they have the same policy as Thorpe. Theres been times I've sat on Rattlesnake and Mandrill much more than twice in a row.
