Sporting a waterfall on one side, and simple passage through in the back, the cave lets visitors go from one side of the play area to the other without braving the water cannons. Most water parks would just offer a passageway, or minimal theming at best. Not Disney. This is a fully-rendered cave that must have taken many man-hours (man-months?) to carve and sculpt.
Friday, July 9, 2010
Ketchakiddee Creek Cave
The children's play area of Typhoon Lagoon, Ketchakiddee Creek, has water cannons for squirting each other, and fanciful, geyser-inspired landscape to crawl around on. What makes it most unusual among water parks, though, is the cave in the back.
Sporting a waterfall on one side, and simple passage through in the back, the cave lets visitors go from one side of the play area to the other without braving the water cannons. Most water parks would just offer a passageway, or minimal theming at best. Not Disney. This is a fully-rendered cave that must have taken many man-hours (man-months?) to carve and sculpt.
Sporting a waterfall on one side, and simple passage through in the back, the cave lets visitors go from one side of the play area to the other without braving the water cannons. Most water parks would just offer a passageway, or minimal theming at best. Not Disney. This is a fully-rendered cave that must have taken many man-hours (man-months?) to carve and sculpt.
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