Thursday, 24 July 2014

Chessington World Of Adventure

Earlier this month me and my husband had the exciting opportunity for a day at Chessington World of Adventure for free, so armed with sun cream and some spending money off we headed.

One of the my favourite discoveries was their new locker system. It is a very simple and easy system, but an incredible idea. You pick a locker size (small is £1 an hour or £5 a day, large is £2 an hour or £10 a day) and pay. Then it asks for your date of birth and to pick a colour from the on screen selection, these are your password. It then unlocks a locker for you and tells you what locker to open. You can open it again at any point during the day using the screen and locker number/password, no keys to lose!

You can also buy a bottle for £5 that gives you unlimited refills through out the day which was brilliant as it was so hot! So we headed off to explore and check out some of the many rides.

Bubbleworks was probably one of our favourites. Perfect for getting away from the hot sun and cooling off. You start off going through a “factory”, there is a rubber duck hatchery among other displays. All of which made us smile a little. But after the casual boat ride you reach a giant sign, “BATH TIME” it announces. Your little boat splashes down a ramp and you are surrounded by jets of water that spray over head, catching the light and giving the perfect relaxing vibe to really bring you into a peaceful mood. It was the quite frankly the perfect pallet cleanse (but for your eyes, ears and skin as opposed to your taste buds).

Dragon Falls was great fun, but very much a “once and I’m done” experience for me. Much to my husbands amusement I dragged him over all excited to go on, but decided it wasn’t for me about halfway through. The ride is essentially a log style ride. You float along casually for a little while before the “log” locks in to some rails and takes you up the first ramp. You’re up and down the other side in under a minute. You shake a little bit as you land and get splashed, but nothing too scary. Unfortunately that shake was enough to make me nervous. You see, there are no bars or harnesses in your boat. You hold yourself/each other in. And while it doesn’t actually tip you out, knowing there was a much bigger ramp coming made me slightly nervous. So as we locked in to the second ramp, I closed my eyes and told my husband not to let me die. It took what felt like an eternity to reach the top, by which point I had opened my eyes to see how far and promptly got nervous again. You are quite high, you could see across the roofs (not the most gorgeous view up close, but ignore them and look straight ahead and you can see the other rides between trees which is much more beautiful) and you float along for another couple of minutes before you prepare to drop. At which point I closed my eyes again and held on tight haha. It was over quite quickly and while quite enjoyable wasn’t something we were rushing to get back on. I think I would have enjoyed it more if they took out the first ramp and extended the second so you go up and then relax into the statues and trees before the drop.

By Dragon Falls is the Tomb Blaster. A little slow rollercoaster designed for all the family. You go into a dark cave armed with laser guns and shoot the little green dots to collect points. My gun unfortunately didn’t work (laser pointer was broken) so my sweet husband switched with me and then I kicked his butt ;) it was quite a lot of fun. Each “cave” had a different statue set up to look like it was carved into the walls and there were hundreds of the green dots to find and shoot (which go red when shot, then go green again after a moment for the people behind you to shoot) and there is the occasional rumble noise to really make you feel like you are in the depths of a cave system. The ride seats you in 3’s, your gun is next to you and your point counter is in front of you (warning, it updates almost as soon as you reach the end so keep an eye on your total if you want to know it).

The Zufari was a little disappointing. The queues move quickly, the staff were friendly but the ride was very dull. In the jeep there is a large display showing a number of animals they have but they only take you to the giraffes, zebra and white rhino. Then you enter a cave, drive through a waterfall and go back to base.

My absolute favourite had to be the Scorpion Express though. Especially as we managed to do very little queuing. The first time we went on we were able to walk right up to the bridge ready to go on next, after that we were lucky enough to walk straight up to get on. The standard seems to be about two laps, but depending on how busy they are sometimes you will go an extra lap or two. They also love to slow you down as you are turned on your side going around and then get you with the scorpion. The flame was disappointing as you only see and feel it while queuing, once on the ride you don’t know it is there. But the scorpions water jet definitely gets you and had everyone laughing. In total we did 10 laps – so about 5 goes during busy times, but we were lucky enough to compress that into 2-3 goes due to being there during a less busy time.

We also walked around the zoo and sealife areas. Unfortunately the zoo was a little empty, with only really the Tiger and the Gorillas out to see. But none the less it was a lot of fun and they were beautiful. I spent ages taking pictures, and after saying “c’mon handsome, look at the camera” he finally glanced my way and I got this amazing photo! Which I posted on Instagram the other day and Chessington liked and commented on it to tell me they thought it was a fantastic photo which made me smile.


The Sea Lions were out enjoying the sun.


We saw a really clever Gorilla holding one of the ropes so he could have a drink without falling in.


And a starfish gave me a wave.




Thank you Chessington, for a wonderful day.




These views are my own and would be the same regardless of whether I paid for the tickets or not. The free tickets were given to attend Chessington, not as payment for my opinion and we paid parking and food expenses. Only the tickets were free.

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