nadroJ said:
That's the colour of the blood of the thousand children sacrificed by the Chorley locals to get the park closed down and turned into a housing development. It's like The Wicker Man only with less burning up there...
Oh, hi Robbie
Darren B said:
Actually disappointed this park has closed. So ok I believe people when they say it was a sh1t hole, but the first hand experience would have been nice.
It kind of was and wasn't. I mean, Ocean Beach in Rhyl before it closed was a **** hole. I'm sure lots of people can think of lots of places that actually deserve the title much more than Camelot did.
It just hadn't been cared for for 15 years or so. Even when it was cared for, the construction wasn't of particularly high quality. You know the grotty worm thing at Alton Towers in Story Book land? That's what most of Camelot was like, only the grotty worm thing actually looked good to start with. The stuff at Camelot was kind of travelling fair ghost train quality to start with - so imagine what it was like after 15 years of neglect.
However, the rides were relatively tidy and it didn't feel dangerous or like you were going to get mugged to feed a heroin addiction. There were some areas smelled of raw sewage and some areas you would wash your hands after touching (unfortunately, those places tended to be the toilet sinks
). Generally though, it wasn't kind of utterly dreadful, but it wasn't as bad as people would have you imagine.
The shows were good, and the on park entertainers were actually pretty talented.
It was just full of "meh" though for an enthusiast and it was a little too unkempt for families (we were offered a free trip there every year with my Dad's work, but Madmame_Furie refused to go again). Gullivers in Warrington is suffering a little of the same too, but there's something Gullivers has Camelot didn't - I don't know what it is though.
If you ever go to Gullivers Warrington, Camelot was like that; only with less "atmosphere", a huge swathe of concrete for half the park and if Gullivers hadn't been touched by human hands for five years.