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------Welcome to Rickety Historical Park! This park is an old one built in the 1940's. It's quite a small park, and there isn't much decoration to it, but it has a historical backstory. The park was founded by Jared Schmidt, as he still inspects and runs the park to this day. Along with his co-founders, they looked for people to hire so they could make an interesting park (his 4 co-founders being John Arc, Baron Oakwood, Lesley DeMarco, and Steve Boban). The park is located in Ocean Pines, Maryland (side note: this isn't a park based off a real one). Together as friends, they searched and searched for companies that could build rides that satisfy their customers to the fullest. They finally found a interesting ride that would be a popular one of the decade, it being a giant ferris wheel, built by the company Andy Roach® (not an actual company). They requested Andy Roach® to build the ferris wheel. They did, and they put it in the middle of the park. They named it, "Wooden Reel," as it was a wooden ferris wheel, which were rare to find at the time. They asked Andy Roach® if they had any other good rides. They had other rides, but not good ones. So business was finished and Jared Schmidt and his co-founders moved on to find another company. They did, and this was more of a thrill ride company. Their name being Amadeus Rides®. Jared Schmidt himself asked Amadeus Rides® what type of rides they had. They had all sorts of rides, the ones that caught Jared's attention were the chairswing ride and the merry-go-round ride. So he requested Amadeus Rides® to build them, and he wanted them to be right next to each other. He named the chairswing ride Carnival Swing and the merry-go-round ride Carnival Merry-Go-Round. Since they were built by the same company, Jared wanted to give Amadeus Rides® recognition, so he mentioned that he would name the rides with the same first word. Amadeus Rides® appreciated the recognition, and they built the rides; right next to each other. Jared finished his business with Amadeus Rides®, and realized something. His rides were a bit boring.. They're just slow rides that adults really got tired of. So he searched, and searched, and searched, until he finally found a company. He never heard of this company, even though they were the biggest company at the time. The name? Stockton Coasters Inc. At the time, they had the best roller coaster designs. They had flying turns designs, they had the original, wooden coaster designs, they had all kinds of things. The flying turns and wooden coaster designs caught his attention. Can this get any better? Yes, you could design YOUR OWN. So he requested a kit so he can start designing. The kit had everything a roller coaster designer can dream of at the time! So, he went on to design a flying turns ride and a wooden coaster ride. But wait, there's more. The wooden coaster had something he'd never seen before. A loop!? He immediately wanted a loop in his ride. He did research and figured out that no other park has created a looping coaster; it was too hard. So he used his big, creative mind and made a wooden looping coaster. And the flying turns coaster? Boy, don't get me started. He was fascinated on what parts he could use. He designed and designed, and finally created his two coasters. He sent it to Stockton Coasters Inc. and they went over the blueprint, did the science, and sent Jared a letter. They said that they would give full recognition for him designing the first, looping wooden coaster ride ever to mankind! By first sight, Jared knew he would be rich. So Stockton Coasters Inc. designed the two coasters, sending construction workers to build the rides. They built it, the one's that were in charge of the wooden looping coaster were excited! They had the first ever wooden looping coaster in their hands, they couldn't let Jared down. They built the rides in over 2 years, and he named the flying turns ride Louisiana Tobogan (there was a spelling mistake in the file, I have no time to fix things, so get ready for a cringe misspell) and the wooden looping coaster Oregon Rails, iconic for it's wagon-designed trains. People crowded over to ride the new rides. And soon, the park became the most famous in Maryland.

Dining
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Well I never mentioned the places you eat and drink at? Jared Schmidt wanted his visitors to eat authentic food and drinks that would make them beg for more. So he opened up his first restaurant, and it included his family recipe that he would keep a secret, and would only tell his special workers. The name was Rickety Park's Kebabs. They had a variety of family recipe items. Then he looked for more companies to build their restaurants, visit the park to find more about it. :)

Slight Return
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Jared Schmidt didn't build a roller coaster in a while. His visitors weren't tired of the old ones, but it seemed like they wanted more. So in 1992, after winning a whole lot of awards, he decided to make one last ride that was modern. An alpine coaster. So he searched for a company that built these rides, and found Alpine®. Ironic, isn't it? But he wanted something difficult; he wanted the ride to be built into the mountain. But that was no problem; it's the 90's and technology is evolving. After paying a lot of money, he had the alpine coaster built. Unfortunately, he couldn't rename the ride; so he had no other choice but to call it Alpine Coaster. It isn't really famous, Jared isn't sure if his visitors are scared to ride it or they just want to see the historical part?

Credit
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Everything was made by me, except for the chairswing ride, merry-go-round, and giant ferris wheel. These rides are created by the creators (I'm not sure if it's Frontier or Atari who made these rides?). Backstory was made by me, keep in mind I'm too lazy to fix any park mistakes, fix it yourself. Thanks!

Section Parks
File Size 1.79 MB
Date Uploaded Feb 19, 2017
Liked by flashstarranger

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1 comment

flashstarranger

yeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee