
I controversially don’t enjoy Valhalla that much.I must admit I haven’t actually ridden Dudley Do-Right’s Ripsaw Falls, despite having visited IOA numerous times.In terms of some of the other highly-rated ones Which ones are the best, though Here are my choices for the best nine log flume rides in the world. It’s a cheap ride to construct and maintain, and so everybody has one. Logger’s Leap at Thorpe Park a controversial choice, I know, but I did really enjoy it, and it’s probably the defunct attraction I miss most! For me, it got you wet without being excessively wet, it had a decent ride duration without feeling too tedious, and I also thought the double drop at the end was a brilliant and novel element! It’s definitely my all-time favourite UK water ride! The log flume is a staple at every self-respecting theme park on the planet.
I also thought the boats were very comfortable.
Splash Mountain at Walt Disney World, which was quite a nice level of wetness with a real feel-good, happy vibe about it and nice theming, as well as having a long ride duration without feeling tedious. Passengers sit in the logs, which are propelled along the flume by the flow of water. Called El Aserradero (translated as, The Sawmill), the ride was the creation of Arrow Development, an. Log flumes (colloquially known as log rides) are amusement rides consisting of a water flume and (artificial) hollow logs or boats. 2 The ride opened as Ye Olde Log Flume in 1978, but was renamed to just The Flume in the early 1990s. 1 History Prior to its opening, a contest was held to name the new ride. Out of the log flumes I’ve ridden, I’d personally go with one of these two: The first log flume ride as we know it today debuted in 1963 at Six Flags Over Texas. The Flume was a Log Flume located at Valleyfair in Shakopee, Minnesota, USA.