Discussion:
Amusement parks, fairs, and masks
(too old to reply)
s***@aol.com
2020-05-23 16:45:05 UTC
Permalink
Should parks and fairs be requiring masks during the 2020 season? Some places, as they reopen, are requiring them, and some are not.
CanobieFan
2020-05-23 21:00:58 UTC
Permalink
Even if parks not require it... I feel like a lot of people will just do it anyways.. At least at first.
I didn't visit FunSpot yesterday but the photos I saw showed a good number of people had masks
r***@gmail.com
2020-05-23 21:10:52 UTC
Permalink
Post by CanobieFan
Even if parks not require it... I feel like a lot of people will just do it anyways.. At least at first.
I didn't visit FunSpot yesterday but the photos I saw showed a good number of people had masks
I'd be MUCH happier if there were masks out there that didn't cause my glasses to fog up!

-R
s***@aol.com
2020-05-24 05:06:16 UTC
Permalink
I went to Fun Spot in Orlando today, and masks were not required there. Probably about a third of the guests wore masks with nearly all employees wearing them, as far as I saw. It wasn’t that busy (the front parking lot was not close to filled, maybe 75% filled). They were cleaning seats/bars after every ride and loading every other rows on coasters and about every other seat (groups together) on other rides, unloading coasters one row at a time. The fun house and splash pad were closed, as were inside restaurants and arcades. Water fountains were turned off.
Dave Althoff, Jr.
2020-05-25 19:58:33 UTC
Permalink
***@aol.com wrote:
: Should parks and fairs be requiring masks during the 2020 season? Some
: places, as they reopen, are requiring them, and some are not.

No, they should not be required.

First of all, there are many situations in a park where they simply do not
make sense. Distance and fresh air are enemies of the virus, as is
sunlight.

Second, there are people who are uncomfortable with facial coverings, who
find breathing difficult, who will essentially have a lousy day trying to
comply with such a requirement when what seems like a good idea is actually
of questionable necessity. "Encouraged" is a good way to approach it,
"required" is not. In particular, hot, humid weather is not a time when
people are going to be comfortably masked. Inside climate controlled
buildings is one thing, out in the hot weather is another entirely.

Third, enforcement of such a rule could quickly turn into a nightmare for
both employees and customers. There are more important, more useful things
that need attention, the added stress of policing this is something that
nobody really wants. Make it "encouraged" and a significant percentage of
people will do it, and nobody has to get bent out of shape about it.

--Dave Althoff, Jr.
/X\ _ *** Respect rides. They do not respect you. ***
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milst1
2020-05-26 14:41:26 UTC
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I have deep respect for Dave's opinions and knowledge on all things amusement-related, I disagree on this. I think that masks should be required. That said, I know any enforcement will be lax and that we are all doomed.

Masks are only partly for one's own protection. They are also for the protection of others. I don't want to spend a second near someone who is infected and not willing or able to wear a mask to limit my risk.

I understand the point about "distance and fresh air", and you can add sunlight, but how often does one have 6 feet around them at a theme park or fair? Not so much. You're constantly being hit by the microscopic spittle of others around you. Masks reduce that crop dusting considerably. Even with reduced capacity, people are going to rub shoulders from time to time. What if it rains? Everyone crowds into the nearest shelter, breathing on each other.

And no, nobody likes wearing a mask, but it's not a particularly heavy burden to bear, especially for a crowd that expects to get their photo taken with a costumed cast member who is gasping for breath and sweating it out in a Tigger costume. Medical personnel wear the simple surgical masks constantly and manage to function. And the guys who mow your lawn in 100 degree heat also seem to survive while wearing masks. Theme park goers are not doing strenuous labor, and going to a theme park is not what I would call a god-given right. If you can't survive a simple mask in the heat, maybe you shouldn't be out in the heat at all. You're putting yourself in danger to begin with. Don't also endanger others.

I completely agree with David that there is going to be an enforcement nightmare, and that's one reason you won't find me near a park, except maybe Disney, where enforcement standards will probably be handled deftly.

Nevertheless, there is a significant percentage of the population that will behave selfishly with zero consideration for others, or who will behave stupidly and thoughtlessly, and who don't care about giving the finger to the medical community, or to me and you, intentionally or not. Lots of people are assholes, and lots of people are stupid. Both types are dangerous.

I normally pull out the "my wife is an ER doctor in Queens" card now but I'll spare you, except to say that she's terrified in a big box grocery store, can't imagine getting on a plane, and thinks that opening up now is suicide. COVID-19 is some serious shit (literally hundreds died at her hospital and they are dreading a second wave) and the number of hospitalizations in the US is rising, not falling.

Until the nation starts to manage the disease intelligently, or until the vulnerable are all dead, you probably won't see us at a park. And if we're among the vulnerable, you won't see us then either.

I understand that economic activity has to resume, but if we have a choice, let's all agree to do it the smart way. Don't give people the option of being selfish or stupid.
Post by Dave Althoff, Jr.
: Should parks and fairs be requiring masks during the 2020 season? Some
: places, as they reopen, are requiring them, and some are not.
No, they should not be required.
First of all, there are many situations in a park where they simply do not
make sense. Distance and fresh air are enemies of the virus, as is
sunlight.
Second, there are people who are uncomfortable with facial coverings, who
find breathing difficult, who will essentially have a lousy day trying to
comply with such a requirement when what seems like a good idea is actually
of questionable necessity. "Encouraged" is a good way to approach it,
"required" is not. In particular, hot, humid weather is not a time when
people are going to be comfortably masked. Inside climate controlled
buildings is one thing, out in the hot weather is another entirely.
Third, enforcement of such a rule could quickly turn into a nightmare for
both employees and customers. There are more important, more useful things
that need attention, the added stress of policing this is something that
nobody really wants. Make it "encouraged" and a significant percentage of
people will do it, and nobody has to get bent out of shape about it.
--Dave Althoff, Jr.
/X\ _ *** Respect rides. They do not respect you. ***
/XXX\ /X\ /X\_ _ /X\__ _ _ _____
/XXXXX\ /XXX\ /XXXX\_ /X\ /XXXXX\ /X\ /X\ /XXXXX
_/XXXXXXX\__/XXXXX\/XXXXXXXX\_/XXX\_/XXXXXXX\__/XXX\_/XXX\_/\_/XXXXXX
NEW! When emailing this account, include the 'canonical magic word' in
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Marshall
2020-05-26 16:54:19 UTC
Permalink
Post by milst1
I have deep respect for Dave's opinions and knowledge on all things amusement-related, I disagree on this. I think that masks should be required. That said, I know any enforcement will be lax and that we are all doomed.
Masks are only partly for one's own protection. They are also for the protection of others. I don't want to spend a second near someone who is infected and not willing or able to wear a mask to limit my risk.
I understand the point about "distance and fresh air", and you can add sunlight, but how often does one have 6 feet around them at a theme park or fair? Not so much. You're constantly being hit by the microscopic spittle of others around you. Masks reduce that crop dusting considerably. Even with reduced capacity, people are going to rub shoulders from time to time. What if it rains? Everyone crowds into the nearest shelter, breathing on each other.
And no, nobody likes wearing a mask, but it's not a particularly heavy burden to bear, especially for a crowd that expects to get their photo taken with a costumed cast member who is gasping for breath and sweating it out in a Tigger costume. Medical personnel wear the simple surgical masks constantly and manage to function. And the guys who mow your lawn in 100 degree heat also seem to survive while wearing masks. Theme park goers are not doing strenuous labor, and going to a theme park is not what I would call a god-given right. If you can't survive a simple mask in the heat, maybe you shouldn't be out in the heat at all. You're putting yourself in danger to begin with. Don't also endanger others.
I completely agree with David that there is going to be an enforcement nightmare, and that's one reason you won't find me near a park, except maybe Disney, where enforcement standards will probably be handled deftly.
Nevertheless, there is a significant percentage of the population that will behave selfishly with zero consideration for others, or who will behave stupidly and thoughtlessly, and who don't care about giving the finger to the medical community, or to me and you, intentionally or not. Lots of people are assholes, and lots of people are stupid. Both types are dangerous.
I normally pull out the "my wife is an ER doctor in Queens" card now but I'll spare you, except to say that she's terrified in a big box grocery store, can't imagine getting on a plane, and thinks that opening up now is suicide. COVID-19 is some serious shit (literally hundreds died at her hospital and they are dreading a second wave) and the number of hospitalizations in the US is rising, not falling.
Until the nation starts to manage the disease intelligently, or until the vulnerable are all dead, you probably won't see us at a park. And if we're among the vulnerable, you won't see us then either.
I understand that economic activity has to resume, but if we have a choice, let's all agree to do it the smart way. Don't give people the option of being selfish or stupid.
Nope. Dave is 100% correct on this point. Masks are somewhere between useless and counter-productive outdoors. They should NOT be required.

The ONLY place they make any sense in a theme park environ is in the queue lines/preshows and maybe shops. Even there, you're going to have problems with indoor eating establishments.

Next, lets talk about the stupidity of keeping waterparks closed...
Dave Althoff, Jr.
2020-05-26 23:43:31 UTC
Permalink
Marshall <***@gmail.com> wrote:
:
: Nope. Dave is 100% correct on this point. Masks are somewhere between
: useless and counter-productive outdoors. They should NOT be required.

The truth is we don't have much evidence on the science front. I'll stop
short of calling them 'useless' but I certainly think that given the level
of risk especially outside they are unnecessary. Counter-productive to the
extent that they detract from people enjoying their day...

: The ONLY place they make any sense in a theme park environ is in the
: queue lines/preshows and maybe shops. Even there, you're going to have
: problems with indoor eating establishments.

Rearrange the queues a bit, keep the fans going in the queue houses, you
can keep people apart and keep most contact incidental. Shops are the
biggest problem I can see; for eating establishments there are already
guidelines and strategies being implemented by restaurants out in the "real
world". Those don't all make sense either, but at least it's something to
go on.

: Next, lets talk about the stupidity of keeping waterparks closed...

Now that's the stupid part. Wide open space, bright sun/limited shade, and
treated water are all deadly to SARS-Co-v2. Aside from people actually
breathing on each other, a water park might be, from a COVID-19
perspective, the safest place to be!

--Dave Althoff, Jr.
/X\ _ *** Respect rides. They do not respect you. ***
/XXX\ /X\ /X\_ _ /X\__ _ _ _____
/XXXXX\ /XXX\ /XXXX\_ /X\ /XXXXX\ /X\ /X\ /XXXXX
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s***@aol.com
2020-05-27 23:04:32 UTC
Permalink
Apparently at Fun Spot in Kissimmee, makes are required as it’s in Osceola County, but at Fun Spot Orlando, masks are optional.
Dave Althoff, Jr.
2020-05-26 23:35:17 UTC
Permalink
milst1 <***@yahoo.com> wrote:
: I have deep respect for Dave's opinions and knowledge on all things
: amusement-related, I disagree on this. I think that masks should be
: required. That said, I know any enforcement will be lax and that we are
: all doomed.

I never claimed to be a medical expert. That said...

: Masks are only partly for one's own protection. They are also for the
: protection of others. I don't want to spend a second near someone who is
: infected and not willing or able to wear a mask to limit my risk.

And I certainly can't blame you for that. But my experience with amusement
parks is that even when the crowds are heavy (and most of the opening plans
insure that they won't be) I find that I spend very little time les than at
least arm's length (even in a queue) and more often far more than 6' from
anyone I don't actually know. Combine that with the great outdoors and the
mask really becomes little more than an unnecessary nusance. I'll avoid
calling it "useless" but in reality I don't think it improves anyone's odds
much outdoors.

: I understand the point about "distance and fresh air", and you can add
: sunlight, but how often does one have 6 feet around them at a theme park
: or fair? Not so much. You're constantly being hit by the microscopic
: spittle of others around you. Masks reduce that crop dusting
: considerably. Even with reduced capacity, people are going to rub
: shoulders from time to time. What if it rains? Everyone crowds into the
: nearest shelter, breathing on each other.

There is that. Of course there are other considerations. Will people crowd
thusly? Or will they just go home? Let's add in another variable: What are
the actual odds that anyone you meet is actually carrying the virus?
Evidence of asymptomatic spread is extremely scarce and mostly anecdotal.
Parks that are opening are making an attempt to keep symptomatic people out
of the park entirely. I'm in Ohio where my odds of meeting a person
infected with the virus are about 1:2700 assuming that the cases are evenly
spread across the state, which they are not: in Ohio a tremendous number of
cases are concentrated in collective living environments (nursing homes,
prisons, group homes). Of course this presents a nightmare for a park like
Cedar Point (dormitories) but it means that in reality the virus is not
especially widespread in my community. It is extremely unlikely that any
person you encounter in my state currently has the virus. Not zero, of
course. Given the math I presented earlier, that's 6 people in a typical
crowd at Cedar Point. And of course, you don't know which 6.

: And no, nobody likes wearing a mask, but it's not a particularly heavy
: burden to bear, especially for a crowd that expects to get their photo
: taken with a costumed cast member who is gasping for breath and sweating
: it out in a Tigger costume. Medical personnel wear the simple surgical
: masks constantly and manage to function.

Medical personnel are wearing their surgical masks in a climate controlled
environment. Personally, I don't know how they manage, but more on that in
a moment...

: And the guys who mow your lawn in 100 degree heat also seem to survive
: while wearing masks.

Well, they guy who mows my lawn in 100 degree heat doesn't. That would be
me, incidentally. I don't trust others not to cut the cord.

: Theme park goers are not doing strenuous labor, and
: going to a theme park is not what I would call a god-given right. If you
: can't survive a simple mask in the heat, maybe you shouldn't be out in
: the heat at all. You're putting yourself in danger to begin with. Don't
: also endanger others.

Sometimes it isn't the heat.

Originally I was anti-mask only as a matter of principle: there are other
methods we can employ to protect our fellow citizens that are actually more
effective. As a person who doesn't wear a mask in the grocery store, I've
been indirectly called some of the worst names in the book...not
personally, but as one of Those People Who Don't Wear Masks In Public.
Villified like you wouldn't believe. And yet in real life, I haven't
received so much as a dirty look. Part of that, certainly, is because I
deliberately stay away from people. I keep aware of my surroundings, and of
the people around me, and do lots of little things, a few obvious but most
not so much, to protect my neighbors from my exhaled filth. People do
notice, and occasionally they will back off as well.

Anyway, my choice to go maskless was just that...a conscious choice, with a
full understanding of what that requires of me to protect the people around
me even though I am fairly certain I am not carrying the virus (fairly
certain is not 100% and I respect that). That doesn't mean I was an
absolutist in the matter. When I had to go to a local hospital a couple of
weeks ago to have a bit of non-destructive testing done on my leg, I walked
in from the parking lot, had my temperature taken and was handed a paper
mask. No problem, I put it on, ridiculous as it was with my beard hanging
out. Told the greeter why i was there, headed down the hallway and down the
stairs to the admission counter. I started off down the air-conditioned
corridor. The stairs were a bit of a problem as the mask was forcing my
glasses up enough that I was looking through the wrong part (progressive
lenses). But the bigger problem was the breathing obstruction. By the time
I got downstairs, I was gasping for breath, dizzy, shaking, and...to put it
mildly...a complete wreck. The back of the mask and the covered part of my
beard were completely saturated just from exhaled moisture; I hadn't even
started sweating yet. I sat down and waited, and finally figured out that
if I put my thumb behind the mask at the bottom I was able to get enough
fresh air to be almost comfortable, although the ultrasound tech demanded I
not do that. When the procedure was finished, I actually exited the
building through a door that forced me to walk the long way around just so
I could be rid of that damn mask.

I'll be the first to tell you that my reaction did not make physiological
sense. But that reaction was very real, and very much unintended. It did
give me a better insight into some previous incidents, and probably goes
back to something that happened to me almost 50 years ago. I know that I
didn't last an hour in a low impact climate controlled setting (most of
that time spent sitting or reclining). I know full well there is absolutely
no way I could last an entire day, at least not with anything anyone would
consider effective.

So I do have a bit of an ulterior motive for preferring "suggested" to
"required". And sure, just about anywhere that requires a mask will allow
exceptions for people like me. But if it's truly optional, then I don't
have to spend the day explaining myself.

: ...Nevertheless, there is a significant percentage of the population that
: will behave selfishly with zero consideration for others, or who will
: behave stupidly and thoughtlessly, and who don't care about giving the
: finger to the medical community, or to me and you, intentionally or not.
: Lots of people are assholes, and lots of people are stupid. Both types
: are dangerous.

We have to deal with that every day of the year, in every situation. It's
not that different from driving on the expressway, where you have no
control over what the idiots in the other vehicles are going to do. You
have to know and understand the risks, and deal with them accordingly.

: I normally pull out the "my wife is an ER doctor in Queens" card now but
: I'll spare you, except to say that she's terrified in a big box grocery
: store, can't imagine getting on a plane, and thinks that opening up now
: is suicide. COVID-19 is some serious shit (literally hundreds died at her
: hospital and they are dreading a second wave) and the number of
: hospitalizations in the US is rising, not falling.

This is a useful bit of information, because I think it underscores the
geographic divide that comes along with this virus. Oh, sure, it's plenty
serious. I work in a call center, and before they handed me a computer and
sent me to work at home, we had probably a dozen people test positive..and
during my second week at home I learned one of those people (who I did not
know) died from complications. But until the restrictions were lifted, our
hospitals were empty, our emergency rooms were closing and our medical
professionals were being laid off because of the wave of cases that never
happened. But that's how we live in Ohio. We live in single family homes,
we drive cars, and for a lot of us, a certain amount of "social distancing"
is just kind of how we do things. And I suspect that also influences our
differing viewpoints on the risks associated with this virus.

: Until the nation starts to manage the disease intelligently, or until the
: vulnerable are all dead, you probably won't see us at a park. And if
: we're among the vulnerable, you won't see us then either.

FIrst of all, we're really better off not managing the pandemic nationally.
Partly due to classic Federal incompetence, but mostly because of the need
for a localized response. In many ways it's the same as my argument against
giving the CPSC jurisdiction over amusement rides. (See? Back on topic!)

: I understand that economic activity has to resume, but if we have a
: choice, let's all agree to do it the smart way. Don't give people the
: option of being selfish or stupid.

People always have the option of being selfish and/or stupid, frequently
with terrible consequences for others. Why pick this one issue in
particular? If it were truly possible to mitigate the problems of
selfishness and stupidity, many of us wouldn't still remember where we were
on the evening of May 31, 2003...

--Dave Althoff, Jr.
/X\ _ *** Respect rides. They do not respect you. ***
/XXX\ /X\ /X\_ _ /X\__ _ _ _____
/XXXXX\ /XXX\ /XXXX\_ /X\ /XXXXX\ /X\ /X\ /XXXXX
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David H.--REMOVE "STOPSPAM" to reply
2020-06-16 07:07:25 UTC
Permalink
On Tue, 26 May 2020 23:35:17 -0000 (UTC), "Dave Althoff, Jr."
Post by Dave Althoff, Jr.
: I understand that economic activity has to resume, but if we have a
: choice, let's all agree to do it the smart way. Don't give people the
: option of being selfish or stupid.
People always have the option of being selfish and/or stupid, frequently
with terrible consequences for others. Why pick this one issue in
particular? If it were truly possible to mitigate the problems of
selfishness and stupidity, many of us wouldn't still remember where we were
on the evening of May 31, 2003...
We pick this one issue because in this instance, being selfish and stupid
could (and has) resulted in over 110,000 American deaths.

Your right to be selfish and stupid ends at MY health.



"With the first link, a chain is forged. The first speech censured,
the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us
all irrevocably." -Capt. Jean-Luc Picard
"The Drumhead", _Star Trek: The Next Generation_
David H.--REMOVE "STOPSPAM" to reply
2020-06-16 07:07:42 UTC
Permalink
Every word you just said!!!
Post by milst1
I have deep respect for Dave's opinions and knowledge on all things amusement-related, I disagree on this. I think that masks should be required. That said, I know any enforcement will be lax and that we are all doomed.
Masks are only partly for one's own protection. They are also for the protection of others. I don't want to spend a second near someone who is infected and not willing or able to wear a mask to limit my risk.
I understand the point about "distance and fresh air", and you can add sunlight, but how often does one have 6 feet around them at a theme park or fair? Not so much. You're constantly being hit by the microscopic spittle of others around you. Masks reduce that crop dusting considerably. Even with reduced capacity, people are going to rub shoulders from time to time. What if it rains? Everyone crowds into the nearest shelter, breathing on each other.
And no, nobody likes wearing a mask, but it's not a particularly heavy burden to bear, especially for a crowd that expects to get their photo taken with a costumed cast member who is gasping for breath and sweating it out in a Tigger costume. Medical personnel wear the simple surgical masks constantly and manage to function. And the guys who mow your lawn in 100 degree heat also seem to survive while wearing masks. Theme park goers are not doing strenuous labor, and going to a theme park is not what I would call a god-given right. If you can't survive a simple mask in the heat, maybe you shouldn't be out in the heat at all. You're putting yourself in danger to begin with. Don't also endanger others.
I completely agree with David that there is going to be an enforcement nightmare, and that's one reason you won't find me near a park, except maybe Disney, where enforcement standards will probably be handled deftly.
Nevertheless, there is a significant percentage of the population that will behave selfishly with zero consideration for others, or who will behave stupidly and thoughtlessly, and who don't care about giving the finger to the medical community, or to me and you, intentionally or not. Lots of people are assholes, and lots of people are stupid. Both types are dangerous.
I normally pull out the "my wife is an ER doctor in Queens" card now but I'll spare you, except to say that she's terrified in a big box grocery store, can't imagine getting on a plane, and thinks that opening up now is suicide. COVID-19 is some serious shit (literally hundreds died at her hospital and they are dreading a second wave) and the number of hospitalizations in the US is rising, not falling.
Until the nation starts to manage the disease intelligently, or until the vulnerable are all dead, you probably won't see us at a park. And if we're among the vulnerable, you won't see us then either.
I understand that economic activity has to resume, but if we have a choice, let's all agree to do it the smart way. Don't give people the option of being selfish or stupid.
Post by Dave Althoff, Jr.
: Should parks and fairs be requiring masks during the 2020 season? Some
: places, as they reopen, are requiring them, and some are not.
No, they should not be required.
First of all, there are many situations in a park where they simply do not
make sense. Distance and fresh air are enemies of the virus, as is
sunlight.
Second, there are people who are uncomfortable with facial coverings, who
find breathing difficult, who will essentially have a lousy day trying to
comply with such a requirement when what seems like a good idea is actually
of questionable necessity. "Encouraged" is a good way to approach it,
"required" is not. In particular, hot, humid weather is not a time when
people are going to be comfortably masked. Inside climate controlled
buildings is one thing, out in the hot weather is another entirely.
Third, enforcement of such a rule could quickly turn into a nightmare for
both employees and customers. There are more important, more useful things
that need attention, the added stress of policing this is something that
nobody really wants. Make it "encouraged" and a significant percentage of
people will do it, and nobody has to get bent out of shape about it.
--Dave Althoff, Jr.
/X\ _ *** Respect rides. They do not respect you. ***
/XXX\ /X\ /X\_ _ /X\__ _ _ _____
/XXXXX\ /XXX\ /XXXX\_ /X\ /XXXXX\ /X\ /X\ /XXXXX
_/XXXXXXX\__/XXXXX\/XXXXXXXX\_/XXX\_/XXXXXXX\__/XXX\_/XXX\_/\_/XXXXXX
NEW! When emailing this account, include the 'canonical magic word' in
the body of your message for a quicker response.
"With the first link, a chain is forged. The first speech censured,
the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us
all irrevocably." -Capt. Jean-Luc Picard
"The Drumhead", _Star Trek: The Next Generation_
surfd...@aol.com
2020-10-29 03:17:52 UTC
Permalink
It’s interesting that now at most parks masks are required and the standard. It actually seems odd when I see older pre-early 2020 photos of guests not wearing masks at parks, like its from a (very) different time period. Kinda like when I would see photos of people in suits at amusement parks in the 1920s in a way.
Richard Bannister
2020-10-29 08:50:36 UTC
Permalink
I did two separate theme park trips this summer.

The first was to Denmark in July. The rules at the time were that masks were required to ride – and that a new mask was required for each and every ride, meaning that the one you were wearing had to be removed and disposed of before leaving the station platform. I got into an argument with an op at Djurs Sommerland when I refused to take mine off (!) at the end of a lap on DrageKongen – it wasn't pretty. Masks were not required otherwise and I was one of the few people wearing one continuously. (That park was charging 5Kr for masks, and you had to use one that was flat across the face – the cone-shaped N95 one I'd brought into the park with me was deemed unsuitable).

The second was to Germany in September. Masks were required at all times inside the parks, and every visitor had to fill in a form with contact details, time of arrival, and expected time of departure.

On the whole I preferred the German approach.

-
I make Retro Games for Mac when not riding coasters.
Try them out at www.retrogamesformac.com
surfd...@aol.com
2020-10-29 12:49:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by Richard Bannister
I did two separate theme park trips this summer.
The first was to Denmark in July. The rules at the time were that masks were required to ride – and that a new mask was required for each and every ride, meaning that the one you were wearing had to be removed and disposed of before leaving the station platform. I got into an argument with an op at Djurs Sommerland when I refused to take mine off (!) at the end of a lap on DrageKongen – it wasn't pretty. Masks were not required otherwise and I was one of the few people wearing one continuously. (That park was charging 5Kr for masks, and you had to use one that was flat across the face – the cone-shaped N95 one I'd brought into the park with me was deemed unsuitable).
The second was to Germany in September. Masks were required at all times inside the parks, and every visitor had to fill in a form with contact details, time of arrival, and expected time of departure.
On the whole I preferred the German approach.
-
I make Retro Games for Mac when not riding coasters.
Try them out at www.retrogamesformac.com
Wow! That’s crazy about having a new mask for each ride.

I’ve been to many of the parks in Florida several times. Although Florida as a whole does not have a mask mandate, most of the parks are located in counties where mask use is required. Also, although their rules and cleaning procedures varied slightly depending on the chain, masks were to be worn at all times, including on the rides (though Universal allowed them off on the water rides, and also allowed them removed for taking photos). Gater masks are no longer acceptable at most parks here now. I’ve found the masks that Universal sells are actually the best and most comfortable mask anywhere to get. I wear the Universal ones almost exclusively outside of work (where we have to wear the provided ones).

Generally the parks in Florida do a great job with enforcement of mask use and social distracting. Fun Spot is certainly the worst at enforcement, but also are the most strict as far as cleaning procedures, as they clean the seat/restraint after every guest. Scream a guessing, a temporary haunted park attraction for Fall, was the worst in general as far as enhanced procedures.
surfd...@aol.com
2020-11-16 01:04:09 UTC
Permalink
*That should read ”Scream A Geddon”, not “Scream a guessing” in my earlier response.
Richard Bannister
2020-10-29 08:51:24 UTC
Permalink
Post by milst1
Masks are only partly for one's own protection. They are also for the protection of others. I don't want to spend a second near someone who is infected and not willing or able to wear a mask to limit my risk.
This. Allowing people to not wear masks is like having a peeing section in a swimming pool; sooner or later everyone is impacted.

-
I make Retro Games for Mac when not riding coasters.
Try them out at www.retrogamesformac.com
Chris K-Man
2020-11-15 15:53:26 UTC
Permalink
Post by s***@aol.com
Should parks and fairs be requiring masks during the 2020
season? Some places, as they reopen, are requiring them, and
some are not.
_______
My question is:

Will a standard surgical - blue side/white side - face mask remain on when riding Steel Force, Superman: The Ride, or any coaster bigger & faster?
Richard Bannister
2020-11-15 15:56:35 UTC
Permalink
Post by Chris K-Man
Will a standard surgical - blue side/white side - face mask remain on when riding Steel Force, Superman: The Ride, or any coaster bigger & faster?
This summer I had no issues wearing one on Expedition GeForce, F.L.Y., and Piraten.

Expedition GeForce came close to shaking it loose but it stayed in place.

-
www.retrogamesformac.com
Bob Rahe
2020-11-15 19:44:40 UTC
Permalink
Post by s***@aol.com
Post by s***@aol.com
Should parks and fairs be requiring masks during the 2020
season? Some places, as they reopen, are requiring them, and
some are not.
_______
Will a standard surgical - blue side/white side - face mask remain on when riding Steel Force, Superman: The Ride, or any coaster bigger & faster?
I don't wear one in the park, I have one that was made for me that is
cloth and has two straps that run to the back of my head and are
tightened with a catch. Had that almost fly off, taking my glasses
(also with a strap) on Kingda Ka at SFGrAdv. Caught them just in time.
The wind got under the mask (should have had the bottom tighter) and
flipped it up.

But I did see quite a few of the blue/white both go flying off the
ride as well as a bunch on the ground in various places. Some people
were removing them just before launch altho theoretically not allowed...

Bob
surfd...@aol.com
2020-11-16 01:01:21 UTC
Permalink
Post by s***@aol.com
Post by s***@aol.com
Should parks and fairs be requiring masks during the 2020
season? Some places, as they reopen, are requiring them, and
some are not.
_______
Will a standard surgical - blue side/white side - face mask remain on when riding Steel Force, Superman: The Ride, or any coaster bigger & faster?
I wear the cloth ones (usually the ones sold at Universal as they’re by far the most comfortable) to the parks in Florida all the time, haven’t had an issue on any ride, including Mako, Tigris, Kraken, Kumba, Sheikra, Montu, Hollywood Rip Ride Rockit, Revenge Of the Mummy, Mine Blower, Hurricane, White Lightning, Hagrid’s, Hulk, and a variety of other rides. The masks do slip DOWN a bit (not up) during some rides.
Marshall
2020-11-16 16:00:51 UTC
Permalink
Post by ***@aol.com
Post by s***@aol.com
Post by s***@aol.com
Should parks and fairs be requiring masks during the 2020
season? Some places, as they reopen, are requiring them, and
some are not.
_______
Will a standard surgical - blue side/white side - face mask remain on when riding Steel Force, Superman: The Ride, or any coaster bigger & faster?
I wear the cloth ones (usually the ones sold at Universal as they’re by far the most comfortable) to the parks in Florida all the time, haven’t had an issue on any ride, including Mako, Tigris, Kraken, Kumba, Sheikra, Montu, Hollywood Rip Ride Rockit, Revenge Of the Mummy, Mine Blower, Hurricane, White Lightning, Hagrid’s, Hulk, and a variety of other rides. The masks do slip DOWN a bit (not up) during some rides.
The only ride I had an issue on this year was Orion. My cloth mask with a behind the neck strap slipped up over my eyes. I pulled it down into place and then it slipped down around my neck for the rest of the ride.

Stupid useless requirement all around. Almost as stupid as staggered, every-other-row seating.
Bob Rahe
2020-11-16 16:21:47 UTC
Permalink
On 11/16/20 11:00 AM, Marshall wrote:
...
Post by Marshall
The only ride I had an issue on this year was Orion. My cloth mask with a behind the neck strap slipped up over my eyes. I pulled it down into place and then it slipped down around my neck for the rest of the ride.
Stupid useless requirement all around. Almost as stupid as staggered, every-other-row seating.
I was wondering about that. Kinda strange at SFA. They did full
ride seating on Wild One but every-other-row seating on ROAR. Tried
asking the ROAR ride-op about it but she didn't even know that was the case.

SFGrAdv seemed to gradually move to full seating, esp. KK, that
seemed to come once they got the plexiglass up on the chutes on the
platform. Not sure how they did decide tho. But that Wild One vs ROAR
was just odd.

Bob
surfd...@aol.com
2020-11-16 21:19:24 UTC
Permalink
...
Post by Marshall
The only ride I had an issue on this year was Orion. My cloth mask with a behind the neck strap slipped up over my eyes. I pulled it down into place and then it slipped down around my neck for the rest of the ride.
Stupid useless requirement all around. Almost as stupid as staggered, every-other-row seating.
I was wondering about that. Kinda strange at SFA. They did full
ride seating on Wild One but every-other-row seating on ROAR. Tried
asking the ROAR ride-op about it but she didn't even know that was the case.
SFGrAdv seemed to gradually move to full seating, esp. KK, that
seemed to come once they got the plexiglass up on the chutes on the
platform. Not sure how they did decide tho. But that Wild One vs ROAR
was just odd.
Bob
Some rides at Universal started using every row recently, they had partitions built in the stations between rows. SeaWorld and Busch Gardens started using every row on some of their coasters earlier this summer, they had guests in every other row stand toward the back of the row in the station to keep the rows apart while waiting. Still only one party per row (though SeaWorld and Busch Gardens allow two singles in the same row on the B&Ms if the each ride in outside seats).
surfd...@aol.com
2021-01-05 18:23:55 UTC
Permalink
Concept art of the new coaster at Islands of Adventure shows all riders wearing masks...
Richard Bannister
2021-01-05 18:24:52 UTC
Permalink
Post by ***@aol.com
Concept art of the new coaster at Islands of Adventure shows all riders wearing masks...
Reality, I fear. At least for the next two years or so.

-
www.retrogamesformac.com
surfd...@aol.com
2021-01-05 19:24:15 UTC
Permalink
Post by Richard Bannister
Post by ***@aol.com
Concept art of the new coaster at Islands of Adventure shows all riders wearing masks...
Reality, I fear. At least for the next two years or so.
-
www.retrogamesformac.com
Yeah, I'm really not too surprised, but it was definitely noticeable when I saw it. I think it's the first time I'e noticed something like that as far as new attractions.
Dave Althoff, Jr.
2021-01-12 06:22:10 UTC
Permalink
***@aol.com <***@aol.com> wrote:
: Concept art of the new coaster at Islands of Adventure shows all riders
: wearing masks...

I *really* hate the degree to which various organizations are trying to
normalize this. It's NOT normal and we should not treat it as such.

What's the payoff if we never get to see anybody smile?

--Dave Althoff, Jr.
/X\ _ *** Respect rides. They do not respect you. ***
/XXX\ /X\ /X\_ _ /X\__ _ _ _____
/XXXXX\ /XXX\ /XXXX\_ /X\ /XXXXX\ /X\ /X\ /XXXXX
_/XXXXXXX\__/XXXXX\/XXXXXXXX\_/XXX\_/XXXXXXX\__/XXX\_/XXX\_/\_/XXXXXX
NEW! When emailing this account, include the 'canonical magic word' in
the body of your message for a quicker response.
surfd...@aol.com
2021-01-14 02:06:15 UTC
Permalink
Post by Dave Althoff, Jr.
: Concept art of the new coaster at Islands of Adventure shows all riders
: wearing masks...
I *really* hate the degree to which various organizations are trying to
normalize this. It's NOT normal and we should not treat it as such.
What's the payoff if we never get to see anybody smile?
--Dave Althoff, Jr.
/X\ _ *** Respect rides. They do not respect you. ***
/XXX\ /X\ /X\_ _ /X\__ _ _ _____
/XXXXX\ /XXX\ /XXXX\_ /X\ /XXXXX\ /X\ /X\ /XXXXX
_/XXXXXXX\__/XXXXX\/XXXXXXXX\_/XXX\_/XXXXXXX\__/XXX\_/XXX\_/\_/XXXXXX
NEW! When emailing this account, include the 'canonical magic word' in
the body of your message for a quicker response.
I personally don't mind masks being a more normal thing. At this point it would almost be weird going back to no masks at all being the norm.
Marshall
2021-01-14 15:57:45 UTC
Permalink
Post by Dave Althoff, Jr.
: Concept art of the new coaster at Islands of Adventure shows all riders
: wearing masks...
I *really* hate the degree to which various organizations are trying to
normalize this. It's NOT normal and we should not treat it as such.
I'm more concerned about the every-other-row seating in the picture. Thats a COMPLETELY useless idea that needs to die asap. There MIGHT be some use to spreading out the seating on VERY slow moving rides in enclosed spaces(maybe Kennywoods Old Mill-like structures), but fast-moving rides outdoors? Literally more chance of the ride failing and injuring the riders than any infectious disease spreading thru breathing in separate rows. Theres more chance of spread from one load to the next then actually in motion. Panic porn at its worst.
surfd...@aol.com
2021-01-15 03:41:12 UTC
Permalink
Post by Marshall
Post by Dave Althoff, Jr.
: Concept art of the new coaster at Islands of Adventure shows all riders
: wearing masks...
I *really* hate the degree to which various organizations are trying to
normalize this. It's NOT normal and we should not treat it as such.
I'm more concerned about the every-other-row seating in the picture. Thats a COMPLETELY useless idea that needs to die asap. There MIGHT be some use to spreading out the seating on VERY slow moving rides in enclosed spaces(maybe Kennywoods Old Mill-like structures), but fast-moving rides outdoors? Literally more chance of the ride failing and injuring the riders than any infectious disease spreading thru breathing in separate rows. Theres more chance of spread from one load to the next then actually in motion. Panic porn at its worst.
I'm guessing they're playing it safe with this image. A lot of Universal's rides are back to using every row (still only one party per row). Incredible Hulk Coaster, Men In Black, Hollywood Rip Ride Rockit, & Revenge of the Mummy all use every row, when they were using every other once reopened (most have barriers in the load station between rows which apparently allows for this). Some rides still do not use every row- examples are Cat In the Hat, Fast & Furious, Amazing Adventures of Spiderman, E.T. Adventure, and the theater shows including Shrek 4D. It'll be interesting to see where this one is when it opens. I was at the park today, and most of the walls are down, it looks incredible from the outside! Busch Gardens Tampa really should have pushed to get Iron Gwazi open in 2020, this ride is gonna give it a lot of competition in Central Florida!
David H.--REMOVE "STOPSPAM" to reply
2021-02-12 05:42:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by Marshall
Post by Dave Althoff, Jr.
: Concept art of the new coaster at Islands of Adventure shows all riders
: wearing masks...
I *really* hate the degree to which various organizations are trying to
normalize this. It's NOT normal and we should not treat it as such.
I'm more concerned about the every-other-row seating in the picture. Thats a COMPLETELY useless idea that needs to die asap. There MIGHT be some use to spreading out the seating on VERY slow moving rides in enclosed spaces(maybe Kennywoods Old Mill-like structures), but fast-moving rides outdoors? Literally more chance of the ride failing and injuring the riders than any infectious disease spreading thru breathing in separate rows. Theres more chance of spread from one load to the next then actually in motion. Panic porn at its worst.
Except that you spend as much time NOT moving quickly on these rides as you
do moving. What about the time you spend in the station?

Look, I get that you don't take this pandemic seriously. But most of us
do, and actually want to stop the spread of it. THAT is the only way that
businesses like amusement parks will be able to open and stay open safely.


"With the first link, a chain is forged. The first speech censured,
the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us
all irrevocably." -Capt. Jean-Luc Picard
"The Drumhead", _Star Trek: The Next Generation_
Marshall
2021-02-12 18:35:12 UTC
Permalink
On Thu, 14 Jan 2021 07:57:45 -0800 (PST), Marshall
Post by Marshall
I'm more concerned about the every-other-row seating in the picture. Thats a COMPLETELY useless idea that needs to die asap. There MIGHT be some use to spreading out the seating on VERY slow moving rides in enclosed spaces(maybe Kennywoods Old Mill-like structures), but fast-moving rides outdoors? Literally more chance of the ride failing and injuring the riders than any infectious disease spreading thru breathing in separate rows. Theres more chance of spread from one load to the next then actually in motion. Panic porn at its worst.
Except that you spend as much time NOT moving quickly on these rides as you
do moving. What about the time you spend in the station?
What about the time spent in the station? 30seconds to a minute in an environment that is not only usually well ventilated but just had a MASSIVE amount of air pulled thru it by the entering and departing trains. Any virus particles that might be nearby are so dispersed as to be non-existent. You're more at risk from the person checking your lap bar than the people a row ahead(who are facing away anyway) or the row behind who are more than far enough away. It would be trivial to manage alternating row loading on the odd chance you want to avoid even the appearance of liability.
Look, I get that you don't take this pandemic seriously. But most of us
do, and actually want to stop the spread of it. THAT is the only way that
businesses like amusement parks will be able to open and stay open safely.
"With the first link, a chain is forged. The first speech censured,
the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us
all irrevocably." -Capt. Jean-Luc Picard
"The Drumhead", _Star Trek: The Next Generation_
No, you quite obviously DONT get it. You're the one not taking it seriously, you've been infected by the panic mob and havent spent even a scintilla of a second in actual thought about this.

This virus needs no more precaution than an intelligent individual takes against the flu or the common cold.
Avoid crowds, wash your hands, take your vitamins.

All businesses should be open right now with capacity limits to prevent crowding AND most businesses are never busy enough to even warrant that precaution.
Theme parks need only restrict large crowds, eliminate the claustrophobic queue lines and clean on a regular basis to safely operate...you know, like all those places that aren't run by a (D) Gov....
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