Does it seem like parks are closing early way more often than they used to? Seems like everyday on social media parks are closing early, or not opening at all, due to expected weather or other reasons.
I think doing this regularly will make guests think twice about going to parks, getting passes, and workers not wanting to work at places where they´re given the day off without pay all the time.
What does everyone think?
On Jul 10, 2023, Surf Dance Chris wrote
(in article<3f1aca04-d03d-45d9...@googlegroups.com>):
Does it seem like parks are closing early way more often than they used to?
Seems like everyday on social media parks are closing early, or not opening
at all, due to expected weather or other reasons.
I think doing this regularly will make guests think twice about going to parks, getting passes, and workers not wanting to work at places where they´re given the day off without pay all the time.
What does everyone think?Sorry for the late reply but yes, parks having weather closings does seem more frequent than it used to be. Kennywood was always kind of twitchy on the
trigger finger with rain, but I think other parks have been doing it more often. And this is on top of parks just closing very early in general. I was rather shocked to finally make it out to Santa Cruz earlier this month (a longtime ambition of mine finally realized) and discover that even on a Friday night the Boardwalk closes at 9. The only night it stays open later is
Saturday and only until 10. It really seems like a place that should have late night operation.
--
Heather, the Carousel Rabbit
Of course, then along came COVID to really screw things up. Everybody shortened hours as we came out of the pandemic restrictions, and lots of those hours have never been brought back. My all-night grocer still closes
at 10pm and I can't buy a loaf of bread *anywhere* in this major city after Midnight.
Summer nights are special. Let's preserve them!
Surf Dance Chris <surfd...@aol.com> wrote:
: Does it seem like parks are closing early way more often than they used
: to? Seems like everyday on social media parks are closing early, or not
: opening at all, due to expected weather or other reasons.
It sure seems like it. I think there are a couple of factors involved;
first of all, the existence of social media makes parks think they can just post something on Twitbook or TickFace saying that they're closing early
and that will be enough to notify everyone. Then the visitor from 200 miles away arrives at the gate on a gorgeous Sunday afternoon only to find that the park is either closed or is closing in an hour or two. Yeah, I've been there, done that, and repeated behavior of that kind got me free tickets to Kennywood more than once.
There's something else at work here, and I suspect it's part of the reason Kennywood closed early for "inclement weather" on that particular beautiful Sunday afternoon: their season pass dining package. It would not at all surprise me if they figured out that the vast majority of the relatively small crowd they had in the park that day consisted of season pass holders there to take advantage of a day of prepaid entertainment and food....meaning that in the aggregate, the park might have been operating
at a loss that day. No business wants to do that, so they simply shut down for an evening. Giving everybody in the park a ticket to come back another day costs almost nothing, but serving up a bunch of "free" meals gets to be expensive. Note this was pre-COVID; I want to say it was 2018. It certainly makes me think twice about committing to that drive if the weather forecast is anything less than perfect!
: I think doing this regularly will make guests think twice about going
: to parks, getting passes, and workers not wanting to work at places where
: they?re given the day off without pay all the time.
:
: What does everyone think?
Of course, then along came COVID to really screw things up. Everybody shortened hours as we came out of the pandemic restrictions, and lots of those hours have never been brought back. My all-night grocer still closes at 10pm and I can't buy a loaf of bread *anywhere* in this major city after Midnight. I curse and lament the loss of the 24-hour world, and even worse is what has happened to amusement parks. Here in Ohio, Kings Island and Cedar Point are finally back to 10pm closes, but in neighboring
Pennsylvania we're seeing major parks schedule closing times before it even starts to get dark! Given labor challenges, I can understand trying to cut the operation down to one shift, but why does that shift have to start at the crack of dawn? If the operating hours need to be shortened, why not shorten them from the other end? Instead of running from 9a-7p, operate
from 12n-10p! Take advantage of the fact that most parke become so much
more magical after the sun goes down. Not to mention the fact that people who are working during the day can stop in after work if the park is open a few hours in the evening.
Summer nights are special. Let's preserve them!
--Dave Althoff, Jr.
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Totally agree about the evening hours loss. Would much rather have just later hours than just earlier hours. No one wants to get up early on their day off/vacation!
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