Kingdom of the Dinosaurs

In 1987, Knott’s foreshadowed the dinosaur craze by replacing Knott’s Bear-y Tales with Kingdom of the Dinosaurs, a trek into prehistory complete with 21 animated creatures and environmental special effects. The attraction opened just in time to capture the craze for everything dinosaurs, thus making 1987 one of the best years on record.

Kingdom_of_the_Dinosaurs (8) 
The Entrance  to Kingdom of the Dinosaurs.

Knott's Kingdom of the Dinosaurs 
Signs on the entrance ramp help to set the story.

Knott's Kingdom of the Dinosaurs
Inside the attraction, the professor warns,  "Go Back.  My time machine is on!!"

Knott's Kingdom of the Dinosaurs
Knott's Kingdom of the Dinosaurs

Knott's Kingdom of the Dinosaurs Knott's Kingdom of the Dinosaurs
As a whole, Kingdom of the Dinosaurs was a great attraction that was very popular with guests.  Many of the sets were very well done and fit well with the family-friendly charm of Knott's.

Knott's Kingdom of the Dinosaurs 
Unfortunately, KOD died an embarrassing death.  For the last year or so of its operation, the cars were joined together in three long trains which stopped at the station for loading. This served to pacify California’s overly-burdensome government regulators, but killed the show as a result.  Joining the cars together made it impossible to continually load and unload the attraction.  Instead, the entire ride to come to a stop for 5-10 minutes while the train in the station was unloaded, loaded, seatbelts checks (yes…seatbelts), and dispatched again.

Knott's Kingdom of the Dinosaurs 


 

 

 

 


Since the ride systems was designed as one continuous drive system, two trains of guests would be stopped in the attraction each time a train in the station was changing over.  Employees would come out of the shadows with flashlights, making sure everyone was still seating and had not unlatched the seatbelts.  The trains never moved faster than a few feat per second, but seatbelts were mandated anyway.  It’s for your safety, you know.

Knott's Boardwalk
Kingdom of the Dinosaurs unceremoniously closed in 2004. The show building remains unused, except for the arcade and Laser Tag area downstairs.

3 comments:

  1. Kingdom Of The Dinosaurs was one my best childhood attractions that I remember. It is such a shame that it closed down. I really hope that Knott's would bring it back, the way that it used to be.

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  2. It's awesome that Xcelerator finally opened back up after all this time. I hope that this will be the last problem this coaster has.

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  3. You know what also made 1987 one of the best years on record? The Brave Little Toaster movie! I loved the wonderful songs, the perfect animation, and an excellent voice cast (SNL's Lovitz and Hartman? Tony the Tiger's Ravencroft?). Even though it has a few scary scenes (like the evil clown dream), the original Brave Little Toaster is both perfect and awesome in my book.

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