Wild Arctic
Wild Arctic | |
---|---|
SeaWorld Orlando | |
Status | Closed |
Opening date | May 24, 1995[1] |
Closing date | March 16, 2020 |
Replaced | Mission: Bermuda Triangle |
SeaWorld San Diego | |
Status | Removed |
Opening date | 1997 |
Closing date | January 11, 2020 |
Replaced | Mission: Bermuda Triangle[2] |
Replaced by | Arctic Rescue |
Ride statistics | |
Attraction type | SeaWorld Parks and Entertainment |
Model | Motion simulator |
Capacity | 1,416 riders per hour |
Vehicle type | Motion Based Cabin |
Vehicles | 3 (Orlando) 4 (San Diego) |
Riders per vehicle | 59 |
Rows | 6 |
Riders per row | 9-10 |
Audience capacity | 100 stationary seats. per show |
Duration | 5:00 approx. |
Height restriction | 42 in (107 cm) |
Wheelchair accessible | |
Must transfer from wheelchair | |
Closed captioning available |
Wild Arctic is an animal exhibit featuring beluga whales, walruses, and harbor seals at SeaWorld Orlando and SeaWorld San Diego. It previously featured a motion simulation at both parks. This attraction replaced Mission: Bermuda Triangle at both locations.
Guests had the option to ride on a non motion gyrostabilized helicopter, completely bypassing the motion simulation.[3] The same video that was played in the motion ride was played in the non motion theater, but watching was optional as guests could walk through the room at any time.
The ride was manufactured by
In 2019, SeaWorld announced on its Instagram page that the motion simulator at the San Diego location would have its final day of operation on January 10, 2020. The ride then closed January 11.
When SeaWorld Orlando reopened in June 2020 after the COVID pandemic closure, Wild Arctic remained closed. It closed on March 16, 2020 after its last operating day on March 15. The exhibit stayed open (containing all the animals), but the ride (and the non-motion theater) could not be accessed. As of January 2022, the animal exhibits are still operating in both locations, but the ride in Orlando has not announced a reopening date.
The SeaWorld San Diego ride was replaced by Arctic Rescue, an Intamin family launch coaster that exits into the animal exhibits.
Attraction summary
Queue and preshow
Guests queued outside the "Franklin Exploration Center", where it was presumed that they were waiting to board a helicopter which took them to "Base Station: Wild Arctic". The queue outside the attraction included numerous murals of the Arctic animals and scenery as well as various
Once inside the building, guests were divided into either traveling by helicopter (the ride portion) or traveling by foot / walking (in which they viewed the ride film without the motion). Guests who required stationary seating were taken directly to a Gate Boarding Room B where they viewed the ride film and then the interactive animal exhibit.
Guests experiencing the actual ride were taken into a room with an information board showing the flight departure schedule, as well as a large projection screen in front of them which showed another random clip about facts of the Arctic. From here, guests entered the pre-flight boarding station where they lined up into multiple rows to prepare for their helicopter flight. Soon, a video came on the screen in which the Operations Coordinator for the Franklin Exploration Center explained that the center is a support facility for Base Station Wild Arctic, and that both facilities were founded by Thomas Purcell in 1937, who strived to have man survive in the Arctic climate to research the area. The Coordinator further explained that guests would be traveling to Base Station Wild Arctic in the White Thunder helicopter. A brief restriction spiel was played before she then turned the show over to Co-Pilot Norm "Snowman" Miller, played by Rick Ducommun. Miller began to explain that the White Thunder was being piloted by Captain Emerson, but was interrupted by White Thunder's computer, which warned of a severe arctic storm in their path. Miller then explained the safety rules to guests, and ended the video. The doors to White Thunder then opened, and guests boarded the ride vehicle via a drawbridge-style ramp.
During the attraction's later years in San Diego, the pre-show was removed and was updated with a new pre-show explaining animals in the attraction then turned to a crew member for safety information. The ride itself was not altered and stayed the same.[5]
Ride
Once guests were seated and secured
Post-show
Guests enter Base Station Wild Arctic, which consists of a re-created Arctic Research Station built around two sailing ships which are trapped in the ice. The story surrounding the ships are taken from Captain
Gallery
-
Two polar bears
-
A visitor interacting with a polar bear
-
A beluga whale surfacing
-
A beluga whale under water
References
- ^ "New Attraction Just Tip of Iceberg". Orlando Sentinel. May 24, 1995. Retrieved December 1, 2023.
- ^ The Cursed & Forgotten Mission: Bermuda Triangle/Wild Arctic Simulator - SeaWorld's First Ever Ride, January 24, 2023, retrieved December 1, 2023
- ^ "Wild Arctic non-motion video". www.youtube.com. Retrieved November 19, 2022.
- ^ "Company buys Reflectone Inc". St. Petersburg Times. 1997. Retrieved November 19, 2022.
- ^ Parkineer (September 15, 2019), Wild Arctic Full Pre-Show Video 1080 HD - Seaworld San Diego, retrieved November 19, 2022