A highlight is mid-afternoon, when there is an energetic performance of dancers set to thumping music on a stage suspended over the deep end. Periodically, impressively large waves are unleashed when they smash into you, filled with the swept aside debris of bodies and inflatables, it's pretty scary. Great fun if a little dangerous. In the shallower water, the waves break more gently and there is plenty of room for surprised toddlers to be softly knocked down or to jump over the little crests.
The queues to some of the popular flumes are quite long and slow moving. Unless you do these early, when the crowds are smaller, you might feel the brief minute of exhilaration is not worth the wait. There are however, plenty of other watery ways to keep cool. My favorite was the surfing, where you get the chance to balance on a board over a fast-moving stream of water. Exhilarating to do, but also highly entertaining to watch other people fall off and get swept ungraciously away into the padded walls.
Fanta Wild Adventure Park
A statue in Fanta Park[Photo/JIN Magazine] |
After the show, we shot off to Fanta Wild Adventure Park. If you enter after 4pm the tickets are half price. If you have been to Disneyland, the layout of a main street of shops and several zones leading off with themed rides under a fairytale castle will feel familiar.
Fanta Wild Adventure Park has several rollercoasters that provide a varying degree of stomach churning scariness. What differentiates it from other parks is its heavy use of 3D imaging. There are several indoor features and their air-conditioned darkness is a very welcome break from the heat and screaming of the thrill-seekers outside. I particularly liked the story of Nezha Nao Hai, based on a local legend of a boy who goes under the sea to kill the dragon king's son. As well as being educational, it had us ducking sharks and arrows as our seats rose and weaved over beautiful sunken cities. The themes in the park are nearly all from Chinese culture, such as 'journey to the west' and 'Boonie Bears', but there is also a very popular Harry Potter like attraction too.
As darkness descends there is a reasonable live boy band followed by a series of dance shows in the main street. The night ends around 9pm.
Sunday seaside
Sunday morning was another hot sunny day. We had booked a return train at 3pm so only had half a day to explore the rest of the vast tourist area. We had been to the most popular attraction - Binhai Aircraft Carrier Theme park before, so was keen to see the new beach at Rolling Waves. We had heard it had been created from sand imported from Gulangyu in Xiamen. The taxi dropped us off at the entrance to the quiet marina. Several blue fishing boats were tied up to the quay side and people were wading in the muddy banks collecting oysters.
The Rolling Waves beach is around the corner, part of a new development which hasn't progressed beyond a model and artist's impressions of the future. The beach isn't finished, with just a small section of sand open and no access to the sea. The beach at Dongjiang is infinitely better. Disappointed, we went on to the Giant statue of Mazu the Buddhist goddess of fishermen. The statue stands at the end of a very long causeway, dotted with fishermen. There is nothing there, except the statue, but it is impressive and on a day where the haze blurred the margin between sea and sky, quite ethereal.
One weekend isn't long enough to do everything that the Binhai tourist area has to offer, the distances between the attractions is vast and although most are served by public buses, it's better to use Didi if you don't want to waste your time waiting at bus stops. There are clearly great plans for the area, including a subway line from the city but it's all going to take a long time to finish. In the meantime, the 2 parks and the aircraft carrier are enough for a couple of very good cheap breaks out of the city.
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