The Day

Boulder Dash!

Does this little Bristol amusement park have the best wooden coaster?

- By BRADY MacDONALD

Ride enthusiast­s beat a path each summer to ride the world’s best wooden coaster in one of the most unlikely of places: a small amusement park located halfway between New York City and Boston that bills itself as the oldest continuous­ly operating amusement park in the United States.

I made my pilgrimage this summer to Lake Compounce in Bristol to ride Boulder Dash, ranked the top wooden coaster by an industry trade publicatio­n for the last four years in a row.

I rode Boulder Dash twice, once in the front and again in the back. I preferred the front where I could anticipate the seemingly endless stream of airtime hills that sent me bouncing out of my seat over and over again. The back was a rougher ride with more lateral movements. The train kept up a relentless pace that whipped riders around turns and over whoop-dedo humps.

The $6 million coaster was built in 2000 by the now-defunct Custom Coasters Internatio­nal and outfitted with Philadelph­ia Toboggan trains. The 4,725-foot-long out-and-back terrain coaster traverses a hillside covered by trees and craggy boulders on the edge of the park.

Most of the coaster is hidden from view as I approach Boulder Dash. Leaving the station, the train climbs the hillside through a canopy of trees before reaching a clearing where the track makes a sweeping 90-degree right turn. A swooping 115-foot-tall first drop shatters the calm. We race 60 mph past the station on a 2½-minute journey that never lets up. The outbound trip tackles a relentless sequence of double-up hills that generate repeated negative-G airtime moments. After a 180-degree turnaround, we navigate bunny-hop hills and even more off-your-seat double-ups as the train races along the lake. The ground-hugging track rarely reaches more than 10 feet above the hillside.

“It’s got to be the fastest coaster from start to finish,” bragged Lake Compounce general manager Jerry Brick in a phone interview with the Los Angeles Times. “It never slows down.”

Over the years, coaster enthusiast­s have showered Boulder Dash with praise. Coaster Critic calls the ride “relentless and thrilling.” Coaster Grotto deems it “simply awesome.” The most common refrain from Theme Park Critic user ratings: “Amazing.” The only thing that makes Boulder Dash better is riding it at night when the dips and turns seem to come out of nowhere in the pitch darkness.

Boulder Dash has won the Golden Ticket award for best wooden coaster the last four years (in addition to claiming the prize in 2004). The Golden Tickets, dubbed the Academy Awards of the amusement park industry, are presented

annually by the Amusement Today trade publicatio­n.

Wooden coasters tend to hold on to the Amusement Today top ranking for several years in a row. Holiday World in Santa Claus, Ind., was home to the world’s best wooden coaster from 2000 to 2003 with Raven and from 2007 to 2011 with Voyage. Thunderhea­d at Tennessee’s Dollywood held the title in 2005 and 2006. El Toro at New Jersey’s Six Flags Great America was No. 1 in 2012. Phoenix at Pennsylvan­ia’s tiny Knoebels amusement park has hovered in the Top 5 since 2000.

Those six rides — Boulder Dash, Raven, Voyage, Thunderhea­d, El Toro and Phoenix — have dominated the Amusement Today poll since 2000. The relatively low turnover rate is in part because of the dearth of wooden coasters built on an annual basis, six or fewer per year during that period. The last big year for wooden coaster constructi­on was in 2000, when Boulder Dash debuted. Of the 17 wooden coasters built that year, 11 of the rides have since been retired, relocated or mothballed, according to Roller Coaster Database.

History dictates that coasters start high in the Amusement Today poll and drop each successive year as newer rides debut. Boulder Dash has bucked the trend, thanks in part to a $3 million retracking during the 2007, 2008 and 2009 off seasons. Another round of retracking last winter smoothed out a few rough patches, all in hopes of keeping coaster enthusiast­s thrilled and coming back for more.

“Our goal is to keep it No. 1,” Brick said.

Lake Compounce traces its roots to 1846 when the park attracted picnickers, swimmers and boaters to the lake. In 1890, a carousel was added and soon after more rides were introduced.

So is Boulder Dash really the best wooden coaster in the world? To me, it’s a worthy reigning champion and certainly capable of retaining the title after its recent rehab.

 ?? ROBIE CAPPS/LAKE COMPOUNCE ?? Boulder Dash at Lake Compounce amusement park in Bristol has won the Golden Ticket award for best wooden coaster the last four years.
ROBIE CAPPS/LAKE COMPOUNCE Boulder Dash at Lake Compounce amusement park in Bristol has won the Golden Ticket award for best wooden coaster the last four years.

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