The special effects were fun with simulated flooding, earthquakes, and a shark attack. The King Kong and Fast and Furious experiences were basically their own rides. It's cool they're on the tour, but it'd be nice to be able to ride them without needing to do the entire tour again. At least you can go on the King Kong ride at Islands of Adventures in Florida.
We ate some lunch at the Minion Cafe then rode Minion Mayhem and the Super Silly Fun Land ride. Minion Mayhem had about a 40 minute wait, which was the longest wait we had all day. Simpsons got to 60+ minutes later in the day so I'm glad we went there first.
We grabbed a giant donut from Lard Lad's before heading down to the lower lot. The kids played in the dinosaur play area before we rode the Jurassic World ride. We'd saved that ride for the end since it'd been cloudy and cold when we first arrived, but the forecast said the sun would come out later.
After Jurassic World we swapped doing the Mummy Ride with Tyler then just squeezed in Transformers before the park closed.
New Friend: I'm Indian
Allison: I'm not Indian!
Tyler: She's not saying you're Indian. She's saying she's Indian. We're...um...uh...American.
Me: She's American too. She lives here in the United States.
Kids looking around confused: Then what are we?
The ride then started and they'd forgotten about it when it was over.
We then went over to the arctic area to see the penguins. We'd always been here in February, so I had no idea how they change it up in the summer months. They intentionally keep the Penguin area super dark because August in Antarctica is dark most of the day.
To finish up the day I took the kids on Riptide Rescue. This was new to Allison since it's 46+ inch, and she wasn't tall enough for it in February 2020. There was no line when our ride ended, so the operator let us ride twice. Allison and I were done after that but Tyler wanted to keep riding it until closing and ended up doing it 5 or 6 times.
There were some very vocal Sea Lions at Sea Lion point.
While he was on that I took Allison over to see the sharks and the sea turtles.
After that we stopped for lunch at Chili's then went to Sea World. This time we focused on shows. Even on busy days you can always find seating at the shows. It just might be further back, more off to the side, and/or in the splash zone.
I then took Tyler over to the Manta aquarium and Manta coaster.
The sea turtles came right up next to the glass.
The Orca show is always impressive.
Here are Oscar and the kids enjoying the color changing illuminated jellyfish. I'm really glad we got to see all the Electric Ocean features. It made it feel like seeing Christmas lights.
Here's Oscar being a Rocking Eel while the kids waited in line to ride Oscar's Rocking Eel.
We then went over to wild Arctic again. The Beluga whales looked super cool at night. There were 3 of them in the tank this time. I'd never seen more than one. I think they take two of them out for the interactive Beluga encounter exhibits during the day.
The walrus came right up next to the glass to see the kids.
The kids saw a bit of the family friendly dance party, then they and Oscar decided to go back to the car for awhile to play their tablets. I decided to enjoy the park by night and wander around. First I saw some sleeping Orcas.I walked around talking to the employees working the different exhibits. I learned from one of them that the Tidal Twister roller coaster (a small single rail coaster that went around in a sideways figure 8) kept having constant malfunctions since it first opened. It's been closed more days than it was ever opened, and it was basically just a huge loss for the company. They plan on replacing it soon and have instructed the employees to direct people away from the area as much as possible. She also explained to me that San Diego county has tight restrictions on how tall rides can be, hence why they're limited in what they can build and why the coasters in Orlando are way bigger and more intense than anything in San Diego.
Sea World was insanely crowded on Saturday. We arrived around noon, 3 hours after they opened, and there was still a huge line just to park and go through security. Oscar realized he'd left his hat in the car once we made it in the line, so he ran back to grab it while I took the kids in to ride Shipwreck Rapids. Fortunately the line, which had been a 60 minute wait the previous days, was only a few minutes long. It'd been overcast that morning and the sun was just coming out when we arrived, otherwise I'm sure the line would have been huge.
After Shipwreck rapids the kids pet crabs and sharks in the touch exhibits.
And to our great delight they had the cleaner fish available too. This exhibit had been closed the previous two days. We spent lots of time on our knees bent over. I wish I could put on a swimsuit and just hop into a pool with them.We tried doing Journey to Atlantis, but the line was at least an hour, so we walked back over to the Wild Arctic. Ferdinand, the remaining Beluga, bobbed up and down. I think he was trying to find his buddies.
The seal was living his best life playing with a red ball.
Afterwards Oscar took them to see the sharks and we met up at the end of that. We decided it was too crowded to stay for anything else, so we left the park, grabbed some lunch, and went back to the hotel. I didn't take any pictures, but the kids and I had a fun time swimming and sitting in the hot tub. We met another family with kids of similar ages, so they had some friends to play with.
The next day we started our long drive home, stopping off for church. Interestingly enough the ward that was most convenient to go to was in Santa Clarita super close to 6 Flags. It was kind of sad to pass by and not go into the park, but it was also nice to go to church, and we still had 18 hours of driving ahead of us when it was over.
We stayed in northern California the first night then finished the rest of the drive the next day. We got some great views of Mt Shasta, which was totally devoid of snow. It's typical for it to have less snow in September/October, but no snow in August is pretty rare and shows how intense California's drought was this past year.