Good grief! Our buddy Charlie Brown just can’t get a break. Every time he tries to do something that sounds easy -- like flying a kite -- it gets tangled up in the same, pesky tree. Drat! This tree must be really hungry – and particularly hungry for kites. Poor Charlie Brown needs help! Can you climb up the kite eating tree and help him get it down?
As soon as pint-sized kite-savers board our Kite-Eating Tree ride, they’ll start grinning as wide as the tree canopy. This miniature drop ride will lift kiddos up, up, up to tree-top levels of 20 feet and then, with unexpected jiggles that might just cause unexpected giggles, bounce them gently up and down until they return to the ground. Here’s a fun idea for parents from Charlie Brown: Ask your children if kites really eat trees and see what they might say!
Rider Safety Information
- Min Height Accompanied
- 36"
- Min Height Alone
- 42"
- This is a family tower ride where riders are propelled to the top and bounce down to the platform. Riders will experience weightlessness and rapidly changing forces and directions.
- Guests must be 46” tall to ride alone OR 36” tall and accompanied by a supervising companion.
- Maximum Weight – 990 lb. per side. This ride only accommodates two adults per side.
- A shoulder harness with a between-the-legs safety belt secures each rider over the head and across the chest.
- Due to the nature of the restraint, this ride may not accommodate guests of a larger size.
- Guests must have a minimum of two functioning extremities; one functioning arm (excluding prosthesis) and one functioning leg. Guests must have sufficient lower extremities to ensure the ride restraint system adequately restrains them.
- Guests with a cervical collar, neck brace, broken collar bone, braced arm cast, or full leg cast are not permitted to ride.
- Guests with any type of prosthesis should not ride unless they can ensure the device is properly secured and will remain in place during the ride.
- Alternate access is available at the ride exit. Riders will have to take several steps, on their own or with the assistance of a companion, and be capable of elevating themselves up into the seat.
- Visit our Accessibility page for additional information.