Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Rivers of America, January 1996

The remaining portion of my collection that has yet to be scanned grows ever-smaller, and that includes these 35mm negatives from the mid-1990s. So I'm down to "whatever is left"! Anyway, today we will stay near the life's blood of Frontierland - the murky green waters of the Rivers of America. I feel right at home since my Vulcan blood is also green. 

This is a terrific picture of Cascade Peak, a beautiful feature seen near Rainbow Ridge (back when the Mine Train was still there). One of the canoes has narrowly avoided a dunking beneath the roaring waterfall, which I'll bet was lots of fun. Who would have imagine that Cascade Peak would be torn down just a couple of years later?


"Gullywhumper" is just a fun word to say. Go ahead, try it. The louder the better! The 'whumper is just about to pass one of Cascade Peak's little side waterfalls (did it have a name?). I sure regret never riding a keel boat at Disneyland.


Uh oh, it's those teenagers, racing their canoes again. No respect for other people! It's all fun and games until somebody gets wet. 



9 comments:

  1. Picture perfect (pun intended) shot of Cascade Peak. Could be a postcard shot.

    Live long and prosper Major Pointy Ears.

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  2. Chuck6:15 AM

    Major - I can't open the large-size image files on today's post. Could this be a repeat of the same problem you were having the other day?

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  3. Alonzo, if only you knew how many photos of Cascade Peak were taken by my friend, in order to get the best shot! Dozens.

    Chuck, thanks for letting me know. I can see now that I am going to have to do this for every blog post, but I wish I knew WHY this was happening. I'll fix it.

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  4. How much would it cost to replace Cascade Peak? It could be designed to let the canoes sail behind the waterfalls and maybe encounter a lurking Mike Fink or other river critters.
    Thanks for these pictures Major(you can almost smell the water spray and the trees), and for the treasure trove you've shared for 7 years!

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  5. I like how these images are shot low and close to the water. The Gullywhumper photo is perfect.

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  6. Anonymous9:06 AM

    Beautiful pics of the river attractions.

    Great view of the "three-window" Gullywhumper too. From the viewpoint, it seems that some of these may have been shot from a canoe, hard to do when you are supposed to be paddling.

    Lost images. Thanks Major.

    JG

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  7. Anonymous3:50 PM

    On a hot day, the falls at Cascade Peak was definitely the place to stop on the canoes. -- Former Canoe CM

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  8. Looks like Ariel on the top deck of the Gullywhumper. No sign of Prince Eric though...

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  9. Raimundo, I'll bet that it was cost a lot more to build "Cascade Peak II" than one might think. Don't get me wrong, I would LOVE it if they did it. But a new peak wouldn't draw in customers, meaning it wouldn't put money in the Disney company's bank account. And thanks for the nice comment!

    K. Martinez, I think these might have been taken from Tom Sawyer Island, but I'm not sure. The Gullywhumper pic is a beauty!

    JG, I wish I knew more about the exact history of the Keelboats… how many were there? When were they retired? Stuff like that.

    Former Canoe CM, I believe you!

    Tom, is that "Ariel" up on top, toward the stern?

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