Ride Locations
- East River Crawler (Schwarzkopf Monster III) – Six Flags Great America
- The Fury (Eyerly Monster) – Canada's Wonderland (1981–2003) It now rests in pieces behind Splashworks
- Monster (Eyerly Monster) – Cedar Point
- Monster (Eyerly Monster) – Kings Island (1972-present) originally operated at Coney Island, Cincinnati, Ohio (1969-1971).
- Monster (Eyerly Monster) – Valleyfair
- Monstruo (Schwarzkopf Monster III) – Parque de la Ciudad (1983-present), Buenos Aires, Argentina
- Octopus (Eyerly Spider) – Worlds of Fun
- Octopus (Sartori Polyp) – Six Flags America (2000-2009) It now rests in pieces by the Astroworld coaster Ultra Twister
- Octopus (Vortex) – Riverside County Fair and National Date Festival
- Paul Revere's Midnight Ride (Eyerly Spider) – Holiday World & Splashin' Safari (1978-2011)
- Polyp (SDC Polyp) – Kiddieland
- Spider (Eyerly Spider) – Bill Hames Amusements, carnival
- Spider (Eyerly Spider) – Lakeside Amusement Park, Denver
- Spider (Eyerly Spider) – Elitch Gardens
- Spider (Eyerly Spider) – NAME (All Star Amusements)
- Spider (Eyerly Spider) – Oaks Amusement Park
- Spider (Eyerly Spider) – Bell's Amusement Park
- Spider (Eyerly Spider) – Tom Evans United Shows
- Spider (Eyerly Spider) Evans Midland Empire Shows, Inc.
- Spider (Eyerly Spider) – Idlewild Park
- Spider (Eyerly Spider) – Luna Park, Melbourne
- Spider (Eyerly Spider) - Camden Park
- Octopus (Eyerly Octopus) - ; Great American Shows.
- Spider (Eyerly Spider) - Waldameer Park
- Monster (Eyerly Spider) - Palisades Amusement Park, NJ - closed 1971
- Michael Jackson's Neverland Ranch
- El pulpo (Eyerly Spider) – Parque Nacional de Diversiones Costa Rica
Spider (Eyerly Spider) Idlewild Park
Read more about this topic: Octopus (ride)
Famous quotes containing the word ride:
“Not too many years ago, a childs experience was limited by how far he or she could ride a bicycle or by the physical boundaries that parents set. Today ... the real boundaries of a childs life are set more by the number of available cable channels and videotapes, by the simulated reality of videogames, by the number of megabytes of memory in the home computer. Now kids can go anywhere, as long as they stay inside the electronic bubble.”
—Richard Louv (20th century)