Edwardo wrote:They can add coasters, the waits will never be like Cedar Point. That's just marketing speak for "place with lots of roller coasters". Cedar Point is a destination because it has more than just rides, it's got Beaches and Sandusky is a tourist trap.
Having said that, and knowing that it's unlikely Carowinds will ever get CP sized lines, I'd rather have more rides. There is only a finite amount of people that will come, and there is only a finite amount of rides they're going to add.
That's very true, but what will the limits be (rides and park patrons)? Has it already been achieved with Fury? Maybe.
It won't be known, until it is known.
I hope that limit has not been reached with Fury. What the business folks are going to be looking at, to determine those limits, is the bottom line. Sandusky is a tourist destination, and that is part of the draw to Cedar Point. There is no question about that.
But with Carowinds being so close to a large and growing metro area, Carowinds has a possible different kind of advantage over Sandusky. It has large pool of very local potential patrons, who don't need to travel to ride roller coasters (and who don't need to blow large amounts of additional money for transportation, lodging, breakfast and...). It can be a staycation thing to do. It simply can be fun local thing for families to do on a summer day. So, even if there aren't as many folks who come to Carowinds as part of family vacation travel plans, like Sandusky, Carowinds has a million folks like me. A million people, with roller coasters "in their backyard". That is something Sandusky and CP does not have. The more rides they build, the more likely my family will continue to keep spending money to go to Carowinds.
And there are other types of vacationing folks too, besides the kind who choose to travel to a vacation destination area, like the Sandusky area. There are the types of vacationers who primarily travel to visit family (or friends). I know we travel for both reasons. Folks certainly do come to visit their relatives who live in the Charlotte area. And then they look for things to do. The whole extended family, local residents and visitors, might go to visit to Carowinds for a day during that visit. So even without Charlotte having the draw of being a traditional vacation destination based upon unique geography, it has the draw of being a vacation destination for the families and friends of about a million residents. I know that my friends and family that live scattered across the country have seen Fury on the news (and then I told them that my wife and I bought season passes). They have all mentioned they would want to go to Carowinds when they come to visit.
Just because Charlotte is not Sandusky, does not mean that Carowinds is destined to being less of an amusement park than Cedar Point. Like I said, it just won't be known until it is known.
I'm hoping for more, and more and more.