Tenten said:River Country, now that's a name I haven't heard in a while. When did that place shut down?
CDSTapisRouge said:Typhoon Lagoon never had another name. It has always been Typhoon Lagoon. But maybe she is looking for the name of the fictional village that was "there" prior to "The Storm"
The story in a nutshell is that a Storm came through an "island village" and what you see is what was left behind. The "Miss Tilly" fishing boat is on top of "Mt Mayday", etc... The name of the fictional resort is " Placid Palms Resort" that might be what she is asking for...
HumphreytheBear said:That was my thought too... she is looking for "Placid Palms Resort". The park itself never had another name, it is all a part of the story:
Typhoon Lagoon is one of Disney's water parks. It is themed in a tropical island setting of the Placid Palms Resort, now severly damaged following a tropic typhoon that has swept the island. As you reach the top of the rise you catch your first glimpse of the former Placid Palms Resort, with its storm-damaged thatched-roof buildings coursing along the palm-lined pathways that meander off to your left and right.
** thanks to Deb at allears.net for having such a great site... that is where this info came from**
Von Drake said:It has always been Typhoon Lagoon. This may become a case of the student educating the teacher.
kimbac3 said:UPDATE:
His teacher claims it was called "Splash". I told my nephew..."I don't think so!". Anyone ever hear of this????
Kimba

kimbac3 said:UPDATE:
His teacher claims it was called "Splash". I told my nephew..."I don't think so!". Anyone ever hear of this????
Kimba
Disneyholic said:Go to this website and find Typhoon Laggon. This paragraph is part of the article.
http://www.disneyworldtrivia.com/trivia/wdwhistory.php
The huge wave of wind and water left nothing in the tropical village untouched. Surfboards were embedded in trees. Parts of boats and buoys dangled in thatched roofs of surviving buildings. Miss Tilly, a small shrimp boat caught in the typhoon, was left precariously atop a nearby volcano called Mount Mayday. Originally called "Splash" in preliminary designs, this water park is four times larger than River Country. It contains more slides (including one of the world's tallest and fastest), a giant wave pool, and a large children's water area. Special heaters are strategically placed around the landscaping and in pools to keep the "tropical waters" warm year round. Typhoon Lagoon opened June 1, 1989, providing Guests with even more cool relief from the Florida summer heat.
Thanks for posting this!!abamick said:Wow! That is cool! Learned something new today.![]()
kimbac3 said:Son of a gun..she was right! Dang I hate that![]()