He forewarned the revelation of additional information in a recent Facebook post. ‘Find that ugly girlfriend,’ other Fiesta advice from San Antonio lawyer.H-E-B opens first Fresh Bites convenience store in Central Texas.Lobo, a West Texas ghost town near Marfa, is looking for a new owner.ZZ Top guitarist Billy Gibbons visits San Antonio fave Los Barrios.Possible tornadoes, hail, and outages cause Fiesta Fiesta cancellation.RELATED: The long-lost amusement parks of Texas He told the Daily Mail he “hopes his work bring awareness to the issue of a huge corporation like Disney failing to clean up what they left behind.” Lawless’ motives for sneaking into the property and taking photos using a robotic drone are fueled by something deeper than showing people a creepy lot. “Being inside the abandoned park felt like a creepy real-life Disney ride,” Lawless said in his interview with Buzzfeed. The Huffington Post reported “creepy banjo music” sometimes still plays throughout River Country. RELATED: Eerie photos show abandoned Costa Concordia cruise ship years after deadly disaster Weeds and trash now fill the pools where families once enjoyed their vacations. Even fish caught from the area should not be eaten, Lawless told the site.īuzzfeed described the lonely park as once having four water slides, a sand bottom lake, white water rapids and a tubing river. Requests made by to Disney World Communications for clarification on the topic were not immediately returned.īay Lake workers, where the property is located, told Lawless the water is too dangerous to swim in after years of boat and firework pollution. Multiple news sites have cited various reasons and rumors surrounding the mysterious 2001 closure of the park.Īccording to, the park initially shut its gates in 2001, but then made the decision to remain permanently closed in 2005.Ī 2012 report from the Martin County Times, headquartered about three hours away from the park, said River Country was closed in September 2001 “due in part to new Florida Laws prohibiting the use of natural water bodies, requiring chlorination and only municipal water supplies, for water park use.” RELATED: Photos show desolate, abandoned Six Flags New Orleans 10 years after Hurricane Katrina
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