Tampa Typhoon: A water slide that closed in 2005. The slide opened in the late 1980s and shared a tower with Gulf Scream, a now defunct water slide. Standing nearly, or seven stories tall, the ride allowed patrons to see for miles around, including a view of the nearby MOSI museum.
Gulf Scream: Built in 1980, it was the second ride to be constructed in the park. It shared its tower with Tampa Typhoon until 2005. It was demolished in 2014 to make way for the Park's newest ride Colossal Curl, a tube slide that opened in 2015.
Barratuba: Built in the mid 1980s. Entrance to this ride was near the top of the hill behind the Runaway Rapids where Wahoo Run is now located. This ride was a similar experience to Calypso Coaster but instead was built in-ground and followed the lands natural terrain down hill. The ride finished with a short drop through a large cylinder before ending in a splash pool located immediately adjacent to the splash pool of the Runaway Rapids, approximately where the parks most eastern snack and concession stand is now located. Guests can still observe the remnants of this ride now disguised as flower bed decoration lining the exit path of Wahoo Run. The exact details of this rides fate are unclear, but many Tampa natives who are old enough to remember Barratuba and the lore behind it, believe it was closed after a lawsuit was filed after a patron broke a bone while riding. As stated above the ride was built in ground : and this created a very haphazard unpredictable experience which often created enough force to eject riders from their tubes. The slides surface was hard like concrete and not very forgiving.
Everglides: A unique water slide that sent riders down a pair of straight fiberglass flumes from a wooden tower riding flat bottomed plastic toboggans. At the bottom of the slide the fast moving toboggans would carry the riders on a series of skipping bounces along the length of the splash pool before coming to rest at a beach. A mechanical conveyor carried the toboggans back to the top of the ride for the next guests. It was removed in between the 2017 and 2018 seasons to make way for a beach and sitting area.
Key West Rapids: A 700 ft.-long one-or-two person water slide. iders, seated on tubes, dwere sent own a course that includesdgushers, pools, water mines, and 3threeterraces of water,that slow edthe tubes to a near halt so that staffers caould edirect the tubes down the remainder of the course. On 10 September 2011, a lifeguard working the attraction was struck by lightning whilst wading in a pool, and later died. In 2017, the park announced that Key West Rapids would be closing in 2019. It was replaced by Solar Vortex in 2020.