Phone Number: +1 40 Address: 1304 Grand Ave, Chickasha, OK 73018, United States Zip Code: 73018 Total Reviews. Montgomery County: Olney (20832), Damascus (20872), Laytonsville (20882), Silver Spring (20910), Clarksburg (20871), Gaithersburg (20878), Germantown (20876), Bethesda (20816), Chevy Chase (20815), and more.Īnne Arundel County: Annapolis (21401, 21403, 21409), Arnold (21012), Crofton (21114), Crownsville (21032), Gambrills (21054), Glen Burnie (21060, 21061), Hanover (21076), Jessup (20794), Pasadena (21122), Severn (21144), Severna Park (21146). Jungle Ice Fun Zone in Chickasha, Oklahoma. warm friendly welcome, relaxing atmosphere, jungle den, kids parties, children, parent toddler mornings, play areas, make a bear, laser tag, school tours. True to the name, there is a drive-thru shaved ice stand with smoothies, drinks and more. The facility is available to rent for parties. Southern Pennsylvania: Glenville (17329), Glen Rock (17327), Hanover (17332, 17331, 17333), Spring Grove (17362), Seven Valleys (17360), New Freedom (17349), McSherrystown (17344), Shrewsbury (17361), Loganville (17342), York (17407, 17404, 17403), Stewartstown (17363) Give the black light 3D Jungle Mini Golf a go for a one of a kind miniature golf experience. Have a party at Jungle Ice Fun Zone in Chickasha, Oklahoma Jungle Ice Fun Zone features a challenging 18 Hole Miniature Golf Course, a video game room, cornhole and plenty of TVs for your next family-fun day.
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Of the few that I played, there was one that was a basswood body that I really liked-it was a lot like my Fly Stealth in terms of prominently emphasizing the fundamental frequency of each note. Hey have played a few of these, and yes, they are very Fly-like! A little heavier as you noted, and they feel a little different than a Fly, but if I was going to move away from a Fly I’d probably grab one of these guitars. But I literally can't hold out any longer, it's either give up the 7 string (which means half my bands catalog goes with it), or injure myself right out of all playing and more if I don't replace it with something else soon. But if I buy this or any other guitar and a 7 string Parker turns up any time soon, I likely won't have the budget to make an offer on it anymore. That's what my heart really desires, but my back just can't keep waiting on it. Hopefully before it ships a 7 string Parker turns up. ( None of the issues the one i played had weren't fixable, but I'm not shelling out $2500 for a brand new guitar, and relocating fret markers and dressing SS frets for free, nor should you have to). I'll just return over and over till I get one of the good ones, or they offer me a steep enough discount to fix it myself. It'll be a few months before anyone can get me one, but I'll probably be forced to order one due to lack of other options. If I play it for ten years, I'm spending 100 bucks a year to hopefully not further damage my poor spine any further with a guitar. So in my situation, I'd be shelling out nearly a grand more, to get the Strandberg prog NX 7 over an equally as nice Ibanez ( which I already have mind you, but trying to frame the perceived value into something communicable), BUT I'd shave 4ish pounds off my guitar and save my poor back. So basically your paying $500-800 for the neck (which I'm VERY ambivalent about) and a significant weight reduction. If all those QC issues were fixed and suppose we were looking at what it SHOULD have been and not what it actually was, I'd say that guitar would be as nice as a $1200-1500 Ibanez, Jackson, or prs se. I didn't look at the guts but I'd suspect corners being cut there as well as compared to other $2000 guitars out there. Tuners we're a bit stiff and knobs a bit cheap. But all in all nice and light and I feel like I could play it for hours without injury. Did have a bit if neck dive, more than a fly anyways, which was surprising seeing as there's no headstock. Not much different than my fly weight wise, a bit more distribution to your left shoulder, but that could have easily been the strap. Again not acceptable in a two thousand dollar guitar one bit. I found this actually detrimental to the playability of the instrument, and they me off big time. Not even equally off, just randomly plugged in at roughly where the target frets would be, but in no way shape or form accurate. The side fret markers were NOT aligned at all. Would prefer the parallel fret to be around 7 instead of the zero fret though. In a guitar denter showroom, no telling if it was damage, crappy old strings, or just one of the bajillion little screws in the bridge being a bit loose.įanned frets were very natural feeling with the exception of hitting those natural 4,5 and 2 2/3 harmonics. Neck pocket and all hardware was cleanly installed, though the bridge had a bad buzz on the low E. Some fret sprout, but also uneven bevels and turned edges on the ends, unacceptable on a $2k guitar. That made it hard to judge how "fast" the neck was cause my index finger was getting shredded by the fret ends. The fret work was down right poor, chewed up my hand something fierce, and was clearly uneven in height. The next point makes it hard to be sure though. But I could also see playing it happily as is in that regard too. A little beefy in the shoulders, and I'd be fighting myself from day one not to do a little reshaping to lose some bulk. On one hand, the endure neck was not as intrusive as you'd think, though more substantial than I'm used to. I have a hard time shelling out $2500 for an Indo Cort. I've been around guitars for a long time now, and can tell which factory produced a particular guitar with high accuracy. It's not an NX, or a 7 string, and has been kicking around a guitar center for a couple years, and didn't have a trem, but it did have that weird looking neck so off i went to try it out. I did spend an hour or so with a boden metal 6 today at a semi local guitar denter. Pretty much at the same conclusion regarding adding a 13 pin of some sort etc. |
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