The entrance and Apollo, Enterprise and Free Fall rides are all found at the southern end of the park.
Whilst, the larger roller coasters including Gold Rush, Wild West Adventure and Tomahawk rides are at the northern end of the park.
The flour mill built in 1859 named De Pionier can also be found at the northern end of the park.
A cable car suspended above the main street connects the different areas of the park and has a number of stations including those located within the Apollo and Kids Country.
In 1963 a shop keeper named Henk Bemboom built some vacation homes on a piece of farmland around an old farmhouse in Slagharen.
As an extra attraction he offered every vacation home a Shetland pony and a small carriage.
In 1972 Bemboom introduced the principle of a ticket were you would pay once and get unlimited access to all the attractions.
In 1973 the rides Octopus (renamed to "El Torito" in 2016) and Weens Reuzenrad (Ferris wheel) were added to the park.
In 1976 a kind of carousel themed after the landing on to moon was added to the park, this was than named Apollo 14.
In 1979 the large roller coaster named Looping Star (later demolished in 2016) was built.
Slagharen was featured in the Trump - commercial "America first, Netherlands second" by Arjen Lubach.
The park’s former roller coaster, Thunder Loop, was featured in music video for Wonderful Life by Black.