Aside: This post is now conclusive proof that it takes me a full year to write, edit, and annotate a post from a big trip. (Aside, within an aside, Happy Birthday honey!)
Rosa’s birthday began with us all watching Church
TV in our separate rooms. Because of my...lets go with less focused version of Catholicism than the rest of the family, I had our bags
packed during the show and the three of us were ready first.
We all met up sporadically at the station, but
made it onto the same bus. I spent the
ride wondering how another family was going to survive the week without a Grid;
after hearing them decide at that moment to choose the Magic Kingdom in two
days.
The ride was far shorter than the posted length,
because Disney knows how to psychologically manipulate crowds just as much as
they know how to move them. Even with a
delay at the start, and Grandma’s ever present fingerprint issues, we made it
to Animal Kingdom in time for the park opening ceremony…
Which no longer existed.
At least they played the Circle of Life to welcome our Lion
King loving family.
Rosa went off to find some birthday PhotoPass
locations…and, apparently, kangaroos, Grandma took Morgan on a stroller tour of the park,
and the rest of us brought the girls to Expedition Everest to sneak in a ride
before our first FastPass.
Unsurprisingly to anyone who knows our
family, the roller coaster was broken.
Not in the easy to navigate, “Going to be
closed all day” way. But in the, “Frequent Cast Member movement encourages us
to hang around juuuuuuuuuust a little longer over and over again way.”
Eventually both Grandma and Rosa stopped by
to see us, and left to meet us by the “Bumpy Bus” of Kilimanjaro Safaris. As the last possible seconds were about to
tick by that would prevent us from catching the opening of our Safari FastPass
window and causing that day’s grid to collapse like dominos in an artillery
bombardment, Everest opened.
Well, most of us yayed. Kim and Dave liked it, but realized
“Backwards in a mountain train in the dark” was far worse that the already
acknowledged unpleasantness of “Backwards in a boat.”
We crossed over to meet the rest of the gang
for the African bumpy bus ride. The day was still early enough that the
superheated nature of the park hadn’t kicked in full blast yet, allowing many
of the animals to move about. For the
ones that weren’t, the kids would state, “That one’s dead,” and laugh
maniacally.
Apologies to anyone else forced to share the
bus with our set of pint sized supervillains.
Because it’s next door, and awesome, my Where
Will We Go Next Guy function pulled us all into the Pangani Forest trail for a
walking tour through more African animals.
We saw the silverback gorilla this time! YAY!
In the aviary cage was a singularly rude bird
that would pretend to pose for each of our cameras in turn, but fly off
chuckling before we could focus.
Thank you to my family who acted as excellent
frog screeners in the little house in the middle with the naked mole rats. Nothing like seeing three young girls link
arms to form a mini barricade while shouting, “Nothing to see here,” at me and
Grandma to know we’re loved.
For the first time in forever (to quote
another Disney song) we didn’t have to run across the whole park between two
FastPasses. It’s like they moved the Festival
of the Lion King to Africa just for us! I’m
still not sure how much FastPass helps with seating in this show, but until
Avatarland opened we didn’t have much use for them in Animal Kingdom anyway.
The spectacle was magnificent as always,
leading Rosa and Anabelle to dance the whole time. In a rare “first time at Disney” one of the
Tumble Monkeys totally wiped out doing a move.
Ouch.
As Where Will We Go Next Guy, I talked to
everyone extensively about how our large sized party could only get off-time meal
reservations, meaning we’d need to plan specific snacks or mini meals in the
gaps most days.
This day was one example of many where we completely
failed to do that. While we were on a
quest for some random food items to keep the kids from passing out, we wandered
into Flik! He wasn’t supposed to be out,
and the kids were all excited about him, giving them a burst of adrenalin to
metabolize the pretzels and popcorn they were currently subsisting on.
YAY!
Right next to Flik was the (on schedule) Tarzan. Having become a huge fan of the Disney film,
and more specifically the Phil Collins music in it, Anabelle was
thrilled…briefly.
Tarzan was kind of on the short side, and his
mannerisms didn’t quite line up with the “noble savage” or “unsophisticated but
charming” ways of the animated character.
He acted more like Rain Man, leading Anabelle’s enthusiasm to dry up in
a wave of, “Well, he was creepy.”
Pocahontas had gone on a coffee break as we
passed her newly assigned riverside zone en route to Dinoland. Dinosaur was closed. Primeval Whirl had the
infinitely long line the awful throughput of mouse roller coasters always leads
to, which sent the kids on Triceratops Spin.
Grandma went to refill the popcorn bucket,
which became one of her new life goals.
Rosa crossed over to see Goofy and Pluto while the kids rode. Kim and I stood at the exit while Dave walked
the kids in, asking at the entrance if they could ride alone.
Contrary to the answer Dave got after waiting
for twenty minutes (“Yes.” for those not paying attention) when they sat on the
ride, another attendant told them the answer was “No” and made them get
off. Kim brought them back to the front
of the line, while I dealt with the urgent phone call from my wife wanting to
know why the kids got off before the ride started and were crying.
Yes, emotions were high.
Luckily, the overwhelming number of Awesome
Happy Disney people easily counteracted the occasional Dinglehopper. They apologized for the confusion about the
kids riding, and let them back on the ride with Kim, and take two rides in a
row.
YAY!
And I didn’t have to spin high up in the air
for either of them.
DOUBLE YAY!
We came out of Dinoland, and hit It’s Tough to Be a Bug!
Hey!!!
There’s a dolphin on the Tree of Life!!!
I never noticed that. No wonder
the Where Will We Go Next Guy always tells everyone to take their time on that
line because the views are so densely packed with beautiful sculptures, instead
of rushing to laugh at the dung ball.
Oh wait.
That’s me.
(The Where Will We Go Next Guy...not the Dung Ball, that is.)
(The Where Will We Go Next Guy...not the Dung Ball, that is.)
We had a fun, if terrifying time. All the kids laughed at the opening parts,
and all the kids, even those who knew what to expect, were terrified by the
hornet stings and grossed out by the “bugs crawling on your butt” ending.
There was much screaming, and then we exited
and crossed the road to FastPass the only place left with Mickey and Minnie
together.
Yup, it was awesome.
We pulled some super experienced family and
child switching PhotoPass ninja moves to get everyone in the shots we
needed. At the end, we ambushed Grandma
on a switch and dragged her in for a picture as well.
YAY!
It had reached dangerously close to our late
lunch, meaning both Pocahontas had to come back at that moment, and Anabelle
had to remember she made drawings for all the princesses. Why she didn’t remember when we ate lunch
with a parade of them the day before was just another perk of parenting.
The Native American “Princess” was thrilled
by her image, and was basted in enough Disney awesomeness to make the meeting
wonderful for all of the kids.
With a mass of children, and multiple leg
injuries in our group, I got to reenact the Savannah sprint scene from George of the Jungle and rush back to
Africa to secure our three o’clock lunch reservation with Donald and company at
the Tusker House.
Of course, they don’t let you check in until
everyone shows up, but at least I kept us from being deleted, and the light
drizzle was refreshing as I stood in the village of Harambe sucking wind.
The buffet was -as remembered- truly
fantastic. We all got to sample various
new and exciting bits of African influenced cuisine…
And corn dogs.
Hey, it was late, we were hungry and they
were good.
YAY Corn Dogs!
Donald was our first guest, since he recently
was switched to milling around instead of standing outside in the elements and
pretending he was Cinderella.
This used to be the only place we saw Daisy, but she’s everywhere now, so hooray for diversity…or something. She was sweet and fun. (Duh.)
Mickey, true to his Chairman status, not only
orchestrated multiple poses in detail, but mimed out birthday greetings for
Grandma and Rosa; and an elaborate ceremonyish thing for Rosa and my
anniversary.
Rosa wanted a second Lion King show for her
birthday, but the kids wanted more time with other attractions, characters and
locations.
She left ahead of us to catch the show, and had no idea how fortunate this decision was. The rest of us had to test our reflexes by leaping over the projectile vomit from a kid who overdid it at the buffet.
She left ahead of us to catch the show, and had no idea how fortunate this decision was. The rest of us had to test our reflexes by leaping over the projectile vomit from a kid who overdid it at the buffet.
OK, so not every moment is magical.
Exiting put us next to the Asian walk through
safari. This contained giant bats,
komodo dragons and tigers, three of my all time favorite animals. The gang was far more focused on other
attractions, meaning no one else cared about it, and we didn’t take the trail.
Just pointing out a complete lack of abuse of
the Where Will We Go Next Guy authority.
Baloo and King Louis were heading off to a coffee
break, allowing time to buy Mickey ice creams first.
Ah - who am I kidding? There’s always time to
buy Mickey ice creams!
YAY!
The Jungle Book duo came back, Anabelle and I were waiting, and Kim’s kids changed their mind and ran in to be with us after a bathroom break. The restarting of the meetings meant this caused slightly less than our usual amount of chaos. We got pictures and the kids all got Baloo’s autograph.
Royalty does not sign books…
And neither do apes with immobile hands.
Baloo also gave me a hug out of nowhere as we
left. It’s like they have an Awesome Disney favorite movie detector built in or
something.
YAY!
Our groups spilt up on the way to letting the
kids play in the dino dig area. Anabelle
decided to turn back at the last minute to check the single rider line on
Everest. Based on our usual levels of
luck there was no single rider line that day.
Meanwhile, Rosa already stumbled into one
celebratory dance party in Africa and was making her way to a second one on Discovery
Island. Anabelle had grown past the “fun
digging in fake dirt” years, and we met up with Rosa at the party.
There was a great deal of Latin theming to
the music, meaning there was a great deal of Rosa and Anabelle running to join
in the new night time event of Animal Kingdom.
I focused on my strengths in the dancing world, and stood still with
great panache while holding the stuff.
Grandma took her knee home after dropping off
whichever kids took the bathroom break with her at the Boneyard. Therefore we tried to get the two remaining
groups synched up after the party.
Calling Kim produced an almost completely
incoherent answer with the words, “Primeval Whirl,” “Awesome,” “No line” and “Woooooooooooooooooooooo!” in some combination.
We wandered over to Chester and Hester’s to
find Kim and the Girls running off of the ride to take another spin induced
bathroom break. We’d reached the two
main features that accompanied the end of the extended hours nights on this
trip.
A) No lines
B) The kids bleeding off the need for “run
and scream time” by hitting more simplistic rides over and over.
The girls were ready to go again before Kim
returned, and I volunteered to try it. Most
of it was a small fun coaster, with adequate leg and butt room for a change.
The last bit where the car spun continually over a series of whoop-dee-doo
hills replicated Tilt A Whirl motion. As
the Tilt A Whirl is the only ride that made me toss my cookies in a lifetime of
various levels of thrill rideryness, I declared, “I’m done.” and let Kim take
over.
After a few spin filled spins, they checked
the line lengths and saw Kali River Rapids had negligible wait. Kim and Dave were Roaring Rapids fans from
their Great Adventure days. I hate
getting wet, especially at night, and Rosa wasn’t about to suddenly become a
thrill ride fan due to a birthday miracle. With a planned trip Downtown after
park closing, we threw a poncho over our daughter, and walked behind as she ran
to India with them.
About half way there, we saw a young lunatic
related to us come running out of the darkness frantically waving a poncho while
screaming:
“I changed my mind!!!! Everest has a ten
minute wait!!!!!”
Anabelle and I got to explore the mountain
twice in a row. It was quite a different
experience in the dark, because there wasn’t all the delay time in being able
to see when switching between unlit caverns and the blinding Florida sun. It
made it much easier to focus on the dirty Wampa that was the Yeti.
Not only did we get to ride, but we found the
disused corner of the gift shop that still had a few ride car toys to get one
for Anabelle to match the Peter Pan and Buzz Lightyear ones Rosa and I got on
our first Disney trip together.
YAY!
On our way to the exit we caught the end of
the Tree Of Life projection show. Like
much of Animal Kingdom it had more of an air of tranquility than the bombast of
the other Park’s finales. Once it ended
and the various animals on the tree were seen to twitch and randomly shift, it
became marginally disturbing.
On our way to the busses, we met up with the
rest of our soggy family. Morgan clearly inherited the same “don’t like to be
wet at night” genes that I did, and gave us a scathing review of their
ride. Veronica and Aurora described it
in a much more giggle filled fashion.
YAY!
They went back to the POP to arcade a bit and
put the little ones to bed, and we went with our bigger one to the Disney
Springs formerly known as Downtown Disney.
It had become much more of an upscale and
snooty shopping area.
Bleah.
The only “characters” were some uber creepy
metallic living statues that we ran past on the way to more Disneyish locations.
The World of Disney had, unbelievably, gotten
larger since out last visit. Our additional planning and coordination became no
match for the store of that scale, and we got ourselves and each other lost
several times. At least the Stitch on
the building still spit occasionally. That side of Disney Springs was a tad
less snooty.
Rosa planned to use her Landry Membership
Birthday coupon as an excuse to see the animatronic innards of the T-rex
café. Their smoothie machine was broken,
messing up her initial plan.
The lateness of the evening, and the
exhaustedness of us, messed up other plans, including trying the Rainforest Café
across Snootyville.
We staggered on to the bus back to the POP. Rosa immediately went back to the room to crash, coming from a culture used to a single large late afternoon meal. Anabelle lives with my built in need for American standard meals, and we hit the Everything POP food court for a late night dinner before crawling up the stairs back to our collapse inviting room.
2 comments:
I just wrote a comment, but it didn't go through. I think? If it did, you'll get two similar comments.
Anyway....
Very rude bird. Kind of manipulative. Or at least attention-seeking. Probably has abused many tourists.
I'm sorry you didn't go on the trail to see your favorite animals.
Gross about the vomit!
I'm glad we are on the same page about Disney Springs. I agree that it just looks like another ordinary snooty shopping center. What were they thinking with that?
All good. Single comment present and accounted for.
You have to wonder if the animals figure out how to do that on purpose.
Thanx, Almost all animals are my favorite animals, as long as I'm in Disney, I'm happy. And (foreshadowing) I got a bonus walk through the next time we went.
I blame the same marketing that filled every Disney shop with tshirts and stuffed animals, because that's what they sell the most of. I still miss the Main Street Magic Shop. I'm in no way a nightclub person, but I liked Pleasure Island for the variety. (And Adventurer's Club!)
Thanx again for sharing.
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