Similar to the first MGM day, I woke up before what had become “standard early” to make sure I was fully signed in and able to make an attempt at accessing the Guardians of the Galaxy virtual queue.
And well before I could lock in that fantastic offer by moving my thumb the whopping distance of an inch and a half, the reservations were all gone.
On the positive side- the streak continued!
For the fourth day in a row, and the fourth Park in a row, we all met at our bench and assembled on line for the bus a half hour before the Extra Magic Hour Half Hour. The Disney Magic and probably our family genetic predisposition to Disney pulled us through the entire first rotation.
YAAAAAAY!
YAAAAAAAAAAY!!!
“Oh two aich! Oh two aich!”
Alas…cha cha cha.
Rosa is hilarious.
Rude much?
(“Heathens.” – Auntie Kim)
YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY!!!
YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY!
I like fish.
Operation “Exposure Therapy So I Can See
the Dolphins at Disney World” was a rousing success. Anabelle was able to walk
through the big tank area, and spend a quite while staring happily at the Dolphins.
I alternated being with her and Rosa in the mammal half, and going back to the other side to have some personal fish moments.
We finished up, went back
downstairs and after a brief and unpurchaseful search of the gift shop, met
Grandma outside. Things were going on with Turtle Talk, so the three of us
walked around and rode the Nemo Shells again. YAY!
When we returned, Aurora
was waiting with Grandma. She joined us and with Aurora, the four of us walked
around and rode the Nemo Shells again. YAY!
As we entered, there was a
shockingly large number of people on the “Lightning Lane.” They likely had to
wait longer than we did, as there was no one else on the Stand By line with us.
Aurora and Anabelle made jokes about, “Needing to book a Lightning Lane for
Nemo,” anytime anything regarding urgency arose for the rest of the vacation.
That ride is really cute,
and the projection on the tank at the end elevates it above regular dark rides.
YAAY!
Grandma waited for the
Turtle Talk gang and we four walked across that side of “Not Future World
Anymore, Yet I Still Don’t Care” to Imagination.
Over at Imagination, a
rest room stop brought a surprise. (To me. Anabelle, in her normal caring way,
pointed out, “We knew about this, you fool.”) Winnie the Pooh was running around the little
shady, grass covered area with his bee catching net. My whole family and
AllEars maintain this is a Butterfly catching net. Their rationale is “Who ever
heard of a bee catching net?” My rationale is that Pooh needs to keep the bees
away to get the honey. In either case, the
girls had a great time waving to him, and frolicking along on the sidewalk. In
addition, in either case, rationale may be an overly strong term.
Yes, there was a surprise Pooh by the bathroom. Insert your own juvenile joke here.
The rest of our family
caught up to the Imagination entrance while we were close to boarding the ride
vehicle. The Cast Member asked if the four of us could fit in one row. We
answered, “Only Game of Life style,” referencing how the pegs have to be wedged
in between each other when there are more than four “children.”
Yeah, the Cast Member
didn’t get the reference either, but we got to sit two and two in our own car
anyway.
Rosa was determined not to
be scared by the explosion that reveals the room full of Figments that startled
her on every single one of the many (very many) times we have enjoyed this
attraction.
She accomplished this by
grabbing my arm, squinting and saying, “Is this the explosion?” every time the
car stopped, startling me. Therefore, she was tensed and ready when it finally
happened.
As well as the other eleven minutes we were on the ride.
We spent some time in the
playground making music, and shopping in the store waiting until the whole gang
was reunited.
Rosa watched little kids
grabbing stuffed animals and wistfully said,
As well as the other eleven minutes we were on the ride.
“Remember the time we used to buy
toys?”
Then looked at me and added,
“Well, I mean for Anabelle.”
Nice.
Based on timing of our
lunch reservation, and the Ratatouille ride wait varying yet holding steady under
an hour, it was time to start our First EPCOT Death March. This was an unofficial one, as we didn’t stop
at each country…
Though, it counts as we went all the way around, because we’re insane.
We went straight to France
where the EPCOT gods smiled on us and the Remy Ride wait had dropped from
fifty-five to forty minutes in the time it took us to get there. We had to pass the other new addition to the
pavilion on the way to the ride, the creperie.
I’m guessing the fact that I consistently pronounced it “crap-erry” may be why nobody in our family tried it.
Back to Remy- I thought it
was cool that the fountain outside had statues in the style of the concept art/
closing credits of the film. The EPCOT gods continued to smile as the regularly
scheduled McGinley EPCOT Rainstorm out of a clear sky hit once we reached the
covered part of the queue.
The line had the fun and
immersion Disney puts into all its newer attractions. The animated sign in the
rooftop section with Gusteau, and the moving paintings in the next room were a nifty
touch. Aurora and Anabelle may have
started openly weeping when they saw Collette’s shadow.
I was a big fan of this
ride. Trackless vehicles, clearly the wave of the future, allowed surprising
changes, and easy positioning into giant screen projection areas, simulating
additional movement. Anabelle loves this movie, and the fact that the
characters that appeared prevented it from lining up with any specific point of
time in the film bothered her at first, but she warmed up to it once she became
accustomed to that concept. We all enjoyed it. Those trackless cars do a great
job of moving around a lot, but not in an Old Man Bones jarring way.
Oddly, the ride reminded
me the most of the classic EPCOT era attraction Horizons. I’m not referring to
content, but rather to formatting. The similarity came from the mix of actual
settings with ENORMOUS screens creating simulated motion and environments the
way the old sequel to Carousel of Progress did. (Those mammoth screens on the
old ride were IMAX size, these new ones could be smaller due to better
positioning.) The 3D glasses enhanced the whole simulation.
Closing out a positive
experience on a new attraction, lunchtime loomed. We completed another third of
the First Unofficial EPCOT Death March. On the way, Aurora looked around the
“Tiana” Food and Wine booth that didn’t have any food or wine, getting excited
about a shirt there. She has the “mull over a purchase for a while” genes dominant.
Our family is equally split between those and “kill it and bring it home now!”
genes. Sometimes that divide exists in the same person. A bit more walking (the
Mission Statement of EPCOT), and we reached Germany.
This was one of only two
meals we were able to book for the full nine of us in one reservation sixty
days ahead of time. Looking around the joint, I’m pretty sure I could have
booked it that morning and still gotten a table for nine. The food was
excellent, yet I think the reason for the empty tables was twofold.
A) The place was a gigantic, two level, half circle, cavernous hall.
B) The center of that half circle was occupied by an Oom-Pah Band.
Anabelle pointed out I
have often told her the tale of friends helping out the Denville Harvest Festival
early morning name tag dispensing that my parents ran. The reason was to have
first crack at the used Book Barn. It was right across from the German beer
tent, and I told her we’d book shop as long as we could stand being that close
to an Oom-Pah band.
She leaned over to me and
yelled through the din, “I GET IT NOW!!!”
Followed by, “There is far too much ‘OOM’ in this band.”
Most, if not all, of the
kids, who already had discussed their dislike of the loudness of fireworks on
this trip, kept earplugs in throughout the meal.
Normally I like dark beer,
but since the “small” was a half-liter, I decided to go with the “flight” after
all. Dave went for the full liter, which was impressive since unless I’m replenishing
my hydration following a sauna like accordion bus, a liter of any liquid is
overkill for me. Dave may have helped finished Kim’s “small” as well. This is
likely due to a combination of German genetics and co-existing with eight rabid
Disney fans in the Parks for ten days.
Anabelle sorted my flight
based on “smell” order as her guesses of how much I’d like them. Completely
stunning both her and myself, the dark one was pretty far down the list. More
stunning was I liked the grapefruit beer the best. This was stunning for the
following reasons:
A) I don’t like grapefruit.
B) I don’t like fruit flavors in beer.
Disney Magic - again!
Anabelle also decided a
“flight” should only be used for three selections. Therefore, she named my four
small glasses, “An airport.”
The hall was massive
enough that condensate was dripping on us from the roof. Yes, the air
conditioning coupled with the humidity outside gave the place its own weather
system…
Or the roof was leaking, and the McGinley Downpour out of a clear sky was lurking above.
The band played a bunch of
traditional Octoberfest kind of songs. There was also a sick xylophone solo. (I
can’t believe I just typed that.)
The performance of, “In
Heaven There Is No Beer” confused me. I’d only heard the 1971 version by Clean
Living that Doctor Demento played, causing me great surprise when a “modern”
song was mixed in with the traditional tunes. (Yes, I know 1971 is not modern
and I am old. This is yet another naming thing I do not care about.) My usual
bare minimum of research has turned up that it originated in a German film in
the early Fifties. I guess that means it’s legit.
I also guess I’m a buffoon because this was the first time, after hearing both songs far more times than any human being should, I realized that the melody of “In Heaven There Is No Beer” is the same as “Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes.”
Another song led to a
discussion, likely because it was played on the bells and there was virtually
no “oom” in the “pah,” allowing some conversation. It was Edelweiss. That does sound like a traditional, old German tune, but
we weren’t sure if it originated with the Sound
of Music. Anabelle remembered much later to Google the tune. It turns out
it was the last song written together by Rogers and Hammerstein. Somehow,
having it be a song from a Julie Andrews film in Disney World made it
appropriate.
When the band took a
break, and we could hear each other…and hear ourselves think, interactions came
back to normal. Morgan was the exception to this return to conversation. He
became the second sibling to fall asleep on Aurora. She covered his head with
two napkins, to prevent the tasty German meats from falling on it. Clearly, he,
and to a lesser extent Veronica, had become family champions at Disney recovery
as they found multiple places to fall asleep to prevent them from passing out
on rides and at shows This is in a stark contrast to the rest of us.
What followed next was
Anabelle initiating and the rest of the kids (and some adults) diving into a
string of worse and worse “Oom-Pah” jokes throughout the rest of the meal.
What do you call a German
band at the Haunted Mansion?
Toomb-Pah
What do you call a German
band on Splash Mountain?
Floom-Pah
What do you call a German
band getting married?
Groom-pah
What do you call a German
band at the Flower and Garden festival?
Bloom-pah
Where did the band go on
their break?
Restroom-pah
(Bonus- They had to Poom-pah)
What do you call a really
fast German band?
Zoom-pah
Who cleans the floor after
the German band leaves?
Broom-pah
And so on, and so on…
(Keep in mind that I have only listed the best of the nearly never ending stream.)
Aside- And now the source
of Anabelle’s daily titles for this trip has been revealed.
Shortly after Anabelle
asked-
What do you call a German band that fights the Fantastic Four?
Doctor Doom-pah
The band came back from
break, and she yelled:
“Quick, somebody call Reed Richards!”
In a supreme illustration
that we likely do way too much (scratch that, it is never way too much, simply an astonishing amount) in these Parks, the return of the Oom-Pah band
did not wake Morgan up. This is astoundingly impressive, as even I could not
do it.
Then looked at me and added,
“Well, I mean for Anabelle.”
Nice.
Though, it counts as we went all the way around, because we’re insane.
I’m guessing the fact that I consistently pronounced it “crap-erry” may be why nobody in our family tried it.
A) The place was a gigantic, two level, half circle, cavernous hall.
B) The center of that half circle was occupied by an Oom-Pah Band.
Followed by, “There is far too much ‘OOM’ in this band.”
A) I don’t like grapefruit.
B) I don’t like fruit flavors in beer.
Disney Magic - again!
Or the roof was leaking, and the McGinley Downpour out of a clear sky was lurking above.
I also guess I’m a buffoon because this was the first time, after hearing both songs far more times than any human being should, I realized that the melody of “In Heaven There Is No Beer” is the same as “Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes.”
Toomb-Pah
Floom-Pah
Groom-pah
Bloom-pah
Restroom-pah
(Bonus- They had to Poom-pah)
Zoom-pah
Broom-pah
(Keep in mind that I have only listed the best of the nearly never ending stream.)
What do you call a German band that fights the Fantastic Four?
Doctor Doom-pah
“Quick, somebody call Reed Richards!”
And I can sleep through
anything, including my alarm, and Rosa punching me in the head for not waking
up for my alarm.
They went through the same
songs and features as the last time they were out. During the bell ringing,
Aurora was referencing cowbells and Christopher Walken, adding:
“I’m Christopher Standingstill.”
Aurora is hilarious.
When we didn’t think the
band could get any louder, they did the Alp Horn duet. They had done one in the
earlier set, but Anabelle missed them when she was at the buffet. This should define how loud the place was in
general and how chaotic our meal times were specifically.
As Anabelle talked about
missing them, (likely due to the volume and wearing ear plugs) Aurora thought
she said she missed the “Al Porn.”
After that, it took quite
a while to calm everyone down.
Anabelle pointed out that
every day of this trip she’d believed our Table Service activities couldn’t
possibly get any more chaotic, and yet every single day it did.
First was our exhausted and
confused dinner during the storm at the Plaza,
That was topped by character shenanigans and them and us falling over one another at Tusker House,
Followed by the Mickimald incidents at Hollywood and Vine,
And the kids at their own table, egged on by Queen Rachel in the Castle.
“Surely today would be calmer…
And the freakin’ Oom-Pah band shows up!”
Astonishingly, this trend
would continue full force for the remainder of our table service experiences in
Disney World.
(Coming attractions for food events after the middle of the table service meals- The Snow White Bra incident, The Car Separation, Whatever that was at Tony’s, and Continuous Character Drive Bys)
Dave returned from the
rest room. (See “liter of beer” above.)
He was somewhat wide eyed, and told me I should go before we left because he was amazed at the dead space.
I did go to check it out.
(See “flight of beer” above.)
First of all, the
classical music pumped in at non eardrum shattering levels was nice.
But the room was a tad…open.
The area in the center of
the room with no stalls or sinks was big enough that we could have fit a three
person feed juggling pattern with tricks into it easily.
Yes, old habits die hard and I continue to measure room size by juggling capacity.
After Germany…
Oh wait, we did have food here.
There were lots of German
meats, very tasty. Rosa got a tour of the Gluten Free sections of the buffet
and her own soup and dessert tray. I had some personal moments with the pretzel
rolls along with the beer and cheese soup, something I normally don’t care
about. (Disney Magic!) Anabelle was thrilled with the Spätzle.
“I’m Christopher Standingstill.”
Aurora is hilarious.
That was topped by character shenanigans and them and us falling over one another at Tusker House,
Followed by the Mickimald incidents at Hollywood and Vine,
And the kids at their own table, egged on by Queen Rachel in the Castle.
“Surely today would be calmer…
And the freakin’ Oom-Pah band shows up!”
(Coming attractions for food events after the middle of the table service meals- The Snow White Bra incident, The Car Separation, Whatever that was at Tony’s, and Continuous Character Drive Bys)
He was somewhat wide eyed, and told me I should go before we left because he was amazed at the dead space.
But the room was a tad…open.
Yes, old habits die hard and I continue to measure room size by juggling capacity.
Oh wait, we did have food here.
(And I quote- “I
ate soooooooo much!” Kim backed her up-
“It was soooooooo good.”)
Honestly with all the
Oom-pahs and Al Porn going on, it was hard to discuss what everyone liked, but
the whole nine of us left full and happy about what we ate.
(And rested in Morgan’s case)
After Germany, we set
about finishing the Reverse EPCOT Unofficial Death March. (Because who starts
in Canada on purpose?) We planned to check the Frozen ride’s wait time. We
couldn’t because it was broken…again. You’d think that when they did the themed
overlay replacing the Maelstrom, they would have also replaced what made it
break down on a near daily basis…
Alas, they did not.
Instead, Kim’s family and
Grandma did some shopping in Germany and other lands they passed, and we three
ran to see Mariachi Donald in our Three Caballeros shirts. The shirt, her
Donald ears, and her little Donald sent the real thing into ecstatic joy.
Donald was happy to see our shirts as well and there were hugs all around.
YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY!
The little girl behind us on line was equally excited at our vintage Three Caballeros shirts.
Teeny Instant Disney Friend!
YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY!
The rest of the family
caught up as we finished Latin Waterfowl time. Kim enjoyed peeking in at her
niece’s Donald experience. Once done, we all entered the pyramid for the Three
Caballeros ride.
YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY!
Seriously Disney, go ahead
and make a new Coco land in Animal Kingdom, but if you touch this attraction,
it will get ugly.
Though we were all
together on the ride, and therefore exited the boat together, some mystical force
far and above anything we have control over splits us up in World Showcase.
Random wanderings
completed, we managed to assemble at Mission Space. Rosa and Grandma headed
elsewhere, while the rest of us rode.
(And rested in Morgan’s case)
Alas, they did not.
YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY!
The little girl behind us on line was equally excited at our vintage Three Caballeros shirts.
Teeny Instant Disney Friend!
YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY!
YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY!
During this time (or the next wander
time) Rosa found a hidden Mickey. I do not mean three circles on the floor or
something. I mean an actual Mickey in a room behind Imagination that the rest
of us were unable to locate on later attempts. Maybe he had been talking with
Chip and Dale.
Because us,
and
Because Figment.
YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY!!!!!
They went in the reverse direction again, while Anabelle Rosa and I started over in Mexico…
YAAAAAAAAAAAAAY!
YAAAAAAAY!
After Anabelle took a picture of one of my feet.
Yes, running gags for our family now go between vacation destinations.
YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY!
My family loves to keep the Where Will We Go Next Guy guessing.
We did, yet we will not again.
Three reasons, in ascending order of importance.
1) The guy who took our order was incredibly cranky. (Though given the number of drunk people this Saturday Food and Wine filled afternoon, we’ll let that one slide.)
2) Despite advertising it that way when originally announced, there didn’t seem to be any Sam Eagle representation at the eatery. (A mug appeared months after we came home. Rude!)
3) The ribs were acceptable, but nowhere near the Flame Tree standards.
(But may stop here for the Sam Eagle mug.)
Awesome Happy Disney
people are the highlight of the trip.
YAAAY!
The rest of Rosa’s dinner
was at a kiosk over near Test Track, Gluten Free Yucca Fries. She only rated
them as “ok” but Anabelle loved the one she stole before going on the Test
Track Single rider line.
She enjoyed it, sitting next to another Teeny Instant Disney Friend. The young birthday girl talked to her a bunch. When Anabelle said she had been on the ride “a long time ago”, the girl agreed it was a “loooooong” time ago for her too. The girl’s father looked up and said, “It was last year.” After her new little friend complimented her car design abilities, Anabelle came out to rejoin us.
I stood outside the whole
time and frowned to protest the loss of World of Motion.
(“Dad, we know…shut up about it already.” – Anabelle)
While waiting, Kim texted
me about the next morning’s plans. Due to my phone becoming a brick again in
the evening heat and humidity, communications were problematic but we
eventually worked it out back at the hotel.
Because it was next door,
and Rosa’s back had stretched out from walking, the three of us did Mission
Space before doing some night Big Ball PhotoPassing.
Kim’s family also did
Mission Space before us, or maybe after us. I’m begging you Disney, could you
please put PhotoPass pictures on EVERY ride. It would make my job cataloguing
these adventures much easier.
We got one of them fancy,
“not-Jesus” Magic Express type busses back to the All Star Movies. After two
EPCOT Death Marches, (unofficial though they were) it was very nice and comfortable.
I did a quick mug run.
This night, Anabelle did not want Hot Chocolate, but a Sprite like her Mother.
She told me not to mix it up and bring her “Sparkling Hot Chocolate.”
Hilarious.
She traded for two pins in the store and cafeteria as we passed through.
I got an irate call from
Grandma about the cleanliness above the Murphy beds. Veronica’s allergies were
in overdrive. Grandma looked up there and found a huge layer of dust. While she
was telling me I hopped up to see ours, and saw an above average number of dust
balls, but not a full coating. We had brought a small air purifier to combat
allergies.
(Spoilers- it didn’t work.)
While checking ours I
learned Kim checked hers, and found a moldy piece of cheese up there.
Mickimald, no doubt
storing it for a rainy day.
Complaints were issued to the desk and notes were left in the room for the next day.
Rosa and Anabelle took matching
pajama shirt pictures. Before (possibly during) passing out, we watched “Church
TV” on my phone. Theoretically, at least one of us was awake at all times while
it was playing, so it counted.
Jeff’s Disney World
Philosophy:
As the center point of the trip is reached, this is as good a place to address “things” as any other is. Sometimes on our trips, “things” happen. “Things” can happen with any family, especially when everyone is hot and tired (and hungry) and have happened to, and been caused by, all of us here and there on these vacations throughout our adventures. I don’t dwell on the “things” or detail them in these stories. In fact, I refuse to dwell on the “things” during the trips as well. We’re together for the duration of the Magical Disney World Time, and the good times, family closeness and fun vastly outweigh any occasional “things.” There’s no need to focus on the “things,” and the “things” don’t reduce the overall wonderful time we have together. When we’re there, we’re too busy enjoying the good stuff, and when it’s done, the good stuff memories always overwhelms the “things.”
Well, that was a mess. I
should have just fallen back on the Eleventh Doctor’s “Good things and bad
things piles” quote from the Van Gogh episode like I always do and called it a
day. This time though, I would need to add the “pile of bad things” really does
become insignificant with the constant infusions of family togetherness and
Disney Magic into the “pile of good things.”
27387 steps 10.5 miles
YAAAY!
She enjoyed it, sitting next to another Teeny Instant Disney Friend. The young birthday girl talked to her a bunch. When Anabelle said she had been on the ride “a long time ago”, the girl agreed it was a “loooooong” time ago for her too. The girl’s father looked up and said, “It was last year.” After her new little friend complimented her car design abilities, Anabelle came out to rejoin us.
(“Dad, we know…shut up about it already.” – Anabelle)
Hilarious.
She traded for two pins in the store and cafeteria as we passed through.
(Spoilers- it didn’t work.)
Complaints were issued to the desk and notes were left in the room for the next day.
As the center point of the trip is reached, this is as good a place to address “things” as any other is. Sometimes on our trips, “things” happen. “Things” can happen with any family, especially when everyone is hot and tired (and hungry) and have happened to, and been caused by, all of us here and there on these vacations throughout our adventures. I don’t dwell on the “things” or detail them in these stories. In fact, I refuse to dwell on the “things” during the trips as well. We’re together for the duration of the Magical Disney World Time, and the good times, family closeness and fun vastly outweigh any occasional “things.” There’s no need to focus on the “things,” and the “things” don’t reduce the overall wonderful time we have together. When we’re there, we’re too busy enjoying the good stuff, and when it’s done, the good stuff memories always overwhelms the “things.”
7 comments:
Funny about Rosa avoiding The Land Wheat! All of you seem to have a great sense of humor...and sense of fun and wackiness.
The Winnie the Pooh in the grass is surreal.
It's a strange and intriguing sight. Kind of like an hallucination in a movie scene?
Thank you. It's amazing what day after day of minimal sleep and ten miles of walking does do foster a sense of fun and wackiness!
And yes, the left over socially distanced characters wandering around in normally restricted areas were weird experiences.
I'm kind of sorry I missed the socially-distanced characters.
Very cool about the monster in the Chinese Kali River Rapids!
I'm not sure they're all gone. They weren't really on any schedule or anything, just kinda loitering about.
As much as I hate that kind of getting really wet ride, I might try if for a monster view.
I hate the things. And they stick in my memory for a very long time. I'm haunted by them. Fortunately (knock on wood) our happy times at Disney greatly outnumber our things. BUT with our last whole-family cruise, the things very much outweighed the happiness and fun.
I am very sorry for your things. Hopefully, the good pile will outweigh them in the future.
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