the food was on par with hospital cafeteria food
But the point is that Disney has more than your typical amusement park food. She's just wrong. I'd like to know where she's eaten.1. Skip the food. - Aw, boo. Dining at Disney is fun! All part of the experience, plus I honestly don't like to leave Disney once I'm there. Ruins the magic.
2. Limit your Disney memorabilia. - Agree with this one, but I always like to buy at least a few things when I travel there. Something that will remind me of the memories I've made during my trip.
3. Take disposable ponchos with you. - Best advice ever. You can get them in wall mart for like a dollar.
4. Will you really use the park hopper option? - Not much of a park hopper. I like to designate a day to a particular park, and stay there from open to close (Except AK in the summer... my god. I'll die there in the heat!) Sometimes it's nice to randomly go to HS and catch Fantasmic or something. I'm an AP, though, so I can hop as I please. I wouldn't pay for the hopper unless I was absolutely sure that I was planning on hopping.
5. Save yourself the $17 in Disney parking. - I love staying onsite, so this never applies to me, plus I get free parking anyhow from my AP![]()
The park ones? about $6-$8 (I forget now the exact cost).How much did the poncho cost?
I think she may have ended up hitting the places which had the shortest lines and as such, the worse food. There is BAD food to be found at Disney, without a doubt (Electric Umbrella, I'm looking at you). But it's fewer and further between than the good food is. She'd had to have tried hard to find all bad foodsI can't figure out whether she was eating at a TS or a CS. We had two adults a 15 year old and an 11 year old. Our TS meals were around $90 and our CS were around $40. Maybe she is averaging the two.
I think the cafeteria food comment is wrong. There are some places (Pizza Planet) that aren't very good, but the overall quality of food in WDW is way above the in park food at Universal. (Though the HP restaurants are good for a CS.)
I think the cafeteria food comment is wrong. There are some places (Pizza Planet) that aren't very good, but the overall quality of food in WDW is way above the in park food at Universal. (Though the HP restaurants are good for a CS.)
1. Skip the food. There are two issues being addressed here. Quality and price. The food quality is decidedly mixed. I have never complained about the food I get at Flame Tree, and have, on more than one occasion, commented on how far superior that meal is as compared to whatever you can get at any other amusement park, zoo or museum. I have also had hamburgers (one in particular from Rosie's in DHS) that made me say "What the &%^$" And yes, the price is higher than if you were at a fast food joint in Joplin Missouri. But so what? You aren't in Joplin Missouri. Can you save money by bringing in a peanut butter sandwich? Sure. But part of being on vacation, and being in a "magical" place is the want, need and ability to leave the real world behind you. To mix metaphors, for me it "breaks the fourth wall" for me to pull out food I bought at Publix while inside the park. I want the immersive experience, to build up memories, and the ability to tell stories about my experiences. And that means taking the good with the bad. Even a bad hamburger from Rosie's is a more memorable experience than a plain ol' peanut butter sandwich that I put together that morning.
If WDW food is better than Universal, I'd hate to eat there. We thought the majority of the food at WDW was pretty lousy. Not all, but most.
I can't figure out whether she was eating at a TS or a CS. We had two adults a 15 year old and an 11 year old. Our TS meals were around $90 and our CS were around $40. Maybe she is averaging the two.