Hello everyone! This forum has been invaluable with helping me plan my most current Disney trip. To pay it back, I thought I would write up a little mini (or should I say Minnie?) trip report. Why mini? For one I’m not someone who takes a ton of pictures or videos, and for two this was a very short trip. Hopefully this can help someone else out there who is also planning a similar style trip. For the W’s:
Who: Me, single young adult. I actually worked at WDW as a PhotoPass Photographer from 2012-2014. I haven’t been to WDW since about 2015 so my main “goal” of this trip was to try as many new things as possible and go on a few old favorites. I now live in the Los Angeles area and have been to Disneyland twice (and have been to Galaxy’s Edge). I’m working from home in LA but I decided to spend an extended holiday season with my family in South Florida. While in South Florida, I decided I might as well make my way up to Central Florida for a few days.
Also with me is my brother, another young adult. He goes more frequently than I do and at one point was an AP, but he has still not been able to do a lot of the newer things. He also lives in South Florida
What: Trip to WDW. Like I’ve said above, the goal was to see some old favorites and ride and see what’s new.
Where: All-Star Music, three nights, and two park hopper tickets.
Some backstory on this - we started planning this trip in August, and at that point all of the value resorts were sold out. We were planning on spending all day in the parks and really didn’t see the need to spend more money on a more expensive hotel. So initially I did some research and booked a refundable rate room at the Springhill Suites in Flamingo Crossings. I was actually pretty excited about this one, since it was really close to the WDW property and included free parking and breakfast, plus the room was bigger than a standard value resort. Around October I heard that some rooms on property had opened up so I looked and sure enough All-Star Music was available so I grabbed it. I initially did a refundable rate at Springhill Suites because we weren’t sure about our travel dates, plus everything Covid related, but it ended up working out because I was able to cancel with no penalty. I will say I have heard multiple great reviews about it so it’s definitely a hotel I’ll check out one day.
When: Dec 11-14. I wouldn’t go into it but we were a little limited on times because of our two work schedules. Our basic schedule was to drive up from South Florida on Sat, Dec 11th and make it to the hotel around 8pm. Then Sun Dec 12th we went to Animal Kingdom and Epcot and Mon Dec 13th was Hollywood Studios and Magic Kingdom. On Tue Dec 14th we slept in a little, checked out of the hotel and did some shopping around Disney Springs before heading back down to South Florida. We decided to park hop because it was the only way to see four parks in two days.
Saturday December 11th
Part One: Getting to Disney
Our goal was to leave after my brother finished with work at 5:00pm and get to All-Star around 8:00pm. We were 200 miles away, which usually takes a solid three hours. Unfortunately we hit some traffic but it wasn’t major and we ended up arriving around 8:30. About half way up we got a text and notification that our room was ready so we were able to go directly to our room. I subscribed to Touring Plans and put in a room request and got most of what I wanted (a further back building on the third floor facing trees so we wouldn’t have kids running around in front of the room all night). We got a late dinner at the All-Star Music food court and went to the front desk to link our magic bands to our individual credit cards. We then just went to bed because we had an early day the next morning.
I don’t have pictures (there are plenty of good ones online) but we were impressed with our renovated room. The pull down murphy bed was really cool and we pushed it up a few times to use the table. I ended up sleeping on it and thought it was just as comfortable as a normal bed. We also really liked the fridge and coffee maker set up, the nice bathroom, and all the chargers around the room. I thought it was interesting that there wasn’t anything specifically “music,” or in our building’s case “Broadway,” in the room. It seemed like they standardized all the rooms between all three of the All-Stars, probably to save money when they order everything in bulk. I personally liked it because whatever theming was there was very generic “Disney” without being too in your face. But if you are looking for a highly themed room in a value hotel, you might want to go to Art of Animation.
Also, since I’ve heard some people talking about it, our room (8636 in Broadway) was very quiet. We could hear some plumbing from the other rooms, but that’s expected in any hotel. On the last morning we were in there I thought I heard someone in a neighboring room coughing really loudly, and occasionally you could hear people walking in front of the room, but besides I didn’t hear anything. Since we were facing a clump of trees there wasn’t any area for anyone to run around and be loud. It was a bit of a walk to the main building but we only went up there once and we didn’t use the buses. I actually preferred being close to the parking lot and our car, and we never had trouble parking, even with coming back later in the night. The third floor was pretty annoying after a long day of walking but it was fine. There is an elevator, but we only used it once since it was a bit out of the way.
Sunday December 12th
Part Two: An Animal Kingdom Morning
Our plan was to rope drop Flight of Passage, and since Animal Kingdom opened at 8:00 the resort early entry was 7:30. We got up at 6:00 and started getting ready for the morning. We prepaid for Genie+ so at 7:00 I got on the app and got a 8:10 LL for Navi River Journey. The idea was to hit that as soon as we finished FoP. We also paid for and got our only IA$ of the trip for Remy at Epcot. Since we were park hopping we didn’t have any chance to get a boarding pass, and we wanted to ride it. Buying the IAS was our only option if we wanted to get on it.
My plan was for us to leave the room around 7:00 and drive to Animal Kingdom and then line up for the early entry. We didn’t really leave until 7:15 and we ended up getting to the front of the park until about 7:25. We followed the crowds and made our way to Pandora. Interestingly, we passed by the entrance to Flight of Passage and saw the CMs holding everyone back, so they didn’t start really queuing people up inside the attraction until 7:30 officially. We joined the back of the line, which was backed up about half way to Africa on that back trail. Once the queue opened we walked almost non-stop to the area where you are eventually put into the preshow. The line was probably about 30 minutes, so the early entry felt worth it to me.
Two side notes: First, wow, what a cool attraction! I honestly got a little freaked out once I got strapped into the vehicle (I think it was a little tight on me which contributed to that - I’m a smaller person but they really do push the constraints on as tight as possible) but in the end I really loved it. As you might be able to tell while reading this, I’m not a huge thrill ride person but I felt fine on this one. Second, we waited in line the entire time behind an older gentleman in an ECV/scooter and he was able to comfortably go through the line with no issues. I thought that might be good to know for anyone reading this who may also be using one!
I mentioned before I subscribed to Touring Plans, which I think was totally worth it. I ended up using their timer to time some of my waits, which worked out well for this report because I can look back now and see what some of the times were, plus some of the lightning lane times I got.
Anyway, after FoP we went to our 8:10 NRJ LL. I believe we actually got in the line closer to 8:20ish, but once we tapped in we got to the front of the line in less than two minutes. I didn’t catch what the standby wait time was, but we sure did skip most of it! While in line I grabbed a Kilimanjaro Safari LL for 11:05. NRJ was nice and pretty, but like most people say I wouldn’t wait more than 20 minutes for it in the future.
After NRJ my brother stopped for a Tiger Tail on Discovery Island and we walked over to Dinosaur. The standby line said a 25 minute wait and the TP estimate was 15 minutes, and we ended up waiting about 20 minutes, somewhere in the middle. It’s funny going on this after doing Indiana Jones in Disneyland. They say it’s the same ride layout, which I can kind of understand. However, it feels like Dinosaur is mostly in pitch blackness - it’s hard to see what the layout is or even what you are doing!
After Dinosaur we had some thinking to do. We wanted to see Kite Tales and the first show was at 11:15. We initially thought we would do our safari LL and then see the 12:15 show, but then we decided to see the 11:15 show and just go to the safari after since it wasn’t a very long show and we would still be within our hour window. So we hung out in Asia for a bit and watched the gibbons, who were really active, then walked through the Maharajah Jungle Trek. It was getting hot so I got my first snack, the Kite Tales sundae, and we decided to just sit in the stands in the shade and wait for the show to start. The sundae was pretty good, and they give you a lot of ice cream - definitely a shareable snack! I wish there was something to make it a little more “sundae” like than just sprinkles and a white chocolate medallion. Some fresh strawberries would have been nice.
We initially walked into the stands near Everest and asked a CM if he could point out a shady spot, but he said the whole area was pretty much in the sun so he suggested we go to the stands on the Dinoland side. This seems like the best place to watch. Not only is the whole area pretty shady in the morning/early afternoon but it seemed like all the action was on this side. As a note, while we were waiting we made a 12:20 mobile order for Satu’li Canteen, thinking it would be a good time after the show and after the safari. Before the show some entertainers came out with kites, and at one point they had little sea turtle kites/sticks that they handed out to the kids to do a little parade. Nothing seemed to happen out in the Asia stands. Anyway, the show itself was just okay. Honestly, we were kind of waiting to see a disastrous parade of crashing kites but it wasn’t too bad, and some of the smaller kites were cool. However, at ten minutes it was a really short show, so unless you just want to sit down for a bit it’s really nothing worth sitting and waiting around for.
After Kite Tails (about 11:30) we made our way to Africa for Kilimanjaro Safari for our 11:05 LL. There seemed to be a mass of people walking around between Africa and Asia looking confused, and soon I looked at my phone and saw why - Kilimanjaro was down. It was weird, it was a bright and sunny day with no thunderstorms in the area, so I can only assume there was an issue with an animal blocking the path, or maybe some issues with the trucks. Either way, we were left with a conundrum - the Kilimanjaro LL turned into an any experience LL, but there was nothing else we wanted to use the LL for in Animal Kingdom. We talked to a guest service CM who confirmed that we had to use the LL for Animal Kingdom, and we couldn’t use it at Epcot. Ugh.
We hung out in Africa for a little bit waiting to see if the safari would open up again, but it didn’t. We decided we might as well head to Pandora and see if we could get our Santu’li lunch order in earlier. We ended up looking around Pandora and just sitting in the shade for a bit. Also, since we had an anything LL for Animal Kingdom and there was no time on it, we were able to make our next LL, which we did for Soarin at Epcot at 2:15, since we knew we were park hopping there soon. While it was December, it was still really hot in the sun. We weren’t able to move up our mobile order, but we were able to let them know we were there as soon as our window hit. Luckily we were able to find a table outside in the shade.
I ended up ordering the potato base with tofu and the green onion sauce. I really liked it! I was considering ordering a kid’s portion (I did that the night before at the All-Star food court) but for some reason the potato base wasn’t on the kid menu, at least on the app. This ended up being fine because the portion was good, not too small or too big. The tofu was great and there was a hint of spice that actually really hit me. I would order this again! One minor complaint was the boba balls. I love boba tea, and while it did look cool and “alien,” the flavors didn’t really work for me. I think it was mango, or some other tropical fruit flavor? The sweet and savory didn’t really work in this case. My brother got a chicken bowl with rice and beans and liked his as well.
We started planning out what we would do in Epcot when we got the notification that Kilimanjaro was back up! Yay! We finished lunch and walked over at about 1:00. The standby line was backed up to the front of Tusker House and had a 60 minute wait. We found the LL entrance and tapped in, only to stand in a basically non-moving line. I assume it was also backed up with all the people who now had the anything LL after their initial LL was canceled. It was still pretty hot out and we were worried about waiting forever, but luckily the line started moving and we only waited about 15 minutes, much better than an hour. And while the advice is always to go on KS first thing in the morning to see the animals up and active, we still had a pretty good safari and saw a lot, including a baby rhino!
At this point it was about 1:45, and we did everything we wanted to in Animal Kingdom, so we decided to head over to Epcot! Side note: there were still no trams operating at this time, and while this was fine in the morning, in the afternoon when it was hot and sunny and we had already been on our feet all morning it wasn’t fun at all. We decided to drive to the parks because I heard how inconsistent the buses have been, plus I didn’t want to be packed into a bus where I knew people would be bad about keeping their masks on, but after dealing with the parking lot with no trams I almost wish we did use the buses. Especially the following day at Magic Kingdom.
Up next: Part 3: An Epcot Evening
Who: Me, single young adult. I actually worked at WDW as a PhotoPass Photographer from 2012-2014. I haven’t been to WDW since about 2015 so my main “goal” of this trip was to try as many new things as possible and go on a few old favorites. I now live in the Los Angeles area and have been to Disneyland twice (and have been to Galaxy’s Edge). I’m working from home in LA but I decided to spend an extended holiday season with my family in South Florida. While in South Florida, I decided I might as well make my way up to Central Florida for a few days.
Also with me is my brother, another young adult. He goes more frequently than I do and at one point was an AP, but he has still not been able to do a lot of the newer things. He also lives in South Florida
What: Trip to WDW. Like I’ve said above, the goal was to see some old favorites and ride and see what’s new.
Where: All-Star Music, three nights, and two park hopper tickets.
Some backstory on this - we started planning this trip in August, and at that point all of the value resorts were sold out. We were planning on spending all day in the parks and really didn’t see the need to spend more money on a more expensive hotel. So initially I did some research and booked a refundable rate room at the Springhill Suites in Flamingo Crossings. I was actually pretty excited about this one, since it was really close to the WDW property and included free parking and breakfast, plus the room was bigger than a standard value resort. Around October I heard that some rooms on property had opened up so I looked and sure enough All-Star Music was available so I grabbed it. I initially did a refundable rate at Springhill Suites because we weren’t sure about our travel dates, plus everything Covid related, but it ended up working out because I was able to cancel with no penalty. I will say I have heard multiple great reviews about it so it’s definitely a hotel I’ll check out one day.
When: Dec 11-14. I wouldn’t go into it but we were a little limited on times because of our two work schedules. Our basic schedule was to drive up from South Florida on Sat, Dec 11th and make it to the hotel around 8pm. Then Sun Dec 12th we went to Animal Kingdom and Epcot and Mon Dec 13th was Hollywood Studios and Magic Kingdom. On Tue Dec 14th we slept in a little, checked out of the hotel and did some shopping around Disney Springs before heading back down to South Florida. We decided to park hop because it was the only way to see four parks in two days.
Saturday December 11th
Part One: Getting to Disney
Our goal was to leave after my brother finished with work at 5:00pm and get to All-Star around 8:00pm. We were 200 miles away, which usually takes a solid three hours. Unfortunately we hit some traffic but it wasn’t major and we ended up arriving around 8:30. About half way up we got a text and notification that our room was ready so we were able to go directly to our room. I subscribed to Touring Plans and put in a room request and got most of what I wanted (a further back building on the third floor facing trees so we wouldn’t have kids running around in front of the room all night). We got a late dinner at the All-Star Music food court and went to the front desk to link our magic bands to our individual credit cards. We then just went to bed because we had an early day the next morning.
I don’t have pictures (there are plenty of good ones online) but we were impressed with our renovated room. The pull down murphy bed was really cool and we pushed it up a few times to use the table. I ended up sleeping on it and thought it was just as comfortable as a normal bed. We also really liked the fridge and coffee maker set up, the nice bathroom, and all the chargers around the room. I thought it was interesting that there wasn’t anything specifically “music,” or in our building’s case “Broadway,” in the room. It seemed like they standardized all the rooms between all three of the All-Stars, probably to save money when they order everything in bulk. I personally liked it because whatever theming was there was very generic “Disney” without being too in your face. But if you are looking for a highly themed room in a value hotel, you might want to go to Art of Animation.
Also, since I’ve heard some people talking about it, our room (8636 in Broadway) was very quiet. We could hear some plumbing from the other rooms, but that’s expected in any hotel. On the last morning we were in there I thought I heard someone in a neighboring room coughing really loudly, and occasionally you could hear people walking in front of the room, but besides I didn’t hear anything. Since we were facing a clump of trees there wasn’t any area for anyone to run around and be loud. It was a bit of a walk to the main building but we only went up there once and we didn’t use the buses. I actually preferred being close to the parking lot and our car, and we never had trouble parking, even with coming back later in the night. The third floor was pretty annoying after a long day of walking but it was fine. There is an elevator, but we only used it once since it was a bit out of the way.
Sunday December 12th
Part Two: An Animal Kingdom Morning
Our plan was to rope drop Flight of Passage, and since Animal Kingdom opened at 8:00 the resort early entry was 7:30. We got up at 6:00 and started getting ready for the morning. We prepaid for Genie+ so at 7:00 I got on the app and got a 8:10 LL for Navi River Journey. The idea was to hit that as soon as we finished FoP. We also paid for and got our only IA$ of the trip for Remy at Epcot. Since we were park hopping we didn’t have any chance to get a boarding pass, and we wanted to ride it. Buying the IAS was our only option if we wanted to get on it.
My plan was for us to leave the room around 7:00 and drive to Animal Kingdom and then line up for the early entry. We didn’t really leave until 7:15 and we ended up getting to the front of the park until about 7:25. We followed the crowds and made our way to Pandora. Interestingly, we passed by the entrance to Flight of Passage and saw the CMs holding everyone back, so they didn’t start really queuing people up inside the attraction until 7:30 officially. We joined the back of the line, which was backed up about half way to Africa on that back trail. Once the queue opened we walked almost non-stop to the area where you are eventually put into the preshow. The line was probably about 30 minutes, so the early entry felt worth it to me.
Two side notes: First, wow, what a cool attraction! I honestly got a little freaked out once I got strapped into the vehicle (I think it was a little tight on me which contributed to that - I’m a smaller person but they really do push the constraints on as tight as possible) but in the end I really loved it. As you might be able to tell while reading this, I’m not a huge thrill ride person but I felt fine on this one. Second, we waited in line the entire time behind an older gentleman in an ECV/scooter and he was able to comfortably go through the line with no issues. I thought that might be good to know for anyone reading this who may also be using one!
I mentioned before I subscribed to Touring Plans, which I think was totally worth it. I ended up using their timer to time some of my waits, which worked out well for this report because I can look back now and see what some of the times were, plus some of the lightning lane times I got.
Anyway, after FoP we went to our 8:10 NRJ LL. I believe we actually got in the line closer to 8:20ish, but once we tapped in we got to the front of the line in less than two minutes. I didn’t catch what the standby wait time was, but we sure did skip most of it! While in line I grabbed a Kilimanjaro Safari LL for 11:05. NRJ was nice and pretty, but like most people say I wouldn’t wait more than 20 minutes for it in the future.
After NRJ my brother stopped for a Tiger Tail on Discovery Island and we walked over to Dinosaur. The standby line said a 25 minute wait and the TP estimate was 15 minutes, and we ended up waiting about 20 minutes, somewhere in the middle. It’s funny going on this after doing Indiana Jones in Disneyland. They say it’s the same ride layout, which I can kind of understand. However, it feels like Dinosaur is mostly in pitch blackness - it’s hard to see what the layout is or even what you are doing!
After Dinosaur we had some thinking to do. We wanted to see Kite Tales and the first show was at 11:15. We initially thought we would do our safari LL and then see the 12:15 show, but then we decided to see the 11:15 show and just go to the safari after since it wasn’t a very long show and we would still be within our hour window. So we hung out in Asia for a bit and watched the gibbons, who were really active, then walked through the Maharajah Jungle Trek. It was getting hot so I got my first snack, the Kite Tales sundae, and we decided to just sit in the stands in the shade and wait for the show to start. The sundae was pretty good, and they give you a lot of ice cream - definitely a shareable snack! I wish there was something to make it a little more “sundae” like than just sprinkles and a white chocolate medallion. Some fresh strawberries would have been nice.
We initially walked into the stands near Everest and asked a CM if he could point out a shady spot, but he said the whole area was pretty much in the sun so he suggested we go to the stands on the Dinoland side. This seems like the best place to watch. Not only is the whole area pretty shady in the morning/early afternoon but it seemed like all the action was on this side. As a note, while we were waiting we made a 12:20 mobile order for Satu’li Canteen, thinking it would be a good time after the show and after the safari. Before the show some entertainers came out with kites, and at one point they had little sea turtle kites/sticks that they handed out to the kids to do a little parade. Nothing seemed to happen out in the Asia stands. Anyway, the show itself was just okay. Honestly, we were kind of waiting to see a disastrous parade of crashing kites but it wasn’t too bad, and some of the smaller kites were cool. However, at ten minutes it was a really short show, so unless you just want to sit down for a bit it’s really nothing worth sitting and waiting around for.
After Kite Tails (about 11:30) we made our way to Africa for Kilimanjaro Safari for our 11:05 LL. There seemed to be a mass of people walking around between Africa and Asia looking confused, and soon I looked at my phone and saw why - Kilimanjaro was down. It was weird, it was a bright and sunny day with no thunderstorms in the area, so I can only assume there was an issue with an animal blocking the path, or maybe some issues with the trucks. Either way, we were left with a conundrum - the Kilimanjaro LL turned into an any experience LL, but there was nothing else we wanted to use the LL for in Animal Kingdom. We talked to a guest service CM who confirmed that we had to use the LL for Animal Kingdom, and we couldn’t use it at Epcot. Ugh.
We hung out in Africa for a little bit waiting to see if the safari would open up again, but it didn’t. We decided we might as well head to Pandora and see if we could get our Santu’li lunch order in earlier. We ended up looking around Pandora and just sitting in the shade for a bit. Also, since we had an anything LL for Animal Kingdom and there was no time on it, we were able to make our next LL, which we did for Soarin at Epcot at 2:15, since we knew we were park hopping there soon. While it was December, it was still really hot in the sun. We weren’t able to move up our mobile order, but we were able to let them know we were there as soon as our window hit. Luckily we were able to find a table outside in the shade.
I ended up ordering the potato base with tofu and the green onion sauce. I really liked it! I was considering ordering a kid’s portion (I did that the night before at the All-Star food court) but for some reason the potato base wasn’t on the kid menu, at least on the app. This ended up being fine because the portion was good, not too small or too big. The tofu was great and there was a hint of spice that actually really hit me. I would order this again! One minor complaint was the boba balls. I love boba tea, and while it did look cool and “alien,” the flavors didn’t really work for me. I think it was mango, or some other tropical fruit flavor? The sweet and savory didn’t really work in this case. My brother got a chicken bowl with rice and beans and liked his as well.
We started planning out what we would do in Epcot when we got the notification that Kilimanjaro was back up! Yay! We finished lunch and walked over at about 1:00. The standby line was backed up to the front of Tusker House and had a 60 minute wait. We found the LL entrance and tapped in, only to stand in a basically non-moving line. I assume it was also backed up with all the people who now had the anything LL after their initial LL was canceled. It was still pretty hot out and we were worried about waiting forever, but luckily the line started moving and we only waited about 15 minutes, much better than an hour. And while the advice is always to go on KS first thing in the morning to see the animals up and active, we still had a pretty good safari and saw a lot, including a baby rhino!
At this point it was about 1:45, and we did everything we wanted to in Animal Kingdom, so we decided to head over to Epcot! Side note: there were still no trams operating at this time, and while this was fine in the morning, in the afternoon when it was hot and sunny and we had already been on our feet all morning it wasn’t fun at all. We decided to drive to the parks because I heard how inconsistent the buses have been, plus I didn’t want to be packed into a bus where I knew people would be bad about keeping their masks on, but after dealing with the parking lot with no trams I almost wish we did use the buses. Especially the following day at Magic Kingdom.
Up next: Part 3: An Epcot Evening