I budgeted us some extra time in the morning for waking up and getting ready in a strange place. We made great time and were ready to go and on the bus by 7:30am. See...ready to go:
There weren't many people by the train station when we arrived:
But the people came pouring in as it got closer to 9am. I knew we'd be in for some crowds what with it being pm EMH, but I've already learned the hard way that I must spend my first day in MK. So we braved the crowds for the first day and expected to have the place to ourselves the rest of the week. Except that wasn't the case. Lines were managable, but all week long I kept looking for the empty parks we saw in '08 and '09 and it just didn't happen. It didn't make the trip terrible, but it was a slight disappointment. Another big disappointment was that we didn't get the full rope drop show this morning. We got characters and a countdown, but no "Good Morning" song. It felt just a little less magical stepping onto Main Street without being welcomed by the Mayor and singing along as Casey Jr. pulled up.
As we entered Main Street my plan was to catch a FP for Mickey or the princesses and head off to Space Mountain. When we walked up there were only two families ahead of us for Mickey, so we decided to just wait and meet him right then. That was the end of my carefully laid plans...pretty much for the whole week. Don't get me wrong; we did want we wanted to do: met lots of characters, rode favorite rides several times. We just always seemed to be running a bit behind and it didn't feel like we got to "do" quite as much as we were used to accomplishing. For instance, it felt like we were always arrivng for parades and shows just as they were starting, whereas we would normally be waiting for those things well ahead of time. Perhaps it was because we didn't follow the "plan" and I'm sure heavier than normal crowds contributed to slowing us down. Character lines were much longer than we were used to seeing for this time of year, as well as lines in general and crowds in the walkways.
At any rate, back to day one, where the first thing we do is meet the Mouse himself:
A gentle reminder that Tony was put in charge of taking some pictures this trip. Between him and the Photopass photographers I ended up with some truly awful pictures at times. Tony got a little better as the week wore on, but there were a few meet and greets that we came away with not a single good shot. ::cough:::JackSparrow:::cough:: So this is not a great picture, but it's the best we got.
The visit was a bit more unorganized than I expected, even though Tony and I had gone over our strategy to effciently have pictures together and indivdually. Minnie and the character attendant slowed us down. We were already a bit off track as we made our way down Main Street toward Tomorrowland. Between the hectic meet and greet taking so long and the infamous crane looming behind the Castle, I didn't get my usual every-twenty-steps pictures of the Castle, but I managed to grab one shot to commemorate that "first walk."
We were already off schedule, so when we saw Stitch hanging out in front of his ride, we figured why not stop for a quick hello. I always tell Stitch something like "be good today," so of course when Tony went up for his picture Stitch tried to steal his hat.
Finally we were on our way to Space Mountain. We walked right on and settled in to get down to business. Tony happened to be sitting in front of me, so when his new hat flew off it somehow miraculously hit my arm, and instead of me reacting with a "what the heck was that" jerk of the arm to send it sailing into limbo, I somehow grabbed it, realized it was a hat, realized it was HIS hat and held on to it. Total dumb luck all the way around. We aren't all that lucky, so the new rule: no more hats on rollercoasters.
Our traditional second ride is Buzz.
We actually rode twice because the first time around we were so out of practice that our scores were intolerably low. Tony just beat me the first time and I eeked out a win the second time. We decided not to do one more for the tiebreaker, and set off for Fantasyland. Our Pooh FPs spit out a bonus PhilharMagic FP. It's a nice surprise, especially since we love PhilharMagic, even if it is utterly useless. Come on, who FPs PhilharMagic? Not us. We just walked right in through standby. The only thing I don't like about PhilharMagic is that I can't see it again for the first time and be totally blown away like I was that first time. Even still, it's awesome.
Pooh FPs weren't ripe yet, so we killed some time on "it's a small world." And there was A LINE! Not a big line. A walking through the queue the whole time, keep moving line. But a line, nonetheless. This is madness!
After our happiest cruise, we were off to Winnie the Pooh. Good thing we got the FPs, because Pooh was popular. Sixty minutes popular. More madness! Our FPs got us on in a reasonable amount of time, but there was no chance of two rides in a row. It wasn't quite 11am yet, so we had time to squeeze in one ride on Haunted Mansion before lunch. We skipped the new optional graveyard queue area because it's just plain faster that way. HM ride was uneventful, except for that pesky hitchhiking ghost that blew Tony's head up like a balloon. A scare like that calls for a hearty lunch. We approached Columbia Harbor House, where a town crier was ringing a bell and ushering patrons in, assuring us, "you need no reservations; in fact you should have no reservations...about eating here!" We sure didn't.
Tony had the fish and shrimp combo and an apple crisp. I was boring and went with the chicken nuggets and chocolate cake. Boring, but tasty. Onward to the first of many high seas adventures!
Just one problem...
Look at that line! That's right at the entrance! For Pirates! I've never seen such a thing. The sign said 20 minutes. That's my outer limit for line-waiting, but it's PotC, so we decided to walk the plank...um, wait in line. It was closer to 15 minutes, but that still gave me time to get a few queue pics. Unusual since I'm usually hustling through the empty, winding queue to get to the load area.
And the obligatory shot:
In the natural progression of Adventureland after you ride Pirates, you ride Jungle Cruise. Another 20 minute line. This is getting silly.
No surprise when, after Jungle Cruise, we atteneded a full-occupancy show for the new, old Enchanted Tiki Room.
We wound our way back around toward Splash and Thunder Mountains, only to find Splash high and dry. This suited me just fine, since I don't like drops or getting wet, but Tony wanted to do it, so I was going to suck it up. Lucky for me B'rer Rabbit was not in the soaking business at the moment. I suggested we go on Thunder Mountain anyway, but Tony said he didn't want to walk up the queue. He's not a big fan of Thunder, so I think he was just a little bit upset to see me quietly rejoicing about not having to ride Splash. With nothing left to do in Frontierland, we saw the Liberty Belle pulling up to the dock and figured "why not."
As we were boarding, I happened to overhear a CM saying that with both mountains down they were going to be crazy busy. Did I hear that right? Sure enough, as we floated past Splash Mountain the water wasn't running down Chickapin Hill and Thunder Mountain had no trains running and we could hear CMs talking over the loudspeaker and see them walking the track. The CM was right; while we were lazing around the river the crowds that should have been by the Frontierland Mountains were swamping Liberty Square. Check out the crazy line for HM!
And good news for anyone going for Christmas - they are busily hanging those Casle lights.
That was always already done by the last week of September in the past. I don't know what the hold up was this year, but I've never had the dreaded crane during my visits before. Scrims all over, yes, but the Castle lights were always finished and visible in a close up or zoomed in late-September Castle picture.
After a leisurely ride on the Liberty Belle, we started to stake out a spot for the 3:00 parade. Guess what time it was? By my count, that set of pictures will put us over our 20-pics-per-post limit, so this is as good a time as any to take a midday break, so to speak. Up next: the 3:00 parade. (I'm not much one for cliff-hangers.)