Conniesaurus
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2004
- Messages
- 152
We are looking forward to WOC and will post about it on our return.
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Any chance the lines are shorter?
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Any chance the lines are shorter?
Unlike WDW, everything is walking distance. No buses or trams to deal with, you will not even cross any streets. Plan on returning to your room for an afternoon break.We are leaving for our first trip to Disneyland in 10 days and staying at GCV!!!! We will be there for 5 days. I have reservations for Napa Rose and WOC dining package. Any tips or suggestions would be greatly appreciated. We love and know so much about Disneyworld, but don't really know anything about Disneyland.
OOOH - your first time. That's so very cool. I remember my first time to WDW (I grew up in So Cal and practically lived at DL). It really is a fun and special time to be able to enjoy something so familiar - yet so different - from what you are accustomed to.
to read your take on DL because we both "grew up" in So Cal, but I think you grew up longer and had much more experiences as a CM. I recently wrote this report for someone on another list, but think that it has merit here as we both tend to focus on slightly different aspects as much as we both love DL: the question asked was what were some "insider faves" that one could reccomend.Stopher1 I always LOVEto read your take on DL because we both "grew up" in So Cal, but I think you grew up longer and had much more experiences as a CM. I recently wrote this report for someone on another list, but think that it has merit here as we both tend to focus on slightly different aspects as much as we both love DL: the question asked was what were some "insider faves" that one could reccomend.
ahh thanks. 
2) Rides There are lots of rides that you will find only at Disneyland, and there are lots of rides that youll think are duplicates of rides youll find at WDW. Dont make the mistake that since youve been on rides at WDW you dont need to do them at DL.
Soarin is the same ride without the wait (at least the 120 minute wait) and many WDW vets say that it makes more sense where it is in DCA.
Thank you so much. We have gotten so many tips and great suggestions. We are so excited. We leave Thursday, visitng my sister in AZ and then we arrive in Disneyland on Monday, the 26th.
Having been to Disneyworld many, many times, this is a whole new exciting adventure for us. VWL is one of our home resorts, love the style so I know that we will just love VGC.
Once again, thank you all for your help. I was a little sad that we weren't visiting Disneyworld this year but reading all of your posts have made me very excited!!!!
I'm very happy for you all! I'm sure, even though it isn't the "same", it will still be a wondeful experience. I personally believe every Disney parks lover should make the trip to the place that started it all at least once... if not more.
It definitely is Walt's park, and you can see his loving touches and thought process even all these years later. The Magic Kingdom is awesome - and I do love it (it's my favorite park at WDW), but Disneyland was truly Walt's labor of love, and it still shows. The MK was designed by committee after his death. But DL is the only park that Walt ever walked, or ate, or slept in. WDW may have been his dream too, but he didn't live to see it built.
Walt purchased it for her from Pike Petrified Forest in Colorado. Such the romantic! 
<<It's a charming little part of the park with a beautiful wishing well, and marble carved figures from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Just another charming addition to the park that makes it so special. Back in the mid '60's Walt received a special, anonymous package or shipment,>>
I'm loving this..DL is such a special magical place to so many of us..
interesting bit: on our ABD Backstage Magic trip, our Imagineer told us the true Snow White grotto story..all the fables..actually, it has been discovered that Walt actually commissioned and paid for the marble statues, but hid it to keep it from Roy. A very famous sculptor did them, but I can't recall the name. The original statues were moved quite a long time ago, as weather was wearing them so the ones now on display are copies. They were in storage and horror, a forklift dropped the box containing Snow White. She was repaired, but you can still see the damaged areas. The originals are now kept displayed in the sculpture shop at Imagineering.
Here we are with them...
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I hope the OP will share her trip when she returns

I'm loving this..DL is such a special magical place to so many of us..
interesting bit: on our ABD Backstage Magic trip, our Imagineer told us the true Snow White grotto story..all the fables..actually, it has been discovered that Walt actually commissioned and paid for the marble statues, but hid it to keep it from Roy.

Very cool tidbit and correction Nunzia. Thanks.
What I shared was shared by my Disney University Guide on the day of my Orientation as a CM way back in 1987! I've also read it in several books through the years, so wow, what a way to perpetuate a story, huh?!? I stand corrected. Thank you. And what a great picture.![]()
Another tidbit..the great (great?) grandson of Ub Iwerks works at Imagineering..we ran into him. I think any big Disney fan would just love the ABD Backstage Magic trip.. We did so much..rode Walt's trains at Griffith Park, rode in the Lily Belle, saw the apartment, studios, Imagineering..just amazing stuff.I was really surprised too..I heard the annonymous story for years and thought it very coolAnother tidbit..the great (great?) grandson of Ub Iwerks works at Imagineering..we ran into him. I think any big Disney fan would just love the ABD Backstage Magic trip.. We did so much..rode Walt's trains at Griffith Park, rode in the Lily Belle, saw the apartment, studios, Imagineering..just amazing stuff.
so being in the calm, cool spa was great.OOOH - your first time. That's so very cool. I remember my first time to WDW (I grew up in So Cal and practically lived at DL). It really is a fun and special time to be able to enjoy something so familiar - yet so different - from what you are accustomed to.
There are just so many things about DL to soak up and enjoy. Don't be surprised by what you will find inside the park - that at WDW you would find in multiple different parks. The sidewalks are narrower (think 1950's America), and the park is much more intimate in both scale and acreage.
Be sure to take a ride on the various Main Street vehicles. They truly are a fun part of the experience (and the run a lot longer during the day than the MK ones do).
Be sure to stop in to the Main Street Cinema and check out some classic Mickey moments - you can't get those in the MK anymore since they converted the cinema to a shop there. And check out the daily fresh candy being made in the Candy Parlor.
Definitely go through the Sleeping Beauty walk-thru of the castle. The entrance is just inside the castle courtyard to your left (as you go through the breezeway).
Pinocchio & Alice both have unique to DL adventures to enjoy. As does Mr. Toad, Casey Jr. and Roger Rabbit (up in Toontown).
Be sure to take a ride around Tom Sawyer Island in the Davy Crockett Explorer Canoes. Also be sure to ride the Sailing Ship Columbia, and while you do, explore below decks. It's a treat you definitely don't get in Florida.
While in New Orleans Square, stopy by the Mint Julep Bar at the back side of the French Market (near the train station) Mint Julep and some fritters. Or if you eat at the French Market, you can get a Mint Julep there too (non-alcoholic, of course).
In Adventureland you can enjoy Tarzan's Treehouse (similar but different than those Swiss castaways) and Indiana Jones Adventure (the imagineers used the exact same track layout when they later added Dinosaur to AK - but this theming is so much cooler), and you'll be able to enjoy the Enchanted Tiki Room as Walt intended it (there's no annoying Iago overlay here) - plus you can get a Dole Whip right there, and take it into the show with you, if you are a DW kind of person. (Can you tell I am?)
If you want some ice cream later in the day, avoid the Gibson Girl parlor on the west side of Main Street, and instead enjoy a much shorter line at the Cone Shop at the end of Center Street on the east side of the street.
Both POTC and IASW are both longer and better at DL. Be sure to check them out for their individual differences. And the Mansion - wow - the facade is phenomenal, and you enter from the front, not underneath the side as at WDW. (Did you know that the HM was the 1st attraction completed at WDW back in 1970, because when they were building the HM for DL in 69, they built a 2nd set of the sets and props at the same time - for the MK?) Plus both POTC and the HM move you underground and beyond the berm (whereas the MK's versions don't) - so that stretching room is actually moving down at DL (unlike the MK's where the floor stays put but the ceiling goes up). You'll notice here the original portrait corridor too, that the recent upgrades at the MK added in after the Doom Buggy load area.
And be sure to enjoy Magical (the fireworks) and see Dumbo fly!
CA Adventure has a lot of cool stuff too, but a lot of it is very similar to what you'll find in different places in FL. WOC of course is the newest addition. Toy Story Midway Mania does NOT have a FP line - so prepare to stand in line if you really must go on it. While the queue is different of course, the attraction is the same as in FL. Mulholland Madness, the Silly Symphony Swings, Mickey's Fun Wheel, California Screamin', the Maliboomer and the Goldyn Zephyr are all unique to CA. Definitely be sure to use the GCV private entrance in the morning into DCA to get your WOC FP's. They let resort guests in earlier than non-resort guests - so be sure to ask about that at check-in.
The villas are fabulous - and you will LOVE the proximity to everything at the DLR. Can't wait to get back there this fall and Christmas.
Have a wonderful time!
