kokotg
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 14, 2006
- Messages
- 693
Day 3, Monday, Part 1
We were all ready bright and earlyish the next morning (I don’t remember what time the kids woke up, but it was at least somewhat later than 4 this time!) and headed over. They were already letting people onto Main Street when we got there, so we rented a stroller and joined the mob.
Ari still sporting those supercool shades
Halloween decorations, foggy morning. "It's kind of cloudy," Dave commented. "Oh, we don't get clouds in California; we just have fog," Craig explained.
I knew, based on all my Disboard research
, that we were supposed to do Peter Pan first, then Dumbo, then Mr. Toad. But we picked a sort of circuitous route to get to Fantasyland, and by the time we got to Peter Pan there was already a pretty long line. We got in it anyway, but Amy expressed her doubts about my plan, pointing out that there was NO ONE in line for anything else in Fantasyland. “Well,” I conceded after we’d waited 5 minutes and still had quite a ways to go, “I think the idea was we were supposed to do Peter Pan first, but we were also supposed to get here before all these other people.” All told, we waited maybe ten minutes. It was neat seeing the little differences between the WDW Peter Pan and DL’s…at least at the beginning—probably there are other differences, but those were the ones I picked up on. And Benjamin liked Peter Pan—not scary!
Luckily, there was still pretty much no one in line anywhere else by the time we were finished with Peter Pan. Benjamin had already spotted the Tea Cups and wanted to go on those, so we went there next.
I’m putting in some pictures Craig took now, too, which explains how we managed to get this picture:
Dave is talking on the phone to our house sitter. He’d called and left her a message at some point that morning, and she called back while we were on the tea cups. Not only was there a nasty heat wave in California during our vacation week, there was lots of disastrous flooding back in Georgia! So we had to check in a lot to make sure our house and pets weren’t floating away (everything was fine, luckily).
Now back to Dumbo, where the line was still completely reasonable. Craig and Benjamin got on the Dumbos after the rest of us, so everyone had plenty of time while waiting for someone or other to take some pictures.
Like there's this one Craig took of me taking a picture of Milo...
...and then here's the picture I was taking
And now on to Mr. Toad! Probably our only chance to ride it ever since the WDW one is long gone.
I liked it well enough, but Dave was all, “what was THAT all about?” and Benjamin found it way too scary for his tastes. I don’t remember strong opinions from the kids. I’m sure Gus loved it and wanted to go on it again.
Now Benjamin wanted to go on the carousel and my kids had no interest in it whatsoever, so we split up again. Here is a photo tour of some of the rest of Amy, Craig, Benjamin, and Louis’ morning:
We went on Pinocchio, another ride we don’t have in WDW. After that, Nana went off with Amy, et. al, and we went to check out the line for Nemo. If I remember right, it was something like 20 minutes, so we figured that was about the best we were likely to do and got in line. Ari suddenly started talking about how the line was too long and angrily insisting that he wasn’t going to ride. Now I don’t remember Ari ever complaining about the length of a line before, in any of his four Disney trips (we always go in September, so there aren’t that many lines to complain about, but still), so I was suspicious. He never admitted to it, but I’m pretty sure he got nervous reading all the warnings on the signs about how you shouldn’t ride if you don’t like, “dark, enclosed places.” I told him we were going to wait in the line, but I wouldn’t make him get on the ride if he still didn’t want to once we got up there. He decided to go on in the end and did completely fine. I took a couple of (no flash!) pictures before it got too dark:
So another ride we don’t have at WDW (story of our morning so far), and, to be honest, I found the subs a bit….boring. But I had been fretting about them and how to do them without a long line, so I was glad they were done, at any rate.
Next we went on Buzz and Star Tours. No wait for Buzz, maybe 10-15 minutes for Star Tours.
Then we stopped to get a snack and to try to get in touch with the rest of the group to see if they wanted to meet up for lunch. I tried to talk the kids into the Jedi Training Academy multiple times during the trip, but they absolutely weren’t having it. Maybe next year at WDW.
Dave had been eying the churros stands, so we got a couple of those. The kids weren’t that into them, so we also got a Mickey pretzel for them to share, and a Sprite for Gus, because he really, really wanted one:
Amy, Craig, et. al. met up with us while were snacking, but they had all decided to go back to the hotel for a rest, so we said goodbye until later.
Look who was walking by! He looked pretty mad about something, too.
We were all ready bright and earlyish the next morning (I don’t remember what time the kids woke up, but it was at least somewhat later than 4 this time!) and headed over. They were already letting people onto Main Street when we got there, so we rented a stroller and joined the mob.


Ari still sporting those supercool shades

Halloween decorations, foggy morning. "It's kind of cloudy," Dave commented. "Oh, we don't get clouds in California; we just have fog," Craig explained.
I knew, based on all my Disboard research

Luckily, there was still pretty much no one in line anywhere else by the time we were finished with Peter Pan. Benjamin had already spotted the Tea Cups and wanted to go on those, so we went there next.
I’m putting in some pictures Craig took now, too, which explains how we managed to get this picture:

Dave is talking on the phone to our house sitter. He’d called and left her a message at some point that morning, and she called back while we were on the tea cups. Not only was there a nasty heat wave in California during our vacation week, there was lots of disastrous flooding back in Georgia! So we had to check in a lot to make sure our house and pets weren’t floating away (everything was fine, luckily).


Now back to Dumbo, where the line was still completely reasonable. Craig and Benjamin got on the Dumbos after the rest of us, so everyone had plenty of time while waiting for someone or other to take some pictures.

Like there's this one Craig took of me taking a picture of Milo...

...and then here's the picture I was taking



And now on to Mr. Toad! Probably our only chance to ride it ever since the WDW one is long gone.

I liked it well enough, but Dave was all, “what was THAT all about?” and Benjamin found it way too scary for his tastes. I don’t remember strong opinions from the kids. I’m sure Gus loved it and wanted to go on it again.
Now Benjamin wanted to go on the carousel and my kids had no interest in it whatsoever, so we split up again. Here is a photo tour of some of the rest of Amy, Craig, Benjamin, and Louis’ morning:




We went on Pinocchio, another ride we don’t have in WDW. After that, Nana went off with Amy, et. al, and we went to check out the line for Nemo. If I remember right, it was something like 20 minutes, so we figured that was about the best we were likely to do and got in line. Ari suddenly started talking about how the line was too long and angrily insisting that he wasn’t going to ride. Now I don’t remember Ari ever complaining about the length of a line before, in any of his four Disney trips (we always go in September, so there aren’t that many lines to complain about, but still), so I was suspicious. He never admitted to it, but I’m pretty sure he got nervous reading all the warnings on the signs about how you shouldn’t ride if you don’t like, “dark, enclosed places.” I told him we were going to wait in the line, but I wouldn’t make him get on the ride if he still didn’t want to once we got up there. He decided to go on in the end and did completely fine. I took a couple of (no flash!) pictures before it got too dark:


So another ride we don’t have at WDW (story of our morning so far), and, to be honest, I found the subs a bit….boring. But I had been fretting about them and how to do them without a long line, so I was glad they were done, at any rate.
Next we went on Buzz and Star Tours. No wait for Buzz, maybe 10-15 minutes for Star Tours.



Then we stopped to get a snack and to try to get in touch with the rest of the group to see if they wanted to meet up for lunch. I tried to talk the kids into the Jedi Training Academy multiple times during the trip, but they absolutely weren’t having it. Maybe next year at WDW.
Dave had been eying the churros stands, so we got a couple of those. The kids weren’t that into them, so we also got a Mickey pretzel for them to share, and a Sprite for Gus, because he really, really wanted one:

Amy, Craig, et. al. met up with us while were snacking, but they had all decided to go back to the hotel for a rest, so we said goodbye until later.

Look who was walking by! He looked pretty mad about something, too.