DexLabDeeDee
Hollywood, 1939. Amidst the glitz and glitter...
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2008
- Messages
- 1,508
Hello everyone! Welcome back from the holiday weekend. I hope it was fun and relaxing! On with the show
Day 3 Universal Where is everyone?
Monday was our Universal day. It was part of Maggies requirements for this trip. I was a little on the fence about going but I am glad that we went. I have been to Islands of Adventure (IOA) but I havent been to Universal itself.
We got free Mears transfers to and from US as part of our tickets through Dreams Unlimited travel. The tickets cost a little extra but waaay less than a two way taxi ride. I called the night before for our pick-up at 8:30am. The park hours were 9am to 5pm. I had looked up the park hours online a few weeks ago. The bus picked us up just outside of the main lobby. A few other families were waiting and there were already some other people when we got on the bus. We were given a transfer ticket back when we got on. I left our departure time open so we would have to call the number on the back of the ticket at least two hours before we wanted to be picked up.
The bus ride there was really nice. The driver was really knowledgeable and he was point out things on I-drive and showing us alligators in the water next to the roads. Yikes. There is one that is in the pond across from the entrance to POP. We saw him several times during our stay once we knew what to look for. The bus first stopped at Discovery Cove and then Sea World. It would have also stopped at Aquatica if there was anyone going there. Then it dropped us off at US around 9:00am. For those who dont know, you get dropped in the bus and taxi area. You then take an escalator up to the walkway. You join the crowd coming from the resorts and the JURASSIC PARKing
lot. You get on the moving walkway (nothing in my hands this time!
) and it takes you to CityWalk. Which is Universals version of DTD. When you get to the end of CityWalk, you come to a lake and you can take a right or a left. The left takes you to IOA and the right takes you to US. So off we were!
We used a kiosk to get our tickets that I bought several weeks before.
I was completely unfamiliar with US. I should have spent more time on the US boards, I know. I did sneak a peek at the touring plans in the 2009 Unofficial Guide Book. I have the 2008 early version (I didnt realize that the revised one comes out in February) and it didnt have the new Simpsons ride. I also have a subscription to touringplans.com but they didnt have online touring plans to US. So I had a rough idea of what I wanted but I felt really bereft without FP assistance. I wasnt about to pay more money for their Express Pass. I knew that we for sure had to do Simpsons first. It was, of course, at the very end of the park.
The park was EMPTY. We would turn a corner and we would be the only ones on the street. Then we would turn another corner and see two people up ahead. I was a little confused. Where was everyone? We got to the Simpsons ride and I wasnt sure exactly what it was. I read the blog on the podcast website and I had heard a few other things that it was a rollercoaster type ride. So I started to look for the lockers to put our stuff. I remembered from IOA that you had to get a locker for your stuff when you rode a rollercoaster. I couldnt find them so I walked up to the Universal..um..CM (?) and asked her if I could take my stuff on the ride. She gave me an extremely bored look and said, Yeah like I was the stupidest person ever. Okaaaay. Wow. It was very rude. (I should note that all the other CMs we ran into at Universal were very helpful.)
We walked through most of the queue because there wasnt really anyone there. You enter the queue area through Krustys mouth and it looks very carnival-ish. There are TVs with Simpsons cartoons about them being in Krustyland to occupy you while you wait. The back and forth queue line stops at a hallway and a door. They let a group of people in and you stand on numbers on the floor. There are booths all around you with Simpsons characters on the screens in the booths they randomly talk as you wait. Then you watch a short cartoon about Krustyland and how the Simpsons are the first family to ride the new rollercoaster and then you are interrupted by a news flash that Sideshow Bob has escaped prison. Krusty comes on to tell you that Sideshow Bob hasnt been spotted in the area so we're safe. Suuure we are.
**Note: If you want to be surprised by the Simpsons Ride, skip to after the starred section**
Then they take your numbered group and tell you to wait in a little room. I think there were about six of us. I felt like the CM was abandoning us. The room is tiny. It felt really weird and a bit claustrophobic. You watch another cartoon that gives you more backstory and then gives you safety information and tells you to set your things against the wall next to your car. This struck me as odd because usually the boarding area isnt a safe place to put personal items. But whatever. It takes awhile to get through each room. No wonder the queue moved so slow with only a few people in line.
Soooo. We moved to a slightly larger room with a cartoonish rollercoaster car and put our stuff against the wall. It still was a pretty small room. I dont remember what the restraints were like but I remember that I felt comfortable and safe in them. A CM came and checked on us and gave us the all clear. A roof partially came over our heads. I prepared to move forward but instead we were lifted up. Into a HUGE room. There was a screen covering your whole vision. Click.
Motion simulator ride. Gotcha. That is why it is a rollercoaster type ride because you arent actually on the rollercoaster. When you get all the way into the room you are at the top of the rollercoaster; right behind the Simpsons family who are, if you remember, the first family to ride the ride. Oh and Sideshow Bob has a big wrecking ball and is destroying the rollercoaster as you and the Simpsons try to ride it. Complete and utter mayhem ensues.
You end up flying violently through all of Krustyland. It felt very real. (The flying through the air part.) So much so that I had to watch my feet towards the end to keep my croissant from making a second appearance.
I was miserable. It was the longest ride ever. I DID NOT like it. Maggie, who does not get motion sick, was feeling queasy towards the end as well. She didnt care for it much, either.
************************************************
For those of you joining us from the other side of the stars, Maggie and I didnt like the Simpsons ride. If you get motion sick easily, I wouldnt recommend it.
Revenge of the Mummy was next on our list.
It was all the way on the other side of the park. I needed the walk in the fresh air to recover, though. Still very empty. I was a little apprehensive about this ride after the Simpsons. I thought that this was a ride on a track but people have talked about it as being a rollercoaster but not. How can it be a rollercoaster but not without being like the Simpsons? I was cheered by the sight of the lockers where you had to put your stuff. (Its free for the first 45 minutes) This was definitely something on a track.
Im not exactly sure about the premise of the ride. The queue was super short so we didnt get to see the video about what was going on. You go through several rooms. The first set of rooms are all in a museum. There is something about a curse and this guy (tourist) is trying to find out if the curse is real. Brendan Frasier is being interviewed (and wants coffee but doesnt get it) about the Mummy movies, I think. Then the second set of rooms is a movie prop area. The third set of rooms are on set in an archeological dig. That part of the queue was really neat. My sister and I are big fans of the first two Mummy movies. (The third one is awful. Ugh.) I wish she could have been there!
We waited about 15 minutes in the queue and we boarded a roller coaster car that had two cars, each seated eight people four in front and four in back.
**Note: Again, if you want to be surprised by the Mummy Ride, skip to the end of the starred section. (If you are ever going to ride it, I recommend skipping this section. It was neat not to know what was going on.)**
You start slowly on the track going through what feels like a pyramid-type structure. The tourist in the videos has been wrapped like a mummy and is telling you to go back because it is a trap and the curse is real. The cursed mummy stops you in a temple area and fire shoots up from the temple floor and you are now scrambling to escape him. You are on a rollercoaster ride in the dark (basically). You climb up and then the mummy pushes you backwards. You start and stop. He sends scarab beetles after you. They stop you at the ride end where a CM in the control room tells you to disembark but she gets sucked up by the mummy and he lights the ceiling on fire. It was HOT. And you go through another ride in the dark and then you really stop when you see Brendan Frasier talking to you on a screen. He finally gets his coffee but it is delivered by the mummy and the screen abruptly goes black as the mummy attacks him.
******************************************************
We really enjoyed this ride! I dont know why they said it was like a rollercoaster but not. It is definitely a rollercoaster. It starts and stops which is the only reason that I could think of as to why they would say but not.
I didnt really feel sick. I had a slight twinge at the end but I experience worse while riding in a car. Its all about proper breathing. I time my breathing really carefully. I exhale on any curves, dips and on any sudden stops. I inhale on hills or right as the ride launches forward. Its second nature to me now. It doesnt detract from the ride experience. I do it in the car, too. It took me awhile to figure out what worked for me. You can launch me up and down all day long its the twists and turns that do me in. If there is a ride that makes you a little queasy, try a long, slow exhale on the parts that make you queasy and long, slow inhale on the parts that you feel fine. Do not hold your breath. That does not help.
Okay, back to the trip report. Love the Mummy! We decided to chuck our touring plans at this point because it was so uncrowded. We decided that we would do the rides as we walked through the park and as we felt like it. We did Twister next.
As described from the Universal website Step into one of the most action-packed movies of all time, and feel what it's like to be a storm chaser, looking a tornado right in the eye. Tornadoes scare the heck out of me. Were from Minnesota and Maggie and I have both experienced our share of tornadoes. Luckily, we have never been directly under one but we have watched them form and watched them go by. We have watched the sky turn green, the air go dead and the sirens wail. Then the sky goes black and the wind whips and clouds start moving strangely overhead. Weve sat in the basement with our families and waited, not knowing if this time our house will be hit. It is very frightening. Twister wasnt anything like that.
It was very bizarre to tell the truth. They kept cautioning about how pregnant women should not ride, there was going to be extremely high winds, you WILL get wet, etc.
Bill Paxton and Helen Hunt come and talk about how conditions filming were extreme and tornadoes are huge, frightening forces of nature. You then stand at some railings facing a drive-in movie screen and parking lot (like the Twister movie) and you hear the sirens (that was the most chilling part) and then see the Twister coming in the background. Then it is in front of you and its tiny and white/gray. Things start flying around and then your platform shakes and then drops and thats it. We didnt get wet and we didnt really feel super high winds. I dont know why a pregnant woman would be in danger from a railing dropping six inches. It felt nothing like a real tornado. Not that I wanted to feel like that but they really hype it up.
After Twister we wondered down the street and saw the DeLorean and the train from the Back to the Future movies. Maggie was thrilled. Doc Brown was there and we took this picture:
It was fun!
We went next to ET. The wait said 10 minutes. It was more like 30 minutes. We got to sit right in the front, so that was fun. It reminded me a lot of Peter Pan, just a little longer and you get really close to the edges of the ride. It wasnt an awesome ride but it wasnt bad either. It just was.
We then moved on to MIB: Alien Attack. I knew this was going to be similar to Buzz Lightyear in that you were going to be lasering aliens. The wait again said 10 minutes. I figured that this wasnt the case but I didnt think it was going to take as long as it did. It seemed like a really long wait. We were stuck in the room with all the desks and the twin aliens for a long time. Which is strange because there is just one line going down the side of the room and it isnt that long. At one point we half heard an announcement about a delay and 26 minutes. Since it was muffled, it sounded like it was coming from somewhere else and we didnt know if it meant that we had to wait another 26 minutes or if somewhere else down the line it was 26 minutes. We eventually got to the loading area. Only one side of the track was going. The other side should have definitely been opened. One, because we waited a long time and you could move more people with two tracks opened and two, because at one point during the ride you can hit other peoples cars and make them spin out. Its hard to do that when there isnt anyone on the other side.
My score was 85,750. I dont remember Maggies but I think I beat her. The guy next to Maggie was 299,000 and the guy in front of him was 549,000. It sounded like the two guys did it a lot and it was a competition between the two of them.
We were really hungry at this point so we back-tracked and ate at Mels Diner. Maggie had a cheeseburger with fries and I had chicken fingers with fries.
Maggie liked her cheeseburger okay. I did not like my chicken fingers. The breading was too greasy. The fries weren't really all that good either. We'll have to go somewhere else next time.
To be continued with Jaws .
Day 3 Universal Where is everyone?
Monday was our Universal day. It was part of Maggies requirements for this trip. I was a little on the fence about going but I am glad that we went. I have been to Islands of Adventure (IOA) but I havent been to Universal itself.
We got free Mears transfers to and from US as part of our tickets through Dreams Unlimited travel. The tickets cost a little extra but waaay less than a two way taxi ride. I called the night before for our pick-up at 8:30am. The park hours were 9am to 5pm. I had looked up the park hours online a few weeks ago. The bus picked us up just outside of the main lobby. A few other families were waiting and there were already some other people when we got on the bus. We were given a transfer ticket back when we got on. I left our departure time open so we would have to call the number on the back of the ticket at least two hours before we wanted to be picked up.
The bus ride there was really nice. The driver was really knowledgeable and he was point out things on I-drive and showing us alligators in the water next to the roads. Yikes. There is one that is in the pond across from the entrance to POP. We saw him several times during our stay once we knew what to look for. The bus first stopped at Discovery Cove and then Sea World. It would have also stopped at Aquatica if there was anyone going there. Then it dropped us off at US around 9:00am. For those who dont know, you get dropped in the bus and taxi area. You then take an escalator up to the walkway. You join the crowd coming from the resorts and the JURASSIC PARKing




We used a kiosk to get our tickets that I bought several weeks before.

I was completely unfamiliar with US. I should have spent more time on the US boards, I know. I did sneak a peek at the touring plans in the 2009 Unofficial Guide Book. I have the 2008 early version (I didnt realize that the revised one comes out in February) and it didnt have the new Simpsons ride. I also have a subscription to touringplans.com but they didnt have online touring plans to US. So I had a rough idea of what I wanted but I felt really bereft without FP assistance. I wasnt about to pay more money for their Express Pass. I knew that we for sure had to do Simpsons first. It was, of course, at the very end of the park.
The park was EMPTY. We would turn a corner and we would be the only ones on the street. Then we would turn another corner and see two people up ahead. I was a little confused. Where was everyone? We got to the Simpsons ride and I wasnt sure exactly what it was. I read the blog on the podcast website and I had heard a few other things that it was a rollercoaster type ride. So I started to look for the lockers to put our stuff. I remembered from IOA that you had to get a locker for your stuff when you rode a rollercoaster. I couldnt find them so I walked up to the Universal..um..CM (?) and asked her if I could take my stuff on the ride. She gave me an extremely bored look and said, Yeah like I was the stupidest person ever. Okaaaay. Wow. It was very rude. (I should note that all the other CMs we ran into at Universal were very helpful.)
We walked through most of the queue because there wasnt really anyone there. You enter the queue area through Krustys mouth and it looks very carnival-ish. There are TVs with Simpsons cartoons about them being in Krustyland to occupy you while you wait. The back and forth queue line stops at a hallway and a door. They let a group of people in and you stand on numbers on the floor. There are booths all around you with Simpsons characters on the screens in the booths they randomly talk as you wait. Then you watch a short cartoon about Krustyland and how the Simpsons are the first family to ride the new rollercoaster and then you are interrupted by a news flash that Sideshow Bob has escaped prison. Krusty comes on to tell you that Sideshow Bob hasnt been spotted in the area so we're safe. Suuure we are.

**Note: If you want to be surprised by the Simpsons Ride, skip to after the starred section**
Then they take your numbered group and tell you to wait in a little room. I think there were about six of us. I felt like the CM was abandoning us. The room is tiny. It felt really weird and a bit claustrophobic. You watch another cartoon that gives you more backstory and then gives you safety information and tells you to set your things against the wall next to your car. This struck me as odd because usually the boarding area isnt a safe place to put personal items. But whatever. It takes awhile to get through each room. No wonder the queue moved so slow with only a few people in line.
Soooo. We moved to a slightly larger room with a cartoonish rollercoaster car and put our stuff against the wall. It still was a pretty small room. I dont remember what the restraints were like but I remember that I felt comfortable and safe in them. A CM came and checked on us and gave us the all clear. A roof partially came over our heads. I prepared to move forward but instead we were lifted up. Into a HUGE room. There was a screen covering your whole vision. Click.

You end up flying violently through all of Krustyland. It felt very real. (The flying through the air part.) So much so that I had to watch my feet towards the end to keep my croissant from making a second appearance.

************************************************
For those of you joining us from the other side of the stars, Maggie and I didnt like the Simpsons ride. If you get motion sick easily, I wouldnt recommend it.
Revenge of the Mummy was next on our list.

It was all the way on the other side of the park. I needed the walk in the fresh air to recover, though. Still very empty. I was a little apprehensive about this ride after the Simpsons. I thought that this was a ride on a track but people have talked about it as being a rollercoaster but not. How can it be a rollercoaster but not without being like the Simpsons? I was cheered by the sight of the lockers where you had to put your stuff. (Its free for the first 45 minutes) This was definitely something on a track.
Im not exactly sure about the premise of the ride. The queue was super short so we didnt get to see the video about what was going on. You go through several rooms. The first set of rooms are all in a museum. There is something about a curse and this guy (tourist) is trying to find out if the curse is real. Brendan Frasier is being interviewed (and wants coffee but doesnt get it) about the Mummy movies, I think. Then the second set of rooms is a movie prop area. The third set of rooms are on set in an archeological dig. That part of the queue was really neat. My sister and I are big fans of the first two Mummy movies. (The third one is awful. Ugh.) I wish she could have been there!

We waited about 15 minutes in the queue and we boarded a roller coaster car that had two cars, each seated eight people four in front and four in back.
**Note: Again, if you want to be surprised by the Mummy Ride, skip to the end of the starred section. (If you are ever going to ride it, I recommend skipping this section. It was neat not to know what was going on.)**
You start slowly on the track going through what feels like a pyramid-type structure. The tourist in the videos has been wrapped like a mummy and is telling you to go back because it is a trap and the curse is real. The cursed mummy stops you in a temple area and fire shoots up from the temple floor and you are now scrambling to escape him. You are on a rollercoaster ride in the dark (basically). You climb up and then the mummy pushes you backwards. You start and stop. He sends scarab beetles after you. They stop you at the ride end where a CM in the control room tells you to disembark but she gets sucked up by the mummy and he lights the ceiling on fire. It was HOT. And you go through another ride in the dark and then you really stop when you see Brendan Frasier talking to you on a screen. He finally gets his coffee but it is delivered by the mummy and the screen abruptly goes black as the mummy attacks him.
******************************************************
We really enjoyed this ride! I dont know why they said it was like a rollercoaster but not. It is definitely a rollercoaster. It starts and stops which is the only reason that I could think of as to why they would say but not.
I didnt really feel sick. I had a slight twinge at the end but I experience worse while riding in a car. Its all about proper breathing. I time my breathing really carefully. I exhale on any curves, dips and on any sudden stops. I inhale on hills or right as the ride launches forward. Its second nature to me now. It doesnt detract from the ride experience. I do it in the car, too. It took me awhile to figure out what worked for me. You can launch me up and down all day long its the twists and turns that do me in. If there is a ride that makes you a little queasy, try a long, slow exhale on the parts that make you queasy and long, slow inhale on the parts that you feel fine. Do not hold your breath. That does not help.
Okay, back to the trip report. Love the Mummy! We decided to chuck our touring plans at this point because it was so uncrowded. We decided that we would do the rides as we walked through the park and as we felt like it. We did Twister next.

As described from the Universal website Step into one of the most action-packed movies of all time, and feel what it's like to be a storm chaser, looking a tornado right in the eye. Tornadoes scare the heck out of me. Were from Minnesota and Maggie and I have both experienced our share of tornadoes. Luckily, we have never been directly under one but we have watched them form and watched them go by. We have watched the sky turn green, the air go dead and the sirens wail. Then the sky goes black and the wind whips and clouds start moving strangely overhead. Weve sat in the basement with our families and waited, not knowing if this time our house will be hit. It is very frightening. Twister wasnt anything like that.
It was very bizarre to tell the truth. They kept cautioning about how pregnant women should not ride, there was going to be extremely high winds, you WILL get wet, etc.

Bill Paxton and Helen Hunt come and talk about how conditions filming were extreme and tornadoes are huge, frightening forces of nature. You then stand at some railings facing a drive-in movie screen and parking lot (like the Twister movie) and you hear the sirens (that was the most chilling part) and then see the Twister coming in the background. Then it is in front of you and its tiny and white/gray. Things start flying around and then your platform shakes and then drops and thats it. We didnt get wet and we didnt really feel super high winds. I dont know why a pregnant woman would be in danger from a railing dropping six inches. It felt nothing like a real tornado. Not that I wanted to feel like that but they really hype it up.
After Twister we wondered down the street and saw the DeLorean and the train from the Back to the Future movies. Maggie was thrilled. Doc Brown was there and we took this picture:

It was fun!
We went next to ET. The wait said 10 minutes. It was more like 30 minutes. We got to sit right in the front, so that was fun. It reminded me a lot of Peter Pan, just a little longer and you get really close to the edges of the ride. It wasnt an awesome ride but it wasnt bad either. It just was.
We then moved on to MIB: Alien Attack. I knew this was going to be similar to Buzz Lightyear in that you were going to be lasering aliens. The wait again said 10 minutes. I figured that this wasnt the case but I didnt think it was going to take as long as it did. It seemed like a really long wait. We were stuck in the room with all the desks and the twin aliens for a long time. Which is strange because there is just one line going down the side of the room and it isnt that long. At one point we half heard an announcement about a delay and 26 minutes. Since it was muffled, it sounded like it was coming from somewhere else and we didnt know if it meant that we had to wait another 26 minutes or if somewhere else down the line it was 26 minutes. We eventually got to the loading area. Only one side of the track was going. The other side should have definitely been opened. One, because we waited a long time and you could move more people with two tracks opened and two, because at one point during the ride you can hit other peoples cars and make them spin out. Its hard to do that when there isnt anyone on the other side.
My score was 85,750. I dont remember Maggies but I think I beat her. The guy next to Maggie was 299,000 and the guy in front of him was 549,000. It sounded like the two guys did it a lot and it was a competition between the two of them.
We were really hungry at this point so we back-tracked and ate at Mels Diner. Maggie had a cheeseburger with fries and I had chicken fingers with fries.


Maggie liked her cheeseburger okay. I did not like my chicken fingers. The breading was too greasy. The fries weren't really all that good either. We'll have to go somewhere else next time.
To be continued with Jaws .