I think the souvenir my daughter bought would be nice for your mum. She bought a time turner. The magical necklace Hermione wore in the films? It is fairly large pendant on a chain and it came in a beautiful resin display case with a mirrored back.Will be at Universal in 2 weeks at end of WDW trip. Mainly going as DS is a huge minion/DM fan. He is 6 and too small for many rides & has no idea who HP is. That said, if not super crowded, I would like to see some HP stuff. Which part is 'can't miss?'
My mom is a HP fan & I would love to get her a great souvenir. Are the wands anything special without the interactive stuff in the park? Can you buy one or does it have to 'pick' you. No idea how it works. Any other ideas for a unique souvenir?
If he's 47.5 inches then he's tall enough. I'm assuming the doctor measured him without shoes and all shoes add at least a half an inch. Why don't you measure him in shoes or sneakers and see what you get.Mickeyluv'r, that's what happened to DS. First CM said yes, second said no. Tears ensued. Required retail therapy to remedy while older cousin rode EE. He still keeps asking if I'm sure he'll be able to ride EE this time. Won't make that mistake again. I know he's not 48" (measure at Dr two weeks ago) so we won't try.
Thanks again Andre & Mickeyluv'r
SINGLE RIDER LINES: I have a daughter who will be at UO next week and she asked me to help her with trip planning. I've never been to UO, nor has she. I will definitely be telling her to take advantage of single rider lines when queue times get ridiculous. I've scoured the UO website but don't see a list of attractions that offer single rider lines. Is there a list hiding on the website that someone can point me to or does anyone know how many of the rides offer a single rider line?
Thank you, DisneyFreak06. I may just have to piece my list together. If I ever feel like I have a complete list, I'll post it for others.I'm not a pro at all, but I remember SR at a few rides: Gringotts, Men in Black, Rip Ride Rocket, Transformers (although I didn't need it when I went), Dr. Doom's FearFall and Forbidden Journey. There could be others, but I do recall these ones for sure.
Mickeyluv'r, that's what happened to DS. First CM said yes, second said no. Tears ensued. Required retail therapy to remedy while older cousin rode EE. He still keeps asking if I'm sure he'll be able to ride EE this time. Won't make that mistake again. I know he's not 48" (measure at Dr two weeks ago) so we won't try.
Thanks again Andre & Mickeyluv'r
I would have thought that 1/2 inch might be corrected by the right footwear without you having to do anything abnormal (they don't mind regular shoes, but platforms and stilts might be frowned upon...). You can ask for him to be measured before you join the queue (although be aware of the comments above, which should not happen but you can never know for sure). But at least he'll definitely be able to do several of the rides, and they are great fun and very involving whether or not he likes the Harry Potter stories (in the same way that Spiderman and Transformers are fun even if you have not seen the films).
The active wands (the $50 ones that you can use around the park as mentioned above) are fun too, rather like the Sorcerers of the Magic Kingdom game but with a bit more of a skill element. The prop replica wands are non-active and cheaper, sold as souvenir collectibles rather than activities. I have <cough> one or two displayed on my wall here.
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Have a great time at POR too.
Andre
I need some advice. Next Dec we are taking our son and his girlfriend to Disney (she's never been) but she is a huge Harry Potter fan and would love to do a day at Universal. It appears we would need passes for both parks to ride the train. Any advice would be much appreciated. TIA.
ThanksYes, you do need a park-to-park ticket in order to visit both parts of the Wizarding World (which are connected via the Hogwarts Express train). Universal are not stupid.
We did the same as you plan to do and bought an (expensive!) one-day hopper ticket, basically in order to just do all of the Harry Potter attractions. We did manage to do some other Universal stuff too, but as far as we were concerned we had already justified the cost so anything else was just a bonus anyway.
I would suggest arriving at the parking lot about one hour before the stated park opening time, and head for whichever of the two parks does not currently have early access hotel guests (if possible) as the best strategy.
Andre
I would suggest arriving at the parking lot about one hour before the stated park opening time, and head for whichever of the two parks does not currently have early access hotel guests (if possible) as the best strategy.
Quick question for you - is there a way to tell which of the two parks is offering early access for their hotel guests? I've done a few internet searches, but it doesn't seem to be an easy thing to find.
I found it hard to be certain too, it's not widely advertised at all. When we went they had just switched from both parks offering early-entry to only IoA offering it. I think Touringplans.com had the information but even they stated it can change at any time.
Any ideas on the best way to suprise her? I was thinking about a HP acceptance letter the night before (but would it need to say coming for a visit, because at her age she seriously believes)