Having visited Disney World numerous times, will I be "let down" when visiting DL?

Koz

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Aug 11, 2011
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Family of 4, 2 kids under the age of 7 who are both Disney fanatics. We love the entire DW experience, the Magical Express, a DW hotel (Wilderness Lodge), coming and going from the parks, multiple parks, all with their own distinct feel. Significant character interaction, numerous restaurant choices, the fact that you can spread it out over 8 days, etc.

Looking to DL, I have the feeling that lodging, and dining is certainly a big step down, and that you won't get the same overall experience of feeling as though you're "immersed" in Disney, rather, that it would simply feel as though you're visiting your local Six Flags park for a few days in a row, that the "magic" we've grown accustomed to simply won't be there.

Am I reading too much into the differences? I'm curious to see what comparisons those of you can make, having first visited DW and then DL.

Thanks for your time!
 
Family of 4, 2 kids under the age of 7 who are both Disney fanatics. We love the entire DW experience, the Magical Express, a DW hotel (Wilderness Lodge), coming and going from the parks, multiple parks, all with their own distinct feel. Significant character interaction, numerous restaurant choices, the fact that you can spread it out over 8 days, etc.

Looking to DL, I have the feeling that lodging, and dining is certainly a big step down, and that you won't get the same overall experience of feeling as though you're "immersed" in Disney, rather, that it would simply feel as though you're visiting your local Six Flags park for a few days in a row, that the "magic" we've grown accustomed to simply won't be there.

Am I reading too much into the differences? I'm curious to see what comparisons those of you can make, having first visited DW and then DL.

Thanks for your time!

Expect quite the opposite. DL is a completely different intimate experience:cloud9:

Start here

http://www.disboards.com/showthread.php?t=1162599
 
If you set yourself up to be then you will be. DLR is not WDW or even close. It is the original that Walt built and much more.

Jack
 
First, you have to go into with an open mind and remember that the two are not the same. From what I have read, most people like you who are WDW regulars end up loving DL. It is a very intimate park. The two parks are very close (just across the escapade from each other) and it is very easy to Park Hop. Many of the motels are within walking distance so need to shuttle to your hotel and it doesn't take long to get to your hotel. DTD is right there as well. The parks are very manageable especially with small children. I think you will find that they will be able to last longer and see more because the parks are not spread out so much. It doesn't take much to criss cross back and forth in DL. Remember, DL is where the magic all started. It is Walt's Park. Don't forget to look up at the light in the window above the Fire Station. That was Walt's apartment and the light is always on. And there are rides that are unique to DL and CA so enjoy those.
 

If you love Fort Wilderness, then you should love the Grand Californian. I would definitely suggest staying there.
 
I love both DL and WDW, but I think DL might be my favorite. It is so, so much easier to visit with small children. No bussing, no hour round trip to get to and from your hotel for a nap or an offsite meal. The dining isn't as good at DL, but it's much, much easier to get some inexpensive offsite dining if you want (and you can splurge and have an amazing meal at Napa Rose if you want fabulous food). It is nothing like Six Flags. It's Disney, built by Walt. Disneyland is better than MK, IMHO, and you have California Adventure, which has rides you won't see in WDW. I don't think you'll regret it!
 
When my family planned our first trip to WDW I tried not to allow myself to expect something it may not live up to. Don't come to DL with the expectation that you are going to be disapointed. Instead, you should expect a different experience than WDW. Not better but not worse, it's just different. You may decide that you prefer WDW more but you took the time to see what Disneyland was all about and hopefully it won't be a disapointment.

I couldn't wait to see what WDW was all about. I'm glad we were able to experience it. We have been 2 times now and my daughter and I may go back in a year or two. Disneyland is 40 mins. away from us so it will always be our "home" park.

Plan a trip to DL with the mindset that your family wants to see Disneyland for the first time. See it as an adventure!
 
As has been said, it is the original, the park that Walt built. There is magic everywhere. Check out the Secrets thread, it has some great tips about finding the magic is lots of little, and some very big, ways.

Try not to compare, just allow yourself to be immersed in all that is Disneyland!
 
I am a huge fan of WDW & we go there every 2 yrs. We tried DL once. Now it is not like Six Flags at all. It's still Disney! However, I did not feel the "magic" there as I do at WDW. Part of it was not getting the immersed feeling like I do at WDW. It is still a fun place w/rides you can only experience there. You just can't go there expecting the same as WDW.
Now having said that, we are going back to DL next month. My main reason is b/c we have a 2 yr old & there are so many little rides for him between the 2 parks. Plus, we can walk to hotel, DTD, & both parks which will make nap time easier. I am also looking forward to trying new rides that WDW doesn't have like Indy, Screamin, & Matterhorn. I know it won't replace my love for WDW, but I know we will still have a great time as a family.
You can have a great time too if you don't expect it to be the same as WDW, but as a chance to see another Disney resort.
 
Stay at the Grand Californian. It is located right up against California Adventure with its own enterance gate. If you need to take a rest or change clothes its just a few minute walk from CA to your room.

California Adventure, Disneyland, Grand Californian and Downtown Disney are all 5 minutes walk from each other. Its easy and common to park hop between the two parks daily, sometimes 2-3 times in a single day in order to catch desired shows and attractions.

We love being able to walk out of Disneyland or California Adventure and dine at one of several Downtown Disney restaurants without the time involved in taking a bus, boat or monorail as we do at WDW.

You will be completely immersed in Disney during your stay as everything is right there out your hotel door (at California Adventure). Disneyland Hotel would be a 2nd choice as its located right at the end of Downtown Disney with a monorail stop that takes you inside Disneyland to Tomorrowland.
 
I am a huge fan of WDW & we go there every 2 yrs. We tried DL once. Now it is not like Six Flags at all. It's still Disney! However, I did not feel the "magic" there as I do at WDW. Part of it was not getting the immersed feeling like I do at WDW. It is still a fun place w/rides you can only experience there. You just can't go there expecting the same as WDW.
Now having said that, we are going back to DL next month. My main reason is b/c we have a 2 yr old & there are so many little rides for him between the 2 parks. Plus, we can walk to hotel, DTD, & both parks which will make nap time easier. I am also looking forward to trying new rides that WDW doesn't have like Indy, Screamin, & Matterhorn. I know it won't replace my love for WDW, but I know we will still have a great time as a family.
You can have a great time too if you don't expect it to be the same as WDW, but as a chance to see another Disney resort.

I feel the same way. I like certain aspects of DL and I enjoy going but it is not the same as WDW. Never was, never will be. That is why WDW was built. However, I still think that DL is special in it's own way. I had a fun time comparing the two. Storybook Canal is my favorite Disney ride ever! It is very much worth going to visit.

When are you planning on going? I would try to go after the construction is complete in California Adventure. The massive amount of walls really takes away from the atmosphere.
 
Family of 4, 2 kids under the age of 7 who are both Disney fanatics. We love the entire DW experience, the Magical Express, a DW hotel (Wilderness Lodge), coming and going from the parks, multiple parks, all with their own distinct feel. Significant character interaction, numerous restaurant choices, the fact that you can spread it out over 8 days, etc.

Looking to DL, I have the feeling that lodging, and dining is certainly a big step down, and that you won't get the same overall experience of feeling as though you're "immersed" in Disney, rather, that it would simply feel as though you're visiting your local Six Flags park for a few days in a row, that the "magic" we've grown accustomed to simply won't be there.

Am I reading too much into the differences? I'm curious to see what comparisons those of you can make, having first visited DW and then DL.

Thanks for your time!
The funny thing about WDW vets is the subtle unspoken (and often unrecognized) expectation that they want DLR to be a carbon copy of WDW - just on the west coast. Which begs the question...why would you bother going? If WDW is closer and you know it, why go to another place that is a duplicate?

When posed this way, WDW vets would say "we want to go to DLR because we want to try something different". Then when things are different they are disappointed! Talk about setting yourself up for failure!

DLR is different. Different means worse in some ways and better in others. And it means different things to different people. WDW vets are so conditioned like Pavlov's dogs to make ADR's 6 months in advance that they break into a cold sweat when they can't do the same at DLR. Convincing them that this is a good thing is a challenge. Most DLR dining reservations can be obtained a week or even a day ahead of time.

Dining is not as big a deal at DLR. Not because the food is inherently worse but more because DLR visitors are not into dining as much. On the other hand they are into rides even more than WDW vets in my experience. And the shows at DLR. You will wonder why WDW can't do shows the way DLR does!

Yes, DLR is not as spread out as WDW and not as immersive - at least not in the way WDW is immersive. But it also does not require you to wait for and board endless buses, boats, monorails and trams. You can do the whole thing on foot. Think about having a hotel room where the door of your room is closer to the park gates than some of the bus and boat dropoffs are at WDW!

From this link "A DLR Guide for WDW Vets" www.disboards.com/showthread.php?t=1162599 here is my list of areas where DLR exceeds WDW. Hope you can make it out for a different kind of Disney visit!

22. Areas Where DLR Exceeds WDW

Let me come out and say it right upfront - WDW has many things about it better than DLR. However, not everything about WDW is better than DLR and there are several areas where DLR exceeds WDW. That is what makes each resort special. Here is my list of areas where DLR exceeds WDW:

1. Weather - IMO the weather at DLR is better than WDW on average, and especially in the summer. Less rain and less humidity. See "Comparison of Weather For WDW and DLR" www.disboards.com/showthread.php?t=1711098

2. Ride concentration - One would think that WDW would have twice as many rides as DLR since it has twice as many parks. Nope. WDW has only 10% more rides. DLR has lots more rides packed into those little parks.

3. Entertainment - as of today DLR's top four shows are better than their counterparts at WDW. That would be World of Color, the Remember Dreams Come True fireworks/laser/special effects show (shown seasonally), Fantasmic and the Aladdin stage show

4. Accessibility - everything can be reached on foot and park hopping takes about 1 minute. The walking distance hotels makes for a different experience.

5. Longer park hours - along with #4 above makes it easier to spend more time in the parks.

6. Much less need for planning - for those accustomed to choosing parks and ADR's 6 months in advance you can forget about that. You can't make dining reservations until 2 months in advance and even then they are in much less demand than WDW. Even if you wait until a week before your trip many dining reservations are still available. And since it is so easy to parkhop there is no need to commit to parks on given days. Finally, if you stay at a walking distance hotel there is no need to plan for transportation.

7. Seasonal makeovers - Because DLR caters less to out-of-town vacationers they are more free to change their rides. So every year three rides get seasonal makeovers: From September-January Haunted Mansion is converted into "Haunted Mansion Holiday". From November-January It's A Small World is converted into "It's A Small World Holiday" and from September-October Space Mountain is converted into Space Mountain Ghost Galaxy. This keeps the parks more dynamic and interesting. This does require taking down the rides to install and remove the makeover elements.

8. Extended trip touring outside DLR - as discussed in the next section, there is a lot to do in California if you stay longer than DLR - natural, cultural, historical, entertainment, sports, etc. More of a variety and more interesting things than Florida. Fabulous National Parks such as Yosemite and Sequoia, within reach of the Grand Canyon in adjacent Arizona, accessible to Las Vegas, San Francisco, Lake Tahoe, Wine Country north of the Bay Area, Monterey, Big Sur coastline, and Death Valley. Then there is Hollywood and the entertainment industry, aviation history, a real Universal Studios that is not just a theme park, Spanish mission history, mountains and skiing, and whitewater rafting. The list goes on and on and on. Florida is not without opportunities outside WDW but the list is much shorter.
 
Disneyland is the most magical of the parks IMHO. It is intimate, not to be confused with small. It's Walt's park and you can feel the magic there, more so than in any WDW park or DCA. :lovestruc

If you think you'll be let down, then you'll be let down. :goodvibes
 
Six Flags? Make no mistake - DL is the original Disney park and it will never be like visiting a Six Flags park. Was DL built more as a day visit park rather than a week long vacation resort? Yes, it was, and because of that you will not have the same experience. There are a ton of restaurants at WDW because so many people are eating three meals a day on property. Not the case at DL. But then you don't have to decide six months ahead of time where you want to eat either. You can almost always get a priority seating (ADR equivalent) a few days ahead and most times can get seated as a walk up. This gives you more flexibility, which with young kids can be a very good thing. Assuming you spend a week on a WDW vacation, how much of this is in the parks and how much at the resort/or waterparks? If your family spends most of its time inside the parks, I think that you will not be disappointed. As you have young kids, I think that you will enjoy the close proximity of the two parks. If you have to visit in the summer, you will love the climiate in So Cal. You dont need to spend a whole week at the parks but there are plenty of other things to see in the LA area. If you like immersion stay on property; however, I usually stay off property and still feel plenty of magic. If you spend a significant amount of time at the resort swimming and relaxing, then you will probably not be as happy at DL. If Epcot World Showcase or the Animinal Kingdom is your favorite park, there isn't anything like that at DL. However, next summer Carsland will open, that and plenty of other rides only exist at DLR. The experiences are not the same but both are Disney and each has advantages/disadvantages over the other.
 
Thanks for all of the information! Believe me when I tell you that I want to approach DL with an open-mind, and the opinions provided above have certainly opened my eyes. I will certainly do my research but am curious as to the construction noted above- can anyone shed some light on that for me?
 
Thanks for all of the information! Believe me when I tell you that I want to approach DL with an open-mind, and the opinions provided above have certainly opened my eyes. I will certainly do my research but am curious as to the construction noted above- can anyone shed some light on that for me?

DCA is currently under a 1 billion dollar makeover. This includes a huge chunk of the middle of the park and the addition of a whole new land, Carsland. This has the park under significant construction and there are a lot of construction walls up at this time. Disney being Disney, they are doing a great job of minimizing the impact on guests, but the park is definitely not looking its best right now.

This has more of an impact during busy times, when walkways that were not built to handle so many people become quite crowded. During less busy times, it is not quite as noticeable. Rides themselves are not impacted (excluding the rides being built in Carsland), but moving around the park is hampered.

This construction is slated to be done in "Summer 2012". At first it was thought Disney would push for an earlier summer opening, but latest rumors are that it might not be done until later summer. At any rate, no one really knows. What we do know is that prior to the re-opening of DCA it shouldn't be that bad crowd-wise. As soon as the park re-opens you can bet it will be stuffed to the brim with locals and tourists.

If this is a once in a lifetime kind of trip, I would wait to see the finished product and deal with the crowds. However, I know several folks who said they were just going to Disneyland once who totally changed their minds and have been back again and again. :)
 
Thanks for all of the information! Believe me when I tell you that I want to approach DL with an open-mind, and the opinions provided above have certainly opened my eyes. I will certainly do my research but am curious as to the construction noted above- can anyone shed some light on that for me?

The front entrance to CA is being re done. It is completely blocked off and you are routed around to a different entrance by Soarin. There are lots of walls up. Also, Carsland is being built as well so there are walls up between Bugs Land and the Pier. No rides are closed due to this construction just some of the shops that were at the entrance are no longer there. When you walk from Condor Flat where Soarin is to the Hollywood stage area you are walking between tall walls and cannot see anything on either side due to construction. It can feel strange but depending on when you are planning on going, this may be all done with. Carsland is suppose to be done in Early June and the front entrance is suppose to be sometime during the summer. If you go late summer 2012 or after that, this should all be open. Carsland is going to be very cool. If your children love the Cars movies then you may want to wait until to go until this is open. They are going to have a full size Radiator Springs. Can't wait to take my DS6 there.
 
First thing ya gotta do is...focus on the Matterhorn, and forget about the castle. Remind the family that the castle glints to an entirely different princess, so it's ok that it's not as large. And then enjoy walking through the castle to get to fantasyland, instead of having to walk around.

Enjoy the dizziness you'll experience when you think you know where you are, but are then surprised. We crack up when that happens at WDW since we are still newbies there!


We have enjoyed our two trips to WDW since December, but we yearn for DLR and it's wonderfulness!!!!!
 
Family of 4, 2 kids under the age of 7 who are both Disney fanatics. We love the entire DW experience, the Magical Express, a DW hotel (Wilderness Lodge), coming and going from the parks, multiple parks, all with their own distinct feel. Significant character interaction, numerous restaurant choices, the fact that you can spread it out over 8 days, etc.

Looking to DL, I have the feeling that lodging, and dining is certainly a big step down, and that you won't get the same overall experience of feeling as though you're "immersed" in Disney, rather, that it would simply feel as though you're visiting your local Six Flags park for a few days in a row, that the "magic" we've grown accustomed to simply won't be there.

Am I reading too much into the differences? I'm curious to see what comparisons those of you can make, having first visited DW and then DL.

Thanks for your time!

I'm in the same boat you're in. My family of 5 heads to DLR next week. The past 2 falls we visited WDW and had a blast, staying at POR and dining on the dining plan. We had a blast! My wife and I decided to surprise our 3 kids with a DLR trip next week. We still haven't told them and are still working on how we'll brake it to them.

I'm not expecting WDW, but I'm looking forward to a different Disney experience.

We're staying at the Ramada Maingate and are looking forward to being across the street from the parks. I'm also looking forward to a smaller price tag than POR. I don't expect the same experience as staying at a WDW resort, but it's a lot closer and cheaper! I think our room w/tax comes to about $80 per night.

Food has been a huge part of our past WDW experiences as we have always been on the dining plan. I'm not sure we saved money, but I liked the idea of having paid in advance and it encouraged us to try different restaurants. At DLR, we'll play it by ear.

We are also planning on renting a car and taking in some other sites while in California, ie, Hollywood, Venice Beach, etc. At WDW he never left WDW.

I can't wait for our trip and I look forward to reporting back when we return from DLR.

Mike

:banana:
 

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