thewritegirl
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2010
- Messages
- 187
We just got back this morning from our trip to DL - had a great time, of course!
I often see threads on here about saving money on the trip, or eating cheap, and I thought I'd share what we did, which worked wonderfully. We are a family of four and spent less than $50/day on food, except the day we ate at Ariel's Grotto. One day, we only spent $20! And all without leaving the park once we were in or feeling deprived at all.
The first important thing we did was stay at a hotel that offered a free breakfast. We chose the Park Vue Inn (which I was thrilled with, btw). They had a really good breakfast to choose from - plenty of hot items (eggs, hashbrowns, sausage, bacon, waffles, etc) and cold items (yogurt, fresh fruit, cold cereal). They had oatmeal, bagels and cream cheese, donuts, pretty much something for anyone. So, I encouraged the kiddos to eat a fairly hearty breakfast so no one was hungry early in the day.
Then, we brought lots of individually packaged snacks from home. I brought jerky, pretzels, granola bars, fruit snacks, power bars, fresh fruit, etc. Each day, I tossed plenty of them into our backpack. When the kids got hungry around midday, we snacked on items from the backpack. Then, we had a late lunch/early dinner around 4pm or so. This way, we were only buying one meal in the park. Several of the days, we also purchased a treat, like a Dole Whip, but since we were only buying the one meal in the park, the cost stayed low.
I also brought juice boxes for the kids, and even brought those Starbucks Via packets that you mix with water for coffee, though I never actually used those.
A couple of other random thoughts...
The kids meals at the Pizza Port in Tomorrowland were a JOKE! I was so glad the CM showed me how big they were before we ordered them. The mini pizzas were about 3" across. Instead, the four of us shared 3 entrees - a big salad, and two kinds of pasta. Worked great.
I thought we'd be going during a slow time, but it was sort of a strange thing. There weren't enough people to have all the queues open on the rides, so they were at about half capacity most of the time, which actually meant there were longer lines than there would have been if there were more people. Does that make sense?
The bunkbeds at the Park Vue Inn were a life saver. We stayed one night at the Anaheim Plaza (got into town a day earlier than expected), and my kids had to share a queen bed. Arg! They complained all night, it seemed - someone was always kicking or hogging the bed or the blankets or whatever. Loved that they each had their own space at the Park Vue and they slept soo much better.
We spent more than half our time at CA, I think. There are so many fun rides on that side!
We had a 6 day park hopper. We were there to open the park every morning and closed it every night, except the one night it was open till midnight. There were STILL things we hadn't done on the 5th day! It was great. No one got sick of it, and my son cried in the car on the way home that he missed Disneyland.
I often see threads on here about saving money on the trip, or eating cheap, and I thought I'd share what we did, which worked wonderfully. We are a family of four and spent less than $50/day on food, except the day we ate at Ariel's Grotto. One day, we only spent $20! And all without leaving the park once we were in or feeling deprived at all.
The first important thing we did was stay at a hotel that offered a free breakfast. We chose the Park Vue Inn (which I was thrilled with, btw). They had a really good breakfast to choose from - plenty of hot items (eggs, hashbrowns, sausage, bacon, waffles, etc) and cold items (yogurt, fresh fruit, cold cereal). They had oatmeal, bagels and cream cheese, donuts, pretty much something for anyone. So, I encouraged the kiddos to eat a fairly hearty breakfast so no one was hungry early in the day.
Then, we brought lots of individually packaged snacks from home. I brought jerky, pretzels, granola bars, fruit snacks, power bars, fresh fruit, etc. Each day, I tossed plenty of them into our backpack. When the kids got hungry around midday, we snacked on items from the backpack. Then, we had a late lunch/early dinner around 4pm or so. This way, we were only buying one meal in the park. Several of the days, we also purchased a treat, like a Dole Whip, but since we were only buying the one meal in the park, the cost stayed low.
I also brought juice boxes for the kids, and even brought those Starbucks Via packets that you mix with water for coffee, though I never actually used those.
A couple of other random thoughts...
The kids meals at the Pizza Port in Tomorrowland were a JOKE! I was so glad the CM showed me how big they were before we ordered them. The mini pizzas were about 3" across. Instead, the four of us shared 3 entrees - a big salad, and two kinds of pasta. Worked great.
I thought we'd be going during a slow time, but it was sort of a strange thing. There weren't enough people to have all the queues open on the rides, so they were at about half capacity most of the time, which actually meant there were longer lines than there would have been if there were more people. Does that make sense?
The bunkbeds at the Park Vue Inn were a life saver. We stayed one night at the Anaheim Plaza (got into town a day earlier than expected), and my kids had to share a queen bed. Arg! They complained all night, it seemed - someone was always kicking or hogging the bed or the blankets or whatever. Loved that they each had their own space at the Park Vue and they slept soo much better.
We spent more than half our time at CA, I think. There are so many fun rides on that side!
We had a 6 day park hopper. We were there to open the park every morning and closed it every night, except the one night it was open till midnight. There were STILL things we hadn't done on the 5th day! It was great. No one got sick of it, and my son cried in the car on the way home that he missed Disneyland.
