pkondz
Brace yourself for immediate disintegration
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2007
- Messages
- 33,398
I like the way you think!

It's a beautiful resort!! And the atmosphere/vibe is just so great. We're slowly trying to check off every Disney resort as budget allows and as we find good deals, etc. But I feel like Wilderness Lodge will always keep tempting me away from other places. We almost booked it for our upcoming anniversary trip. But I'll just have to settle for visiting and eating there, which is almost as good!
Almost. And that's what I'll settle with too.

It was so great! Every once in a while an allergy chef just gets creative and goes out of their way, and it might just be a little thing for them, but for me it's super exciting and meaningful. I don't usually get to go to restaurants that have bottomless milkshakes and get to try my own milkshake.
I'm certainly glad you were able to have one!

It's so easy to do...especially when it's been almost a year.
Oh, Lord. I know.
Yeah, we're obviously Disney troublemakers.

I take my Buzz Lightyear's Space Ranger Spin very seriously.
Obviously!
I'll go for a dole whip with you, but won't take you on at Buzz!
It's amazing how much a day of park touring will give you an appetite!

I don't know how we managed to eat so much food in one trip.More incredible is that we only put on a couple of pounds over the two weeks. I guess all those steps and all the sweating must have saved us.

I definitely learned my lesson! Now if I were going to schedule any non-park activities, it would be at the beginning or in the middle, and definitely not at the end. My rationale was that I'd put it at the end of the trip because Daytona is already on our driving route back home, and so after how exhausted we'd be at the end of the trip we'd just have a day or two of relaxing at the beach to recoup. That, and I wanted to give us as much time as possible to adjust to the heat so I didn't feel like death sitting on the beach in the sun in the early days of the trip. I don't handle the heat well, especially at the beach, and I thought it would help me to be less zonked. But as true as all of those things were, they didn't take into account the strongest force of all: the post-Disney depression.
That's a force that is not to be denied.
I did. And it made me feel happy and sad at the same time.

I get it.
The first time we ever went there, they even sat us in the New Brunswick section, which is the province where we both grew up.

But it just feels so familiar! All the cast members feel like talking to people at home. I can only imagine how much more strongly this would apply to people who move to a new country and find a community of people from their home country. Like my step father who immigrated from Greece and immediately became heavily involved in the Greek community where he was living.
I totally get this. My Dad immigrated from Germany and has been the president of the German Congress here.
Apparently it's called Ramune, according to Su-Lynn and Google. It's a Japanese soft drink. It comes in little glass bottles with a marble trapped in the neck creating a seal, and when you open it the marble is forced down into the bottom of the bottle. I didn't try it, but Nathan thought it was nifty.
Huh. Might have to look for that.
I'm all over trying new soft drinks.
Mo'Rockin' forever! They were my favourite act at Epcot, by far!
Wish I'd seen them. Ah well.
That said, Nathan ordered the giant rib-eye the last time we went because he had a bigger appetite and wanted to try something more marbled, and he loved it and said he wouldn't go back to the filet!
Really!
Maybe I'll have to pay it a return visit.

(That same trip of the rib-eye we had taken my mom and grandmother there with us, and my grandmother just ordered a poutine, and not even a very Canadian-sounding one, and I was so disappointed.)

I saw that poutine on the menu and just shook my head.