Jersey Week... Am I crazy??

Disney44please

Always Planing a Trip to the House of the Mouse!
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Oct 11, 2013
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Hey all!

We are going back to Disney in April and while there I am thinking about booking a BB offer for October 29 - November 4th. My son is starting school this year and he is off on November 3rd & 4th, so the week works out great! That was until I realized that Jersey Week is that week. I am getting conflicting reports as to how busy it is and how much of an impact the crowd surge will make. Some additional notes in case anyone is wondering, Food & Wine ends November 10th & F&W Marathon is November 8th, so we will miss out of both of these.

Any thoughts?

Thanks!!
 
I was there during that time last year and thought it was a great time to go. Crowds were not bad at all.

Hey all!

We are going back to Disney in April and while there I am thinking about booking a BB offer for October 29 - November 4th. My son is starting school this year and he is off on November 3rd & 4th, so the week works out great! That was until I realized that Jersey Week is that week. I am getting conflicting reports as to how busy it is and how much of an impact the crowd surge will make. Some additional notes in case anyone is wondering, Food & Wine ends November 10th & F&W Marathon is November 8th, so we will miss out of both of these.

Any thoughts?

Thanks!!
 
I've gone during Jersey week a few times, the most recent 2 years ago. The crowds were not bad and the standby lines were fairly quick. For the most part, the weather was great and the trip enjoyable. The only thing that I noticed was that everyone who I talked with was from New Jersey (learned a lot about that state during those visits!).:laughing:
 
Crazy, those people are nuts :) but seriously our last two trips were during that week and the crowds were not that bad. The Veterans Day weekend at the end of Jersey week last year was a little crowded, but manageable. Weather was great and getting a taste of F&W is awesome. Have a great trip!
 

We went just a few years ago during Jersey Week (the entire week) and the only thing I found strange and different was having to hold in my question of "what exit are you from?" to the others in line if I realized they were from Jersey. :rotfl::rotfl::rotfl2::rotfl2:
 
We went just a few years ago during Jersey Week (the entire week) and the only thing I found strange and different was having to hold in my question of "what exit are you from?" to the others in line if I realized they were from Jersey. :rotfl::rotfl::rotfl2::rotfl2:

Now that's not funny... ;) of course when I see someone from the South struggling with something, I do say "bless her heart" because we know what that really means.
 
We were there a couple years ago during Jersey Week, and while it was definitely more crowded than the week before Thanksgiving (my single favorite week all year), it was nothing that would keep me from booking that week again. It really IS funny how every other person you meet is from New Jersey! :rotfl:
 
NJ Teachers' Union holds a convention Thursday and Friday that week. Some schools have other "teacher in service" days that week, too, since it is common for families to take vacation the whole week without their kids missing much. So....it's called "Jersey Week" unofficially at WDW by park visitors. My state invades the parks! Not uncommon to see someone you know!
 
That week sees higher crowds than other weeks around that time, but it's certainly not President's Week. If that was the only week I could go, I wouldn't let Jersey Week deter me. We had options last year and went the week before Thankgiving, after Jersey Week, and it was great.
 
NJ Teachers' Union holds a convention Thursday and Friday that week. Some schools have other "teacher in service" days that week, too, since it is common for families to take vacation the whole week without their kids missing much. So....it's called "Jersey Week" unofficially at WDW by park visitors. My state invades the parks! Not uncommon to see someone you know!

We did Jersey week once when we lived in NJ (military move) and it was a blast! Busy but not overly crowded. Pleasant weather too!

We kept running into neighbors and friends in every park. My youngest daughter, then about 9 saw a boy from her class and they decided to sign each other's autograph books. I think they didn't know what else to do to acknowledge each other. They just looked at each other, mumbled "hi" and swapped books.

Side notes:

When you move to NJ, the first thing your new, local friends teach you is "don't say you are from any exit. No one really does that. It's weird."

Other rules for jersey newbies:

- no pumping gas
- learn to love jug handles
- it's not the ocean, it's the shore
- Bon Jovi = nicest guy ever but Bruce is still the Boss.
-"yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah" means - "I know just what you mean, but wait until you hear this..."
-see you in Florida in Nov.
 
We did Jersey week once when we lived in NJ (military move) and it was a blast! Busy but not overly crowded. Pleasant weather too!

We kept running into neighbors and friends in every park. My youngest daughter, then about 9 saw a boy from her class and they decided to sign each other's autograph books. I think they didn't know what else to do to acknowledge each other. They just looked at each other, mumbled "hi" and swapped books.

Side notes:

When you move to NJ, the first thing your new, local friends teach you is "don't say you are from any exit. No one really does that. It's weird."

Other rules for jersey newbies:

- no pumping gas
- learn to love jug handles
- it's not the ocean, it's the shore
- Bon Jovi = nicest guy ever but Bruce is still the Boss.
-"yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah" means - "I know just what you mean, but wait until you hear this..."
-see you in Florida in Nov.

LOL I used to live in NJ until 5 years ago and I have never asked anyone what exit they are from, nor have I been asked that. Also, no one I know has ever pronounced it Joisey.
 
We did Jersey week once when we lived in NJ (military move) and it was a blast! Busy but not overly crowded. Pleasant weather too!

We kept running into neighbors and friends in every park. My youngest daughter, then about 9 saw a boy from her class and they decided to sign each other's autograph books. I think they didn't know what else to do to acknowledge each other. They just looked at each other, mumbled "hi" and swapped books.

Side notes:

When you move to NJ, the first thing your new, local friends teach you is "don't say you are from any exit. No one really does that. It's weird."

Other rules for jersey newbies:

- no pumping gas
- learn to love jug handles
- it's not the ocean, it's the shore
- Bon Jovi = nicest guy ever but Bruce is still the Boss.
-"yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah" means - "I know just what you mean, but wait until you hear this..."
-see you in Florida in Nov.

This.... is perfect.

Not all of us are from an exit and we turn right to turn left. No one from Jersey says "Joisey". That's all of those people from New York.

In all seriousness though, there are slightly elevated crowds during the week but nothing crazy. Overall considering the weather, crowds, and refurb schedules this is a prime time to go.

Also, exit 40 off the parkway :thumbsup2
 
Dug this out of my inbox:


If you live in or have ever lived in Jersey...you'll appreciate this...if not, you may be surprised!

New Jersey has the second highest per capita income in the U.S.

New Jersey has three counties in the top ten U.S. counties by income.

New Jersey was the first state to ratify the Bill of Rights (Nov. 20,1789)

New Jersey is a peninsula.

New Jersey is the only state where all of its counties are classified as metropolitan areas.

New Jersey has more race horses than Kentucky.

New Jersey has more Cubans in Union City (1 sq mi.) than Havana, Cuba.

New Jersey has the densest system of highways and railroads in the US.

New Jersey has the highest cost of living.

New Jersey has the highest cost of auto insurance.

New Jersey has the highest property taxes in the nation.

Cartoonist Thomas Nast (Morristown) created the popular image of Santa Claus.

New Jersey has the most diners in the world and is sometimes referred to as the "Diner Capital of the World."

Home to the less mysterious but the best Italian hot dogs and Italian sausage w/peppers and onions.

North Jersey has the most shopping malls in one area in the world, with seven major ! shopping malls in a 25 square mile radius.

New Jersey is home to the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island.

The Passaic River was the site of the first submarine ride by inventor John P. Holland.

New Jersey has 50+ resort cities & towns; some of the nation's most famous: Asbury Park, Wildwood, Atlantic City, Seaside Heights, Long Branch, Cape May.

New Jersey was home to the Miss America Pageant held in Atlantic City.

The game Monopoly, played all over the world, named the streets on its playing board after the actual streets in Atlantic City.

And, Atlantic City has the longest boardwalk in the world,

Not to mention salt water taffy.

New Jersey has the most stringent testing along our coastline for water quality control than any other seaboard state in the entire country.

The "Trial of the Century" (the Lindberg Baby kidnapping) was held in Flemington.

New Jersey is a leading technology & industrial state and is the largest chemical producing state in the nation when you include pharmaceuticals.

Jersey tomatoes are known the world over as being the best you can buy.

You haven't lived until you have eaten New Jersey sweet Corn.

New Jersey is a leader in blueberry and cranberry production.

In 1642, the first brewery in America, opened in Hoboken.

New Jersey rocks! The famous Les Paul invented the first solid body electric guitar in Mahwah, in 1940.

New Jersey is a major seaport state with the largest seaport in the US, located in Elizabeth. Nearly 80 percent of what our nation imports comes through Elizabeth Seaport first.

New Jersey is home to one of the nation's busiest airports (in Newark), Liberty International.

George Washington slept here. Several important Revolutionary War battles were fought on New Jersey soil, led by General George Washington. On Christmas Eve 1776 he crossed the Delaware to attack the Hessian troops at Trenton.

The light bulb, phonograph (record player), and motion picture projector, were invented by Thomas Edison in his Menlo Park, NJ, laboratory.

We also boast the first town ever lit by incandescent bulbs.

The first movie studio was
in West Orange.

The first western was filmed by Edison in the hills of West Orange-"The Great Train Robbery."

Highest population density in the US

Home of the US Olympic Equestrian Team

Home to the United States Golf association (Far Hills)

The transistor was invented by Bell Labs in NJ

The telephone was invented in NJ

Samuel Morse's code machine was built in NJ (Morris Plains)

The first seaplane was built in Keyport, NJ.

The first airmail (to Chicago) was started from Keyport, NJ.

The first phonograph records were made in Camden, NJ.

New Jersey has the largest petroleum containment area outside of the Middle East countries.

New Jersey has the tallest water-tower in the world. (Union, NJ!!!)

New Jersey had the first medical center, in Jersey City.

The Pulaski SkyWay, from Jersey City to Newark, was the first skyway highway.

NJ built the first tunnel under a river, the Hudson (Holland Tunnel).

The first baseball game was played in Hoboken, NJ, which is also the birthplace of Frank Sinatra.

The first intercollegiate football game was played in New Brunswick in 1889 (Rutgers College played Princeton).

The first drive-in movie theater was opened in Camden, NJ, (but they're all gone now!).

New Jersey is home to both of "NEW YORK'S" pro football teams!

The first FM radio broadcast was made from Alpine, NJ, by Maj. Thomas Armstrong.

The Great Falls in Paterson, on the Passaic River, is the second highest waterfall on the East Coast of the US. In 1778, Alexander Hamilton visited the falls and was impressed by its potential for industry. Later as the nation's first Secretary of Treasury, he selected the site as the nation's first planned industrial city.

All New Jersey natives: (Actually 'Born, Raised 0r Settled')

Jack Nicholson, Bruce Springsteen, Bon Jovi, Jason Alexander, Derek Jeter Queen Latifah, Susan Sarandon, Connie Francis, Shaq, Judy Blume, Aaron Burr, Dionne Warwick, Sarah Vaughn, Budd Abbott, Lou Costello, The Jonas Brothers, Alan Ginsberg, Yogi Berra, Larry Doby, Norman Mailer, Marilynn McCoo, Flip Wilson, Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Edison, Frankie Valli, Charles Lindbergh, Whitney Houston, Eddie Money, Grover Cleveland, Woodrow Wilson, Walt Whitman, Jerry Lewis, Tom Cruise, Joyce Kilmer, Bruce Willis, Caesar Romero, Ice-T, Nick Adams, Nathan Lane, Sandra Dee, Danny DeVito, Richard Conti, Joe Pesci, Joe Piscopo, Fanny Brice, Annie Oakley, Jon Stewart, Stephen Colbert, Robert Blake, John Forsythe, Meryl Streep, Loretta Swit, Norman Lloyd, Paul Simon, Jerry Herman, Gordon McRae, Kevin Spacey, John Travolta, Phyllis Newman, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, Eva Marie Saint, Elisabeth Shue, James Fennimore Cooper, Admiral Wm.Halsey,Jr., Dave Thomas (Wendy's), William Carlos Williams, Sammy Williams, Ray Liotta, Robert Wuhl, Paul Robeson, Ernie Kovacs, Joseph Macchia, Brian Williams, Charles Gibson, Martha Stewart, Andrew Fastow (!) and, of course, Francis Albert Sinatra.

You know you're from Jersey when . . .

You don't think of fruit when people mention "The Oranges."

You know that it's called Great Adventure, not Six Flags.

You don't put pineapple on your pizza.

And, you don't buy pizza at a national "pizza" franchise.

You've known the way to Seaside Heights since you were seven.

You know that the state isn't one big oil refinery.

At least three people in your family still love Bruce Springsteen, and you know the town Jon Bon Jovi is from.


You know what a "jug handle" is.

You know that WaWa is a convenience store.

You know that the state isn't all farmland.

You know that there are no
"beaches" in New Jersey--there's the shore--and you don't go "to the shore," you go "down the shore." And when you are there, you're not "at the shore"; you are "down the shore."

You know how to properly negotiate a circle.

You knew that the last sentence had to do with driving.


You know that this is the only "New" state that doesn't require "New" to identify it (try . . . Mexico . . . York .! . . Hampshire-- doesn't work, does it?).

You consider putting mayo on a corned beef sandwich a sacrilege.

Or, ketchup on a hot dog.

You don't think "What exit?" is very funny.

You know that people from the 609 area code are "a little different."

You know that no respectable New Jerseyan goes to Princeton--that's for out-of-staters.

The Jets-Giants game has started fights at your school or local bar.

You live within 20 minutes of at least three different malls.

You refer to all highways and interstates by their numbers.

Every year you have at least one kid in your class named Tony.

You know the location of every clip shown in the Sopranos opening credits.

You've gotten on the wrong highway trying to get out of the mall.

You know that people from North Jersey go to Seaside Heights, and people from Central Jersey go to Belmar, and people from South Jersey go to Wildwood. It can be no other way.

You weren't raised in New Jersey--you were raised in either North Jersey, Central Jersey or South Jersey.

You don't consider Newark or Camden to actually be part of the state.


You remember the stores Korvette's, Two Guys, Rickel's, Channel, Bamberger's and Orbach's.

You also remember Palisades Amusement Park and Olympic Park.

You've had a boardwalk cheese steak and vinegar fries.


You start planning for Memorial Day weekend in February.

And finally . . .

You've NEVER, EVER pumped your own gas.
 
My last trip to WDW was during Jersey Week. I had never heard about it but after seeing every other patron wearing some sort of Jersey team or town t-shirt, and hearing accents, I asked. That's how I learned it was Jersey Week.

Crowds were not bad at all. A little more "jovial" at F&W but overall not a problem.
 


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