Been spending some time with the kids before they leave for their next vacation, so just one quick update today.
When we woke up on Saturday, it was finally time to actually visit a park. We were all pretty revved and got up very early since Animal Kingdom had morning EMH. We would normally avoid parks with a morning EMH but our reservations and the Fantasmic! schedule had pretty much dictated that today be AK.
One of Scott's frequent complaints about our visits to AK is that we don't actually see that many animals. So I figured we were on the right track to correct that when we found this guy on the stairs at Pop.
Compared to the frogs we saw last year at CSR, this guy was a giant. But other than him and a couple of ducks swimming in the bowling pin pool, we didn't see much wildlife at the hotel during our stay. We paused for a cheesy photo to commemorate our room location.
And then we waited for the bus. And waited. It seemed like every time we wanted to go somewhere this week, sixteen buses for other locations would pull up before we finally got a bus for where we wanted to go. Then, we'd be waiting for say, EPCOT the next day, and there would be three AK buses in a row.

Ah well.
We arrived at Animal Kingdom and were distressed to discover that even though we were among the first at the park, we couldn't line up because we needed to go to Will Call for our GAD fastpasses - and the Will Call windows weren't open! The park opened at 8, and the will call window wasn't going to open until 7:30.
But, while we were waiting, I logged on to Mobile Magic. According to the app, Primeval Whirl was open during EMH hours. Now, we had planned on wasting the EMH hour with breakfast at Rainforest Cafe so that we could go straight to Primeval Whirl at 9 when we thought it opened. If it was opening at 8 with the rest of the EMH attractions, this changed our whole plan. When the CM at Will Call finally opened (and gave us our GAD fastpasses, and thanked Kai for volunteering) we asked - sure enough, Primeval Whirl was an EMH attraction! So for that information alone, Mobile Magic was worth the cost. We joined the regular line and watched the rope drop show from afar.
We entered the park (Kai had no trouble with her finger scan, even though she had taken off her band-aid) and hustled straight to Chester and Hester's Dino-rama.
Call it a cheesy roadside attraction if you will - I love this area of the park. The sidewalk that looks like an interstate, the topiaries held in place with license plates, the cheesy painted dinosaurs... It's just plain fun. And so is the ride we hustled onto with no line - Primeval Whirl!
Well, I should say that Kairi, Scott and I hustled on to it. Nick had promised to go on roller coasters this trip, but he had always drawn the line on Primeval Whirl. He's afraid of heights, and unlike many of the Disney coasters that disguise how high up you are, Primeval Whirl is on a high open track. There's no way he was getting on this.
The rest of us were thrilled to finally be riding something, and not just virtually. The total lack of line was great. I could have ridden multiple times if Nick hadn't been waiting for us.
Scott had never been on this ride (long story from our last vacation where we were playing tour guide to 11 people - don't get him started) and he loved it.
We were going to ride Triceratop Spin, just to be completist, but it wasn't working. We did have to take the obligatory "souvenir photo" that comes with all roadside attractions, though.
We still had plenty of time before our 8:45 Rainforest Cafe ADR. So we headed back to the entrance, pausing by the Tree of Life for some picture taking.
We tried to go to the inside entrance of Rainforest Cafe and the CM told us that the entrance wouldn't open until 8:45. So we settled in for a half-hour wait.
Just then, another CM replaced the first one. She said, "If you're waiting for a reservation, why don't you go around? The outside entrance is already open." This seemed weird, but we left the park (getting some rather odd looks from people coming into the turnstiles) and sure enough, the outside entrance was open.
Kai has a thing for frogs, so before we went in, she insisted on a picture with the froggy mascot.
We were seated almost instantly, about 25 minutes before our reservation time. We were given a nice table near the waterfall.
I liked the over the top decor, from the fish in tanks to the starry sky visible through all the leaves.
It was REALLY loud, however, and it was hard to carry on a conversation, even though we were one of the few families in the restaurant at that hour. It got especially loud when the animal animatronics would start their calling and carrying on. Entertaining, but LOUD.
We ordered our breakfasts, and took in the atmosphere until they arrived. The portions were HUGE. Really, really HUGE. My "Pie of the Viper" was enough for an entire family, I am sure. It was tasty, but I only ate two slices. The bites with salsa were the best - I think the center of the pie had so much egg it got a bit bland.
Scott ordered an egg white omelet that came with yummy fresh fruit.
Nick had an omelet. He got to choose his own additions, and I think he went for bacon, ham, and cheddar.
Kai had a standard eggs and fixings kind of breakfast. Problem was, she had a stomach ache, and barely touched it.
Basically, what we learned was that we should order breakfasts to share if we ever return here. No one finished their food, and we ended up spending something like $60 after a $10 coupon we had gotten online (although they did take the coupon, which was nice). Drinks were $3.99 each, which seemed really excessive for coffee and orange juice. The kids really seemed to like the place. Me? I think it's a not-so-cheap roadside attraction.
Up Next:
On My Summer Vacation, We Went On Safari