Okay, I lost some momentum in commenting but I was still reading along. I have to remember what I was going to say.
Buddy's comments and questions are so amusing - he sounds like a little character!
Those flowers at the Partners statue are my favorites of all the ones you have shown us so far. I LOVE those! Just something about the shape of them and the color scheme is really appealing to me beyond my usual admiration of pretty flowers. They really stand out.
They were so pretty. Pictures just don't do them justice. A hundred times better in real life. They are my favorite flowers that I've seen by the Partners statue, I think. And I LOVED the pink tulips that were there in March (that I saw in pictures).
I can't tell what's on that tree in Tomorrowland. It's got to be some sort of fruit, vegetable or herb...but it really just looks like a tree with red flowers!
It really looked like red pepper skin that had been carved by a person that was into food presentation, with a flower coming out of the skin.
Very interesting!
I was chuckling at your idea to anonymously send photos to your sister! Very stalker-ish!
Those chocolate-covered strawberries look good. I think I actually prefer white chocolate-covered strawberries, and I think they are sold somewhere in the parks but I can't recall where (they are not as common as the regular chocolate ones). My only problem is the price. It's sooo expensive for one strawberry. I'm all for the 'Well, when you're in
Disneyland be prepared to splurge and pay for things you wouldn't normally pay that much money for' philosophy - like a pineapple spear or a strawberry - because it's all part of the whole experience, and things do seem to taste better in DLR. But many of the snacks are so costly for their size, and the strawberries are one of them. Considering that you can get berries on sale (a bunch of them in a 16 oz. package) at the grocery store for sometimes as low as $.89, it's hard to justify spending so much on one berry in DLR, even though they are big and dipped in chocolate. I would probably still do it because it's there, but that's a hard price to get past!
I totally agree. I can get past a lot of the high prices at Disneyland, but the strawberries...they are priced above and beyond "normal" high prices. D was very generous to share them.
Yay for the Springtime Sewing Machine Display!! Despite the glare in the photo (that happens to all of from time to time), it's interesting to see the different color scheme and how it changes through the year. That's definitely one area where they pay attention to detail at DLR - because it would be so easy to just leave a sort of all-purpose color in the window all year, but they definitely change it for the seasons.
Hot Chocolate of Death


I think that would be very bad - worse than my Peppermint Cone of Death situation - because you'd risk getting scalding hot liquid all over you. Good thing that didn't happen! I sort of think I may try a peppermint cone of death again in the future - well, I will definitely eat one, but I may try to photograph the cone again in a less wobbly environment! Then again, maybe I will just eat it and call it a day. If they only had benches right outside of Gibson Girl, I could plop right down and take the photo immediately. But on that particular day it was 80 - 90 degrees or whatever and the ice cream would have been soup by the time I found a bench to sit on just to get a photo.
I'm glad to see my "zoom 'n' bounce" has caught on!!

I'm affecting the DIS lingo!

But that's really what it is! The POTC boats don't leisurely sail on up to the dock. They zoom you ahead and bounce you around for a few seconds.
Now the worst situation is when you stand up after zoomin' 'n' bouncin' and have the dreaded SBS. Remember what that is? Soggy Butt Syndrome! I actually think my friend Shawn might be hesitant to get on POTC again in the future - even though she loves it - because of that last SBS incident we experienced in December. She was not happy - even though I couldn't stop laughing at the whole situation. That was the worst! Of all the times we have gone on POTC, that was the worst in terms of water on the seat when we sit down. It was already there before we sat - and it was like a true, standing puddle of water, not just some drops. I don't know what happened before we got in, but I know the people in the row we got didn't alert us to the fact that it was super wet.
I definitely remember SBS!
I thought of Shawn a few times as I stepped into the boat, before I sat down. I've seen a few drips on the seat but that's it. There's definitely more potential to get wet on POTC these days, compared to decades past.
You mentioned your camera and the nighttime shots. I'm sure my camera is not all that much different from yours in overall operations - mine is the 880 model so it's probably more confusing but not any
better! I think that most P&S cameras could take better nighttime photos - not as great as the SLR photos, but better - if we all knew exactly how to manipulate the features to get the maximum result. But the manuals that come with these cameras - sometimes there are 3 or 4 books to read just for a tiny P&S - are too daunting and convoluted, so I usually end up just tinkering with things on the buttons and dials on the back of the camera and figuring out the basics myself.
I have not fully explored the different 'scene modes' on the camera to get the best sunsets and night shots and SNOW! Sometimes a sunset photo may look better using the simple 'turn off the flash' routine and nothing more (I've tried that). Sometimes it may look better actually leaving the flash ON (tried that too). And then sometimes it's beneficial to go into the Scene modes and play around. Who has time for all that? And who has the patience for all that in the middle of DLR?
I keep saying one of these days I will actually read the manual and figure out how to work the camera, but that is yet to happen.
Also, you have much more patience than I do because you will actually edit lots of photos in Picasa. If I am doing a TR, I rarely bother editing any of the photos because it slows me down from getting the TR done. So most of the photos I showed from the December Peppermint Cone of Death TR are the original images, as they were shot. BUT, when I re-post some photos in other threads (Halloween & Christmas) on the DIS at a later time, I sometimes (not always) edit the images in Photobucket at that point to make them a bit clearer (using the Auto Correct). So a photo of a tree may look darker in my TR, and then that same photo may look brighter and clearer in another thread down the road.
I think
all the Quest ideas are fun. I hope we all never stop doing Quests or coming up with new ideas of ones we want to pursue. First of all, it's always interesting to come up with Quests in the first place. But it's also a new way to 'see' DLR that maybe has not been seen before. We all see the same common sights in DLR when we go - and frankly, anyone can get Castle photos from different angles, even though some may be better than others. Doing the Quests allows us to actually notice things we have not necessarily paid much attention to in the past, share them with other people, and really appreciate the detail and creativity that Disney puts into their themes. It's a way to show folks that there is more to DLR than just Mickey Mouse and overpriced strawberries!!