Our Seemingly Silly Semi-Illogical Four Day Whirlwind Trip

Hi Kay! Sorry to be so slow responding but at least my response gets you off page 2! You certainly don't belong there!

I take the pager device from Lowell, and as usual, turn my attention to manipulating the device by mind control. I haven’t been successful on previous attempts but eventually I will master the technique. I’m certain I have only to properly focus my brain waves. Once I learn to do this, we’ll never have to wait in lines again. I sigh with happiness at the thought and lock my gaze on the plastic square. Concentrate. Think of nothing but the square. Picture the lights flashing. Feel the square vibrate in my hands. People walk by, talking and laughing but I tune them out. For a few minutes I see and hear nothing. Concentrate. I am sending a signal to the device. You will begin flashing now.

I gasp and nearly drop the square. The lights are flashing. Lowell looks over, totally unaware of my stunning success, takes the device from my hands, and says calmly, “That’s us. Let’s go.”

I tag along smiling. Could it be possible?

:lmao: I love the way your mind works Kay!!


We sit at a small table for two and in a moment our waiter arrives. It will be easy to remember him because he is from Lowell . . . . Lowell, Massachusetts, and his name is Gary. I ponder what an interesting coincidence it would be if Lowell had been born in Gary, Indiana. Then we would have Gary from Lowell and Lowell from Gary. It would be fascinating in a confusing sort of way.

You never fail to crack me up with simple little observations!!!

After finishing about half with no ill effects I get up the nerve to sample Lowell’s Tonga Toast. No doubt this tastes exactly like every other Tonga Toast we’ve eaten, but today it tastes greasy to me and I really don’t enjoy it. One bite is enough.

A true sign that you are still not feeling well. :sick: I'm glad you were able to get out and at least have a bite. I haven't had the Tonga Toast in years but I think its time to try it again - maybe in December!

Can't wait to hear of your adventures as "pool hopping detective"!
 
Kay,
I have really enjoyed your trip report thus far (hint, hint). You have a great dry wit...Your great relationship with your husband shines through. As I learned, sometimes illogical trips are the best!

Christamae
 
Kay,
Soooo sorry you didn't get your Tonga toast. It looks wonderful, though your fruit and yogurt looks pretty good too. Maybe I'm just hungry and should go make myself some lunch, because I'm thinking of getting some sourdough bread, bananas, cinnamon sugar and making some french toast.
That pirate cruise is adorable. I have so many things in my head that I have seen or read about here on the Dis that my son would just love. But the picture in my head of him on that pirate ship includes me having a quiet, liesurely breakfast with some tonga toast.
Your pictures are just beautiful. And know I will think of you every time I go to Panera and get one of those vibrating light up squares. I'll have to make my son try to make it go off with his mind.
I'll be sad when you finish this report. Hope you can make it last a few more installments. ;)
 
A FEW MORE COMMENTS BEFORE THE NEXT EPISODE:


:lmao: I love the way your mind works Kay!! You never fail to crack me up with simple little observations!!!

I'm glad you were able to get out and at least have a bite. I haven't had the Tonga Toast in years but I think its time to try it again - maybe in December!

Can't wait to hear of your adventures as "pool hopping detective"!

:wave2: Liz: Yes, you’re way over due for Tonga Toast. Your health can suffer radically if you develop a Tonga Toast deficiency. ;)

It is possible that in the next episode (due tonight or tomorrow) I may uncover a pool hopper . . . . :woohoo:

Kay,
I have really enjoyed your trip report thus far (hint, hint). You have a great dry wit...Your great relationship with your husband shines through. As I learned, sometimes illogical trips are the best!

Christamae

:wave2: eternaldisneyfan: Hello! Hey, a new reader! I’m glad you found my report before it’s over. Thanks for dropping in to say you’re reading.

Kay,
Soooo sorry you didn't get your Tonga toast. It looks wonderful, though your fruit and yogurt looks pretty good too. Maybe I'm just hungry and should go make myself some lunch, because I'm thinking of getting some sourdough bread, bananas, cinnamon sugar and making some french toast.

That pirate cruise is adorable. I have so many things in my head that I have seen or read about here on the Dis that my son would just love. But the picture in my head of him on that pirate ship includes me having a quiet, leisurely breakfast with some tonga toast.
Your pictures are just beautiful. And know I will think of you every time I go to Panera and get one of those vibrating light up squares. I'll have to make my son try to make it go off with his mind.

I'll be sad when you finish this report. Hope you can make it last a few more installments. ;)

:wave2: mikamah: Hello again to another of my faithful readers. I’m torn about finishing this story. Some people want me to hurry up and finish, others want me to drag it out! I’m so confuzzled. :confused3 I hope your son can go on the pirate cruise. I think it’s the sort of event that would be memorable, and you’ve got a great idea about enjoying some Tonga Toast while you wait for him. Isn’t it great that there are so many special things to do at Disney? :banana:
 

I’m torn about finishing this story. Some people want me to hurry up and finish, others want me to drag it out! I’m so confuzzled. :confused3
Kay, I told you what to do about that. Take a weekend. Tell Lowell to sell an extra few clocks!!! Be there or be square!!!
 
PART THIRTY TWO:




We travel to the Magic Kingdom on the monorail, then exit to catch our boat to the Lodge. Our trip to the Poly was a success despite my Poop-De-Doo Syndrome. Either I didn’t offend the Tiki gods by refusing to order Tonga Toast, or Gary from Lowell put in a good word for us, because my fruit and yogurt seems to be settling fine.

By the time we return to our room at the Lodge I feel more my normal self. A relaxing afternoon in the sun should complete my recovery. Lowell promises to join me in the pool since we have a few hours to swim and plenty of time to dry off in the sun.

Yesterday I had packed most of our clothes so all I have to do now is stuff our remaining belongings into my nylon tote bag. The Pool Hopper Electrocution Kit is buried at the bottom of our suitcase since we haven’t seen any sign of pool hoppers so far. The only pool gear I saved out for today is our swimsuits, Lodge mug, suntan lotion, and paperbacks.

Now for the ritual room inspection to make sure we haven’t forgotten anything. I swear our belongings have a way of camouflaging themselves to blend in with their surroundings. No matter how many times we look, we get home and find we’re missing an article of clothing, a bottle of hair conditioner, or a favorite book. I assign bathroom detail to Lowell since I’ve already seen far, far more of that room than I care to. I hope he doesn’t report that ceramic tiles are falling off the walls and the plastic shower curtain has melted. While he’s checking the bathroom I look inside all the drawers, the closet, and even under the bed. Lowell’s dirty socks have a habit of seeking refuge under the bed, so it pays to look. Satisfied that we’re leaving with everything we came with, we finally carry our luggage to the door and pause for a last fond gaze. It wasn’t the Presidential Otter Suite, and we didn’t have a view of the castle or even the otterless Otter Pond, but it wasn’t a bad room. I was even starting to enjoy the nightly entertainment at Wilderness Downs.

Lowell carries the suitcase and I take the tweed bag and the nylon tote. I must say goodbye to our favorite places before we leave, so we walk by the cozy desk area and head for the lounge that I dubbed the “Redneck Concierge.” The comfortable seating area with its gas fireplace is still vacant. It was fun having breakfast here by ourselves while watching all the activity below. We hang over the railing and look down at the lobby for a few minutes before reluctantly making our last trip to the elevator.


redneckC.jpg



The resort isn’t too busy on a Monday morning, and there’s a short line at check-out. I don’t see the cast member who checked us in. Maybe she’s been transferred to her beloved Animal Kingdom Lodge. I hope so. When they build the AK Villas she can supervise the javelin throws at check-in or head up the Fun with Feces Program. She’ll like that.

We entrust our luggage to bell services, then head to Roaring Fork with our $11.99 Investment. A different cashier is working today. She smiles and says good morning like she genuinely means it, and doesn’t watch while we fill the mug. She must be new here.

The pool isn’t crowded yet so we have our choice of lounge chairs. Lowell chooses chairs in our favorite spot near a tree. We’ll have shade later in the day. We set down our towels and the nylon bag, then go for a walk to take a last look at the beach and the landscaping around Trout Pass Bar and the pool.



WLbeachchairs.jpg




lodgegrounds1.jpg




WLlandscape2.jpg




We decide to soak in the spa before getting into the pool since no one is in the spa at the moment. If you think about it, stepping into the churning water looks a lot like climbing into a boiling pot. Today the water is doing a rolling boil and steam drifts lazily on the breeze. We cautiously climb into the water and sit down. We’re about to become Lucky Fourteen Stew. I half expect a giant hand to toss in a few carrots and potatoes and clamp a lid over us. Fortunately nothing of the sort happens and we enjoy several minutes of uninterrupted relaxation in the bubbling water.

While it’s nice to be alone with Lowell, I don’t mind company. We’ve spent many an evening, and met some of the nicest people, in resort whirlpools. Since people are facing one another within the confines of the spa, it seems rude to ignore one another, so total strangers open up and exchange tales of home, family and travel. Worries and cares melt away with the heat, and strangers become old friends in minutes. World leaders ought to hold meetings in a whirlpool. We’d have far fewer wars.

The pool eventually lures us away, and we make the nerve jangling transition from hot water to cold. The pool is a pleasant temperature but naturally feels cold since we just came from 100 degree water. I start to adjust to the temperature change just as a rambunctious boy of about twelve cannonballs into the pool, engulfing me in a tidal wave. I gasp. Every muscle in my body stiffens. Cold water sheets over me. As the torrent subsides I expect to see icicles hanging from my rigid form. Lowell is far enough away to miss the deluge and laughs when he sees the look on my face. Laugh at me, will you? I’ll fix you! I sweep my arm across the water and spray him before he can duck. Then I swim away, kicking up a wake behind me which is sure to shower him again. I know he will follow, but I’m faster. After a minute I roll onto my back to see where he is. A human paddle wheeler churns toward me. I swim to the end of the pool, laughing. By the time he catches up we’re both panting and giggling like teenagers. We call a truce and hang out for a while by the ledge, enjoying the relaxing sensation of the current flowing past us. I’m always surprised at how many adults sit in a chair and never swim at all. In some cases they’re keeping an eye on their children, but more times than not it seems they don’t care about swimming, they just want to get a tan. I like the feeling of weightlessness and the sensation of gliding through the water. I’m happy whether I’m in a pool, a lake or the ocean. Maybe I enjoy it so much because I equate water and swimming with lazy summers as a child.

When we finally get out of the pool and walk to our lounges, I notice that the chairs around us have filled up and I don’t see many vacant seats. I drop into my lounge still reflecting on the joys of summers as a child, back in the days when I didn’t have many cares or responsibilities. My sister and I grew up on a small dairy farm. There was no such thing as a vacation because we couldn’t leave the cows. When I was nine my father died and my mother, sister and I moved from the farm. We survived on a meager income from social security. We didn’t have much, but we never went without, either. We finally had the time and freedom for vacations, but no money to take one.

During summer vacations our school provided transportation twice a week to a regional state park that had a mammoth swimming pool and a separate diving pool. The bus picked us up, and as I recall, our only expense was lunch. I think hamburgers were fifty cents back then. These biweekly trips to the pool were the highlight of my summers. My mother wasn’t in good health and didn’t drive, so we didn’t do much as a family and friends lived too far away for my sister and me to walk to their houses. Aside from playing with my sister, my main diversion was riding my bike. I never went on a vacation or flew in a plane until I was married. To this day I look at families who go to Disney and other vacation spots with a sort of bittersweet sadness. I’m sad that as a child I never had such special trips, but I’m delighted for the families who are enjoying the life I never had.

Right in front of me, in the next row of lounges, sits a mom with two children. The girl is about ten and the boy maybe seven. If Dad is here I haven’t seen him, but he may be around somewhere. Mom basks in the sun and talks on her cell phone. The kids get up after a few minutes and head for the shallow end of the pool. They run back periodically to get suntan lotion or pool toys or just to tell her something. They’re having a great time and I wonder if they have any idea how lucky they are to be here. Not just at Disney, but at the Wilderness Lodge in particular. This is an expensive resort. I don’t expect kids to care about that, but it’s a very beautiful and special place that not every family can afford, and I hope in some small way they appreciate being here. They look like a very nice family, and I briefly speculate about where they are from and what Mom and Dad do for a living. I find it hard to justify the cost of two nights here; they’re probably here for a week. Yes, they’re a fortunate family.

I’m jolted from my introspective musings by Mom’s cell phone conversation when she stops discussing the weather and their day at the Magic Kingdom and says, “We’re over at the Wilderness Lodge. They have a very nice pool here. Not that it’s so much larger than the one where we’re staying, but it has a slide, and the kids like it better.”

POOL HOPPERS! My eyes go wide. I almost fall out of my lounge. The last two trips to the pool I had looked for pool hoppers behind every rock and speculated about various people who didn’t fit my stereotypical image of “deluxe resort” guests. Now, just as I am mentally congratulating this nice-looking family in front of me for being able to afford a week at the Lodge, they turn out to be pool hoppers! I don’t know whether to laugh or shriek. I want to snatch the phone from her hand and say, “She’ll call you right back after Security drags her no-account pool-hopping carcass from this lounge chair and tosses her shameless butt on the street.”

Lowell is sipping Sprite while reading and doesn’t look up.

My nostalgic reverie is shattered. The woman didn’t even lower her voice, so apparently she sees nothing wrong with invading someone else’s pool and taking lounge chairs that are typically in short supply. Now I have first-hand proof that pool-hoppers exist, and they may be more prevalent than most people suppose. I’m irritated. If I’d come here to spend my final few hours by the pool and there were no lounges it would have spoiled my last day at the Lodge. I’m not one to cause a scene, but I say to Lowell who is absorbed in his book and paying no attention to me, “It’s a good thing we got lounges early, before people who don’t even belong here grabbed the last ones.”

I imagine the woman heard me, as I made no more effort to lower my voice than she had to announce that she was a pool hopper. If the pool sign: “Wilderness Lodge Resort Guests Only” stood in front of the last vacant lounge, she would probably knock it over to get to the chair, so I doubt my comment fazed her, but it made me feel marginally better.

Harrumphing to myself I force myself to take several deep breaths. Lucky for her my Pool Hopper Electrocution Kit is in the bottom of my suitcase, buried under mounds of suitcases in the luggage room. I gaze at the back of her head with such intensity that it’s a wonder her hair doesn’t ignite. She must be wearing asbestos hairspray. I sigh with frustration. I can’t let her spoil my day at the pool so I try to read and keep my mind occupied. After twenty minutes or so, she and the kids finally pack up their gear and leave. Finally, I can fully relax and enjoy my novel. I glance over at Lowell intending to discuss the invasion of the pool hoppers and get the whole thing out of my system.

His book lays open, face down on his chest, and he’s fast asleep.

The whole drama went right over his head.
 
Me First???


OH MY! They DO exist! Shhhesh! I thought pool hoppers were an Urban Legend like refillable for life mugs/ resort swapping mugs.

Kay? is it coming to an end? I'm so sad! I get sad at other people's endings. That lump in my throat is starting to form...
 
I say that to my kids all the time. Do you know how lucky you are to be here or even go away.....Don't take it for granted.

Are you sure the water was that cold....:rotfl2: When we go in January and we are at the pools at night we get the comment that we must be from Canada because the kids are in the water. I think you should have started with the pool and then went to the spa. Just a thought.:lmao:

Pool Hoppers, and you saw them with your own eyes. Impressive.

Love the pictures. How sad it is that you are going to the end.
 
I swear our belongings have a way of camouflaging themselves to blend in with their surroundings.

They don't want to leave Disney World either. Can you blame them?!

We finally carry our luggage to the door and pause for a last fond gaze.

This is always such a sad time! :sad1:

We walk by the cozy desk area and head for the lounge that I dubbed the “Redneck Concierge.” The comfortable seating area with its gas fireplace is still vacant. It was fun having breakfast here by ourselves while watching all the activity below. We hang over the railing and look down at the lobby for a few minutes before reluctantly making our last trip to the elevator.

If I see this area in December I promise to sit down for a moment and think of you and Lowell!


Worries and cares melt away with the heat, and strangers become old friends in minutes. World leaders ought to hold meetings in a whirlpool. We’d have far fewer wars.

I like this idea! :thumbsup2


“We’re over at the Wilderness Lodge. They have a very nice pool here. Not that it’s so much larger than the one where we’re staying, but it has a slide, and the kids like it better.”

I literally gasped out loud when I read this!!! :eek: The nerve of these people!

I sigh with frustration. I can’t let her spoil my day at the pool so I try to read and keep my mind occupied.

While I was hoping you'd knock some sense into her (literally), you did the right thing. Good for you Kay!
 
Wow Kay, you surprised me with a Saturday night installment....don't you usually post on Sundays? (Or maybe I had a dream about that. I dunno). What a wonderful read that was. I feel the sadness of the dreaded "last day" of vacation. Oh boy, those pool hoppers don't know how close they came to being electrocuted. I let out a gasp when I read about the hoppers 'phone conversation.:mad:

I was sad to learn about your Dad and the lack of vacations during your childhood. You really do appreciate your vacations now and that comes through in your writing. As a kid (and an only child) we went everywhere. Tons of vacations. I felt bad for my friends, most of whom had never ventured out of NY. However, my DD hasn't travelled nearly as much as I did at her age. That's why every vacation is extra special to us now. They are few and far between! (that's why I really love these trip reports!:yay: )

Once again, your photo's are beautiful! And, your report was full of laughs. However, as you know, I'm multi-quote challenged, so let me just do this.....:lmao:
 
The whole drama went right over his head.
__________________

You should know by now, men!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Fabulous as always!!!!!!

You are a gifted writer,sis! (oh, maybe that's where all my talents went...)
 
When we finally get out of the pool and walk to our lounges, I notice that the chairs around us have filled up and I don’t see many vacant seats. I drop into my lounge still reflecting on the joys of summers as a child, back in the days when I didn’t have many cares or responsibilities. My sister and I grew up on a small dairy farm. There was no such thing as a vacation because we couldn’t leave the cows. When I was nine my father died and my mother, sister and I moved from the farm. We survived on a meager income from social security. We didn’t have much, but we never went without, either. We finally had the time and freedom for vacations, but no money to take one.

During summer vacations our school provided transportation twice a week to a regional state park that had a mammoth swimming pool and a separate diving pool. The bus picked us up, and as I recall, our only expense was lunch. I think hamburgers were fifty cents back then. These biweekly trips to the pool were the highlight of my summers. My mother wasn’t in good health and didn’t drive, so we didn’t do much as a family and friends lived too far away for my sister and me to walk to their houses. Aside from playing with my sister, my main diversion was riding my bike. I never went on a vacation or flew in a plane until I was married. To this day I look at families who go to Disney and other vacation spots with a sort of bittersweet sadness. I’m sad that as a child I never had such special trips, but I’m delighted for the families who are enjoying the life I never had.
Kay, I didn't know you grew up on a dairy farm!!! MOOOoooooo to yoooooooou!!!!!!!!!!

I think a lot of people from our generation did not have the kind of family vacations that so many people are able to take now. My family didn't have this luxury either, but my sister and I were fortunate enough to be able to travel a bit with the band and know that those trips were big sacrifices by my family. Your comments really struck a chord with me.

I'm happy to have been able to take my daughter on many family vacations and now she is much better traveled than I.

I'm glad that we get to benefit from your adult travels and trip reports. I'm sad this trip is drawing to a close, but I look forward to stories of your future trips :thumbsup2
 
I am also going to be :sad1: when this fantastic TR is finished. Kay you don't have to worry about me Pool hopping since I don't care to much for the pool scene also I swim like a boulder:rolleyes1
 
Lovely installment Kay - I will be sad to see this end, too.

As for those pool-hoppers...they don't know how lucky they are, do they? :lmao:
 
We’re about to become Lucky Fourteen Stew. I half expect a giant hand to toss in a few carrots and potatoes and clamp a lid over us.

Hehe! What a visual!

I’m not one to cause a scene, but I say to Lowell who is absorbed in his book and paying no attention to me, “It’s a good thing we got lounges early, before people who don’t even belong here grabbed the last ones.”

Da noive of some people! Good for you! I wouldn't have been able to resist telling her off either, even though indirectly.

I can identify with your growing up on a dairy farm and feeling sad that you didn't get much chance to travel as a child. I think this has always made me as an adult appreciate the experience of seeing new places (especially foreign countries) all the more.

- Iluvsushi
 
Just like countless others I've been following your report for weeks now and I don't want it to be over! I can't say that I grew up on a dairy farm but I know what it's like not being able to afford family vacations. Money was tight in my house growing up. However, my sister and I are fortunate enough to have a wonderful aunt and uncle (who never had children of their own) that took us on our childhood trips to Disney World. Now that I'm older I can truly appreciate how lucky we were and I understand your feeling when looking at happy families enjoying a Disney vacation. I can only hope that someday those children will grow up to realize how special those family trips really are.
 
Kay,
I have really enjoyed your last couple of posts :) and I, too, will be sad to see it come to an end. :sad1: I sucked in a whole bunch of breath when that family turned out to be pool hoppers.:scared1: I have to admit that after many trips to the world including about a half dozen on site, not once did it ever occur to me to pool hop to another resort. I didn't even know it was a problem until I joined the DIS. :confused3 Do they enforce the rules at any of the resorts? Is this just a problem at Deluxe Resorts or should I be on the lookout on our August trip to POR?:sail: I would appreciate your knowledgable advice so that I, too, could help put an end to this wave of crime plaguing the World.
 
We'll dedicate our next vacation to you, Kay!

I am SO thankful we are blessed to be able to take our boys places like Disney and the beach!

When I was growing up we went away every year, but never on a actual vacation. We just went to my Mom's parents house and sat around in the house and back yard for 2 weeks. Never went to the beach, never went anywhere. Just sat around.

Course last year where did we take the boys? To my Grandparents house and sat around. LOL! We did go to the beach 2 times. Growing up we weren't allowed because of that whole hospital dumping it's crap into the ocean thing.(long island, ny)

I'm sorry to see your TR come to an end!
 
I cannot BELIEVE you encountered a real, live pool hopper! And, sheesh, you know you will never have your electrocution kit handy when you really need it!

Great chapter, my friend, and it makes me wish I was lounging around the pool at the WL myself! Although, I am neither a swimmer nor a tanner, I do like to sit under an umbrella on a warm-ish day and read a good book.

I'm sorry your childhood was devoid of family vacations. Although we didn't have a lot of money, my mom has always been one to find a way to travel some how. When we were kids, we would fly to California and drive back across country with my aunt and her kids in a mini-motorhome and take a different route each year. Looking back, I think they were crazy to travel in a small space with FIVE kids but at the time, I loved it! Mom gave me a lifelong appreciation of travelling and I adore her for that.
 











Receive up to $1,000 in Onboard Credit and a Gift Basket!
That’s right — when you book your Disney Cruise with Dreams Unlimited Travel, you’ll receive incredible shipboard credits to spend during your vacation!
CLICK HERE








DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest DIS Tiktok DIS Twitter DIS Bluesky

Back
Top Bottom