DisneyAuntie12
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2016
- Messages
- 260
I'm going to Disney with my nephew (an 'old for his age' 4 and a half year old) and his parents, uncle, and grandparents this September. We're going the first week of school and will be theme parking mostly in the morning, so hopefully we will not be spending tons of time standing in line. I am his doting auntie whose life's mission is to spoil him rotten, ha ha!
I think he will love the park but he doesn't watch any television, so he doesn't really know any of the characters. I'm trying to plan some fun family activities "in park" to add a little extra magic, memories, and family bonding to the trip, but I haven't been to Disney since I was a kid and I don't know if we'll be so busy that these will end up sitting at the bottom of a bag all day (we'll have a stroller with storage, so carrying them is not a concern). These are some of my ideas so far -
- Since Be Our Guest does not have character dining for breakfast, I was going to tell him that we are in a 'magical castle' and bring a few of those super-easy preschool magic tricks as a gift to show him (the color changing scarves and wands where you push up and a flower comes up, that kind of thing).
- To get everyone talking (and off of smartphones for a bit!) was thinking a journal where we can come up with our own entries - draw the face that everyone made on the big hill at Splash Mountain, what did everything think was scariest at Haunted Mansion, favorite ride of the day, etc.
- He has a baby cousin who is too young to attend - was going to have one of her animal toys 'stow away' in someone's suitcase and then let him take pictures of it Flat Stanley style to text to 'her' (i.e. her parents) throughout the day
- Small, light picture books of the rides (i.e., story of Peter Pan, Little Mermaid, etc.) to flip through before each ride
- General 'down time' back with little things like puzzles, crayons (those might melt though?), bubbles, etc.
I think he'd like all of this under normal circumstances, but I'm not sure what the "pace" will be like with a preschooler at MK. Is he going to want to zoom through breakfast and just walk around taking it in nonstop, or do kids typically appreciate that kind of thing? I know every family is different but would appreciate any feedback!
I think he will love the park but he doesn't watch any television, so he doesn't really know any of the characters. I'm trying to plan some fun family activities "in park" to add a little extra magic, memories, and family bonding to the trip, but I haven't been to Disney since I was a kid and I don't know if we'll be so busy that these will end up sitting at the bottom of a bag all day (we'll have a stroller with storage, so carrying them is not a concern). These are some of my ideas so far -
- Since Be Our Guest does not have character dining for breakfast, I was going to tell him that we are in a 'magical castle' and bring a few of those super-easy preschool magic tricks as a gift to show him (the color changing scarves and wands where you push up and a flower comes up, that kind of thing).
- To get everyone talking (and off of smartphones for a bit!) was thinking a journal where we can come up with our own entries - draw the face that everyone made on the big hill at Splash Mountain, what did everything think was scariest at Haunted Mansion, favorite ride of the day, etc.
- He has a baby cousin who is too young to attend - was going to have one of her animal toys 'stow away' in someone's suitcase and then let him take pictures of it Flat Stanley style to text to 'her' (i.e. her parents) throughout the day
- Small, light picture books of the rides (i.e., story of Peter Pan, Little Mermaid, etc.) to flip through before each ride
- General 'down time' back with little things like puzzles, crayons (those might melt though?), bubbles, etc.
I think he'd like all of this under normal circumstances, but I'm not sure what the "pace" will be like with a preschooler at MK. Is he going to want to zoom through breakfast and just walk around taking it in nonstop, or do kids typically appreciate that kind of thing? I know every family is different but would appreciate any feedback!