The Fat Lady Sings, or See Ya' in '06
Who: Me and my son Miles, 5 years old
Where: Villas at Wilderness Lodge & Animal Kingdom Lodge
When: November 30 - December 8, 2003
Prologue
They say it ain't over until the fat lady sings, and I sang from Mobile to Mandeville, driving home at the end of this trip, so it must be true: this is my son's and my last trip to WDW for a few years. He and I have had enough to hold us, I think, after coming up to three times a year for four years. It's cold turkey for him in '04, then Disneyland for all the Parrs (including my Mr. Anti-Disney hubby) in '05, and then I'll look at taking Miles back to the World in 2006 when he's 7 or 8 years old. By then, he should be ready to ride some old little kid favorites, but willing to try some of the "big boy" rides. I had a great 8th birthday party, maybe his idea of a great 8th birthday will be WDW? I hope I have brainwashed him properly, so that he won't think of anywhere he'd rather be. He kept asking if we could move there, during this trip.
Notice I didn't say *I* was going cold turkey in '04. I'm planning on going tent camping with some childless grownup friends next year, not sure when yet. They don't like to plan in advance. Little do they know I've already got my adults-only wish list (sorry, still pretty G rated) all planned out:
Massage at the Grand Floridian Spa
Tea at the Grand Floridian
Dinner in the Wine Room at the California Grill
Lunch at Le Cellier
Mission:Space
Rock 'n Roll Coaster
Dinosaur
Backstage Safari tour at the Animal Kingdom
Nothing like 9 trips with a small child to make you dream about a trip without a small child... just once. ;-)
So that's enough about me, let's talk about me and my recent trip!
Saturday, November 29
Couldn't stand it, as usual I packed early and headed out the day before I originally intended to leave, just to get a "jump" on tomorrow's drive. Priceline doesn't cover anything between Pensacola and Tallahassee, which is where I thought I'd end up tonight, so I just left without a reservation for anywhere. We pulled out at 5 p.m. and I figured I'd stop when I got tired. Got as far as Crestview, Florida, around 9:45 p.m., and found a Comfort Inn I liked the looks of. It was $65 plus tax, but I'd looked on the internet before I left, for a couple of weeks, and this was as cheap as it was going to get on Thanksgiving weekend. Not much else to report, we turned out the light at 10:30 p.m. after a quick phone call home.
Sunday, November 30
I fell asleep easily last night, but woke up at 4:00 a.m. Too excited. After all these trips. LOL I'm such a big kid. Couldn't go back to sleep. I took a leisurely hot bath and dressed Miles while he was still asleep. He woke up enough walk downstairs to the van by himself. The hotel was pratically full, and there were several other holiday travelers up this early, loading up their cars. We were on the highway by 5:30 a.m.
By 6:30 a.m. the sun was up, and there were a lot of pretty fog banks to the sides of the road, through the wetlands on the west side of Tallahassee. We got some breakfast from a Marianna McDonald's and Miles was soon asleep for a 2 1/2 hour "nap". I added 20 minutes to the drive by getting onto the highway going the wrong direction out of Marianna, and had to double back East again. Doh!
There were plenty plenty Florida Highway Patrolmen out this weekend. There was someone pulled over for speeding every 30 miles or so along the road. I usually push my luck with cruise control at 78 but this morning I set it for 72.
Stopped for gas just outside Tallahassee, and Miles woke up soon thereafter. He was hungry, so I promised we'd stop in a bit, and gave him some snacks I had in the car. I guess they held him, because he said he changed his mind and wasn't hungry anymore.
Had to make a potty and boredome break at the "Florida Welcome Center", a tourist trap off I-75 that advertises "Cheap Hotels" (a lady with a phone and a lot of brochures behind a desk who will call around for you), a "15 Foot Gator" (stuffed), a "Great White Shark" (also stuffed), and "Free Orange Juice" (true, in little paper cups, but it's serve yourself, so you can drink your fill - there's a sign telling people if they fill any other container, they'll be asked to pay for the juice). They also have clean bathrooms, not too expensive gas, hundreds of souvenirs that say "Florida" on them, and some toys and snacks for the road that will cost you about 75% more than you'd pay for them almost anywhere else. We'll stop again.
The kid at the register was going on about what a madhouse the place had been the day before (Saturday after Thanksgiving), that the whole store was pretty much trashed and running out of everything. I guess the traffic headed north had been intense. And it seemed to me it still was, because starting at Ocala, traffic headed north on I-75 was really thick, and on the Florida Turnpike heading north, it was bumper to bumper. *Right* past my "secret shortcut" exit onto Hwy 27 through Clermont, traffic headed south on the Florida Turnpike was also coming to a standstill. I just breezed right off and left them all to sit there while I cruised south to take a left at 192 and left at Sherberth Road and ouila, welcome to Disney property!
It was cool to drive right up to the Wilderness Lodge security booth, and be welcomed by someone who knew I was coming and had my name on a little clip board, after a 550+ mile road trip.
Check in was all right. I do feel the WL lobby is a bit cold in feeling, and certainly too loud, from the noise from Whispering Canyon Cafe. The front desk has a series of beautiful American Indian cradle boards, behind it on the wall, and each station has a little bronze statue of an animal from the West, right at kid height.
Our room wasn't ready, so I went back outside and had bell services put our frozen pizza and chicken nuggets etc. I'd brought into their refrigerator for us, and Miles and I checked in to eat at Whispering Canyon.
We got a table right away, and a very friendly waitress soon had our grilled cheese and nachos in front of us. Miles enjoyed the pony race around the restaurant with a stick pony, but when they handed out certificates, he was standing behind some other kids and the girl passed him up, to which he burst in tears because he didn't "get a prize". I told him to go back and ASK nicely, as he has to start learning to speak up for himself. He trotted back with the certificate and was happy.
I thought my nachos were mediocre -- the "hearty chili" was bland and the portion was small. The "tilamook cheddar" was good but applied very sparingly. Miles' comments re. the grilled cheese were, "Mommy, did you know this cowboy and indian restaurant has great food!" I still think $20 with tax and tip is too much for a grilled cheese and 20 tortilla chips with half a cup of topping, and two cokes. It may not have helped that a large table of adults and small children next to me had one little girl whining and carrying on, and a lot of mess on and around the table, including each child had a stick horse they'd held onto after a prior "race", that were hanging off the backs of the children's chairs. Every five minutes one would get knocked off the chair by a child getting up and down, and bang down onto the wood floor, making a very loud and startling noise. Add the waitresses hollering and carrying on, and it was pretty hectic. I think all the wood and the open ceiling just makes for too much reverberation.
Miles put together a lincoln log house on the way out, at the kid's play table in the restaurant's foyer. He caught on pretty quick, I don't think he's ever seen those before.
Our room was ready now, so up we went and called bell services. I got a Studio Villa, courtesy of renting from a DVC owner, for exactly $100 a night, which is as cheap as it gets unless you have a very good friend who owns DVC and gives you a trip for free. I was very pleased with the decor, it was soothing and handsome, and the condition of the room was flawless. We faced the "woods" which if they would do a little thinning would turn into a view of Bay Lake. I don't quite understand why they haven't attempted that, unless it would create a problem for the Villas having two different "views" on each side. We used the microwave, toaster, fridge and coffee maker in the kitchenette to eat breakfast each day, and a dinner a couple of times.
Miles was begging to swim, and I figured we better go right now while there was still some afternoon sun. It wasn't warm today, at all. But in the sunshine, using the hot tub to warm ourselves up well before getting in the big pool, we managed not to freeze. Miles is all excited because he can dog paddle now without any flotation devices at all, and can get back up to the surface on his own if you dunk him. So standing right at the bottom of the slide, I let him prove to me he could go down it by himself. He did indeed get back up to the surface each time on his own, though I needed to be there. Next year we'll start on some basic strokes so he can get better control, and then I can see where soon I might be able to read next a pool again! Haven't done that in like 5 years!
We saw the geyser go off, woohoo. I think it's more impressive from out on Bay Lake, with a view of the whole Lodge. From a distance, the fakeness of the "rock" and the "wood" used to build this place isn't discernable, and it makes a great effect. Up close, it's kind of like being in a big Lincoln Log diorama.
For those of you considering a stay at the Villas at Wilderness Lodge, or just the Wilderness Lodge, I'd say give it a try once. Lots of people aren't as bothered by noise and crowds as I am, and the decor and the trees and the theming really is fun. I think if I'd eaten at Artist Point I would have liked it, from what I've heard. The main pool is a bit small and busy, with lots of people walking back and forth around it to the boat dock for the ferry to the Magic Kingdom and other Bay Lake resorts (Ft. Wilderness and the Contemporary), but it's fun. The quiet pool for the Villas is very close by, and charming, with bubbling "springs" coming up in the middle of the pool, and a decent sized hot tub.
It's not much of a walk to get anywhere here, compared other Disney resorts I've stayed at. The gift shop is a good one, and the selection of food for the villas section is a great bonus to people staying in the hotel, too, if they know in advance it's there -- you could bring along a small cooler, and fill it with ice from the hotel each day, and keep cold cuts, milk, cheese, etc. plus there's a good selection of breakfast food like cereal, pastries, and bagels.
The food court leaves a lot to be desired. It's small, crowded, loud, the farthest walk from just about every room in the hotel, and the menu choices are basic theme park fast food, and not made with the highest quality ingredients. It's a pretty limited selection. The one saving grace is the really friendly, gracious cast who work there.
This resort also has, in my opinion, the best beach next to the Polynesian, fairly small and private, with a nice climbing playground right there. I wish we'd made the time on this first day to rent a boat or a bike from the marina, instead of putting it off, because we never got back around to it.
Our original plan for this evening was to have my friend Denise come over and swim, but it was way too cold, and I couldn't raise her on her cell phone anyways. Left her a message saying we were going to Downtown Disney, and my cell number, and then Miles and I bundled up and headed out in search of a "Brother Bear Pack".
Before the trip, I told Miles to settle on ONE item he really wanted, and also had him do chores around the house (mostly helping pick up his own toys at the end of the day) to earn Disney Dollars. He miraculously had earned an even $20 for the trip. ;-) He wanted a set of Brother Bear pvc's, to go with his massive collection of just about every other pvc film-related set Disney's put out since 1999, which comprise the bulk of what we need him to pick up at home.
We waited for a Downtown Disney bus for about 20 minutes, none came, there was a big crowd waiting with us. The second Ticket & Transportation Center bus we'd seen showed up, and I said, let's ride around all the monorail resorts and shop at their gift shops, instead. Miles never minds a ride on the monorail, so that was ok with him.
There was of course some great Lilo & Stitch stuff at the Polynesian, but no Brother Bear. I had the cm at the register call the Contemporary and confirm they didn't stock the Brother Bear sets, either. She said, maybe try the Wilderness Lodge? Doh! Miles and I wandered around the Contemporary a little bit, tried to walk up and eat at Chef Mickeys, but there was an hour wait for a table though there were very few people actually waiting in the foyer. They had lots and lots of priority seating slips lined up, so that's where the wait must have been coming from.
We decided to go back to the room and eat microwave pizza and nuggets, and caught the resort ferry back to the Lodge. I got a chance to unpack and then Miles was ready to go down to the gift shop and get his Brother Bear pack. Sure enough, it's right there facing the front door when we walked in. I got a pin to commemorate my stay here a WL, and bought some bagels and cream cheese and sliced ham for breakfast the next morning.
We took our goodies back to our room and Miles played for about 45 minutes with his new toys. The color scheme from that movie is exactly the same as the decor at the Villas, so every time a pvc fell on the rug, it would blend in and be hard to find again.
Miles wanted to see the Water Pageant, but we still had about an hour to kill before it's scheduled appearance at our beach. I got us really bundled up warmly and we went for a round-trip cruise on the ferry to Fort Wilderness and the Magic Kingdom. It was exciting to see the MK entrance and the castle, "Tomorrow honey, we're going there first thing in the morning, tomorrow."
Back at our resort beach, Miles played on the climbing playground and got into a conversation with some other guests that went like this:
Miles: "Excuse me, are you from Hawaii or something?"
Guest: "No, we are from Mexico."
Miles: "You mean you're speaking Spanish?"
Guest: "Yes we speak Spanish."
Miles: "Hola! I know Hola because Dora the Explorer says that."
Guest: "That's very nice, you speak Spanish, too."
Miles: "When I grow up I'm going to be a doctor so I can have lots of money and come live here at Disney World all the time."
At that point I got up and went to collect Dr. Miles before he talk the guest's ear off any more.
The Water Pageant is a nice note to end the day, not too busy or too exciting, but charming instead.
We got in our jammies and left a wakeup call for 7:30 a.m., called hubby back home from the cell phone to give him our room number (just got the answering machine) and asked him to call us the next night in the room, and we were out within about five minutes of putting out the light, right around 10:15 p.m.
Who: Me and my son Miles, 5 years old
Where: Villas at Wilderness Lodge & Animal Kingdom Lodge
When: November 30 - December 8, 2003
Prologue
They say it ain't over until the fat lady sings, and I sang from Mobile to Mandeville, driving home at the end of this trip, so it must be true: this is my son's and my last trip to WDW for a few years. He and I have had enough to hold us, I think, after coming up to three times a year for four years. It's cold turkey for him in '04, then Disneyland for all the Parrs (including my Mr. Anti-Disney hubby) in '05, and then I'll look at taking Miles back to the World in 2006 when he's 7 or 8 years old. By then, he should be ready to ride some old little kid favorites, but willing to try some of the "big boy" rides. I had a great 8th birthday party, maybe his idea of a great 8th birthday will be WDW? I hope I have brainwashed him properly, so that he won't think of anywhere he'd rather be. He kept asking if we could move there, during this trip.
Notice I didn't say *I* was going cold turkey in '04. I'm planning on going tent camping with some childless grownup friends next year, not sure when yet. They don't like to plan in advance. Little do they know I've already got my adults-only wish list (sorry, still pretty G rated) all planned out:
Massage at the Grand Floridian Spa
Tea at the Grand Floridian
Dinner in the Wine Room at the California Grill
Lunch at Le Cellier
Mission:Space
Rock 'n Roll Coaster
Dinosaur
Backstage Safari tour at the Animal Kingdom
Nothing like 9 trips with a small child to make you dream about a trip without a small child... just once. ;-)
So that's enough about me, let's talk about me and my recent trip!
Saturday, November 29
Couldn't stand it, as usual I packed early and headed out the day before I originally intended to leave, just to get a "jump" on tomorrow's drive. Priceline doesn't cover anything between Pensacola and Tallahassee, which is where I thought I'd end up tonight, so I just left without a reservation for anywhere. We pulled out at 5 p.m. and I figured I'd stop when I got tired. Got as far as Crestview, Florida, around 9:45 p.m., and found a Comfort Inn I liked the looks of. It was $65 plus tax, but I'd looked on the internet before I left, for a couple of weeks, and this was as cheap as it was going to get on Thanksgiving weekend. Not much else to report, we turned out the light at 10:30 p.m. after a quick phone call home.
Sunday, November 30
I fell asleep easily last night, but woke up at 4:00 a.m. Too excited. After all these trips. LOL I'm such a big kid. Couldn't go back to sleep. I took a leisurely hot bath and dressed Miles while he was still asleep. He woke up enough walk downstairs to the van by himself. The hotel was pratically full, and there were several other holiday travelers up this early, loading up their cars. We were on the highway by 5:30 a.m.
By 6:30 a.m. the sun was up, and there were a lot of pretty fog banks to the sides of the road, through the wetlands on the west side of Tallahassee. We got some breakfast from a Marianna McDonald's and Miles was soon asleep for a 2 1/2 hour "nap". I added 20 minutes to the drive by getting onto the highway going the wrong direction out of Marianna, and had to double back East again. Doh!
There were plenty plenty Florida Highway Patrolmen out this weekend. There was someone pulled over for speeding every 30 miles or so along the road. I usually push my luck with cruise control at 78 but this morning I set it for 72.
Stopped for gas just outside Tallahassee, and Miles woke up soon thereafter. He was hungry, so I promised we'd stop in a bit, and gave him some snacks I had in the car. I guess they held him, because he said he changed his mind and wasn't hungry anymore.
Had to make a potty and boredome break at the "Florida Welcome Center", a tourist trap off I-75 that advertises "Cheap Hotels" (a lady with a phone and a lot of brochures behind a desk who will call around for you), a "15 Foot Gator" (stuffed), a "Great White Shark" (also stuffed), and "Free Orange Juice" (true, in little paper cups, but it's serve yourself, so you can drink your fill - there's a sign telling people if they fill any other container, they'll be asked to pay for the juice). They also have clean bathrooms, not too expensive gas, hundreds of souvenirs that say "Florida" on them, and some toys and snacks for the road that will cost you about 75% more than you'd pay for them almost anywhere else. We'll stop again.
The kid at the register was going on about what a madhouse the place had been the day before (Saturday after Thanksgiving), that the whole store was pretty much trashed and running out of everything. I guess the traffic headed north had been intense. And it seemed to me it still was, because starting at Ocala, traffic headed north on I-75 was really thick, and on the Florida Turnpike heading north, it was bumper to bumper. *Right* past my "secret shortcut" exit onto Hwy 27 through Clermont, traffic headed south on the Florida Turnpike was also coming to a standstill. I just breezed right off and left them all to sit there while I cruised south to take a left at 192 and left at Sherberth Road and ouila, welcome to Disney property!
It was cool to drive right up to the Wilderness Lodge security booth, and be welcomed by someone who knew I was coming and had my name on a little clip board, after a 550+ mile road trip.
Check in was all right. I do feel the WL lobby is a bit cold in feeling, and certainly too loud, from the noise from Whispering Canyon Cafe. The front desk has a series of beautiful American Indian cradle boards, behind it on the wall, and each station has a little bronze statue of an animal from the West, right at kid height.
Our room wasn't ready, so I went back outside and had bell services put our frozen pizza and chicken nuggets etc. I'd brought into their refrigerator for us, and Miles and I checked in to eat at Whispering Canyon.
We got a table right away, and a very friendly waitress soon had our grilled cheese and nachos in front of us. Miles enjoyed the pony race around the restaurant with a stick pony, but when they handed out certificates, he was standing behind some other kids and the girl passed him up, to which he burst in tears because he didn't "get a prize". I told him to go back and ASK nicely, as he has to start learning to speak up for himself. He trotted back with the certificate and was happy.
I thought my nachos were mediocre -- the "hearty chili" was bland and the portion was small. The "tilamook cheddar" was good but applied very sparingly. Miles' comments re. the grilled cheese were, "Mommy, did you know this cowboy and indian restaurant has great food!" I still think $20 with tax and tip is too much for a grilled cheese and 20 tortilla chips with half a cup of topping, and two cokes. It may not have helped that a large table of adults and small children next to me had one little girl whining and carrying on, and a lot of mess on and around the table, including each child had a stick horse they'd held onto after a prior "race", that were hanging off the backs of the children's chairs. Every five minutes one would get knocked off the chair by a child getting up and down, and bang down onto the wood floor, making a very loud and startling noise. Add the waitresses hollering and carrying on, and it was pretty hectic. I think all the wood and the open ceiling just makes for too much reverberation.
Miles put together a lincoln log house on the way out, at the kid's play table in the restaurant's foyer. He caught on pretty quick, I don't think he's ever seen those before.
Our room was ready now, so up we went and called bell services. I got a Studio Villa, courtesy of renting from a DVC owner, for exactly $100 a night, which is as cheap as it gets unless you have a very good friend who owns DVC and gives you a trip for free. I was very pleased with the decor, it was soothing and handsome, and the condition of the room was flawless. We faced the "woods" which if they would do a little thinning would turn into a view of Bay Lake. I don't quite understand why they haven't attempted that, unless it would create a problem for the Villas having two different "views" on each side. We used the microwave, toaster, fridge and coffee maker in the kitchenette to eat breakfast each day, and a dinner a couple of times.
Miles was begging to swim, and I figured we better go right now while there was still some afternoon sun. It wasn't warm today, at all. But in the sunshine, using the hot tub to warm ourselves up well before getting in the big pool, we managed not to freeze. Miles is all excited because he can dog paddle now without any flotation devices at all, and can get back up to the surface on his own if you dunk him. So standing right at the bottom of the slide, I let him prove to me he could go down it by himself. He did indeed get back up to the surface each time on his own, though I needed to be there. Next year we'll start on some basic strokes so he can get better control, and then I can see where soon I might be able to read next a pool again! Haven't done that in like 5 years!
We saw the geyser go off, woohoo. I think it's more impressive from out on Bay Lake, with a view of the whole Lodge. From a distance, the fakeness of the "rock" and the "wood" used to build this place isn't discernable, and it makes a great effect. Up close, it's kind of like being in a big Lincoln Log diorama.
For those of you considering a stay at the Villas at Wilderness Lodge, or just the Wilderness Lodge, I'd say give it a try once. Lots of people aren't as bothered by noise and crowds as I am, and the decor and the trees and the theming really is fun. I think if I'd eaten at Artist Point I would have liked it, from what I've heard. The main pool is a bit small and busy, with lots of people walking back and forth around it to the boat dock for the ferry to the Magic Kingdom and other Bay Lake resorts (Ft. Wilderness and the Contemporary), but it's fun. The quiet pool for the Villas is very close by, and charming, with bubbling "springs" coming up in the middle of the pool, and a decent sized hot tub.
It's not much of a walk to get anywhere here, compared other Disney resorts I've stayed at. The gift shop is a good one, and the selection of food for the villas section is a great bonus to people staying in the hotel, too, if they know in advance it's there -- you could bring along a small cooler, and fill it with ice from the hotel each day, and keep cold cuts, milk, cheese, etc. plus there's a good selection of breakfast food like cereal, pastries, and bagels.
The food court leaves a lot to be desired. It's small, crowded, loud, the farthest walk from just about every room in the hotel, and the menu choices are basic theme park fast food, and not made with the highest quality ingredients. It's a pretty limited selection. The one saving grace is the really friendly, gracious cast who work there.
This resort also has, in my opinion, the best beach next to the Polynesian, fairly small and private, with a nice climbing playground right there. I wish we'd made the time on this first day to rent a boat or a bike from the marina, instead of putting it off, because we never got back around to it.
Our original plan for this evening was to have my friend Denise come over and swim, but it was way too cold, and I couldn't raise her on her cell phone anyways. Left her a message saying we were going to Downtown Disney, and my cell number, and then Miles and I bundled up and headed out in search of a "Brother Bear Pack".
Before the trip, I told Miles to settle on ONE item he really wanted, and also had him do chores around the house (mostly helping pick up his own toys at the end of the day) to earn Disney Dollars. He miraculously had earned an even $20 for the trip. ;-) He wanted a set of Brother Bear pvc's, to go with his massive collection of just about every other pvc film-related set Disney's put out since 1999, which comprise the bulk of what we need him to pick up at home.
We waited for a Downtown Disney bus for about 20 minutes, none came, there was a big crowd waiting with us. The second Ticket & Transportation Center bus we'd seen showed up, and I said, let's ride around all the monorail resorts and shop at their gift shops, instead. Miles never minds a ride on the monorail, so that was ok with him.
There was of course some great Lilo & Stitch stuff at the Polynesian, but no Brother Bear. I had the cm at the register call the Contemporary and confirm they didn't stock the Brother Bear sets, either. She said, maybe try the Wilderness Lodge? Doh! Miles and I wandered around the Contemporary a little bit, tried to walk up and eat at Chef Mickeys, but there was an hour wait for a table though there were very few people actually waiting in the foyer. They had lots and lots of priority seating slips lined up, so that's where the wait must have been coming from.
We decided to go back to the room and eat microwave pizza and nuggets, and caught the resort ferry back to the Lodge. I got a chance to unpack and then Miles was ready to go down to the gift shop and get his Brother Bear pack. Sure enough, it's right there facing the front door when we walked in. I got a pin to commemorate my stay here a WL, and bought some bagels and cream cheese and sliced ham for breakfast the next morning.
We took our goodies back to our room and Miles played for about 45 minutes with his new toys. The color scheme from that movie is exactly the same as the decor at the Villas, so every time a pvc fell on the rug, it would blend in and be hard to find again.
Miles wanted to see the Water Pageant, but we still had about an hour to kill before it's scheduled appearance at our beach. I got us really bundled up warmly and we went for a round-trip cruise on the ferry to Fort Wilderness and the Magic Kingdom. It was exciting to see the MK entrance and the castle, "Tomorrow honey, we're going there first thing in the morning, tomorrow."
Back at our resort beach, Miles played on the climbing playground and got into a conversation with some other guests that went like this:
Miles: "Excuse me, are you from Hawaii or something?"
Guest: "No, we are from Mexico."
Miles: "You mean you're speaking Spanish?"
Guest: "Yes we speak Spanish."
Miles: "Hola! I know Hola because Dora the Explorer says that."
Guest: "That's very nice, you speak Spanish, too."
Miles: "When I grow up I'm going to be a doctor so I can have lots of money and come live here at Disney World all the time."
At that point I got up and went to collect Dr. Miles before he talk the guest's ear off any more.
The Water Pageant is a nice note to end the day, not too busy or too exciting, but charming instead.
We got in our jammies and left a wakeup call for 7:30 a.m., called hubby back home from the cell phone to give him our room number (just got the answering machine) and asked him to call us the next night in the room, and we were out within about five minutes of putting out the light, right around 10:15 p.m.
