Sleepless Knight
Jedi Knight Seeking His Jedi Princess
- Joined
- May 15, 2008
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- 4,977
QOTD: Todays question is somewhat running related. For those of you who run a runDisney race, or races over the weekend, how do you plan your trips? What I mean by that is, do you plan on having park days before the race weekend, after, both, or only during the event weekend itself? When running multiple races do you spend time in the parks after each race or do you focus on recovery and preparing for the next race?
Disneyland (I visit frequently):
Friday: Arrive early to mid afternoon. Go to Expo. If running a challenge, head to hotel after Expo and rest up for 10K.
Saturday: Visit parks no matter what. However this is a light touring day. Avoid long lines, obtain as many fastpasses as possible, watch shows, movies, etc that involve lots of sitting down. Head back to hotel no later than 7:00pm for early bed.
Race day: Visit the parks after the race. Stay until the fireworks. May watch 10:30 Fantasmic if I'm not completely exhausted. Usually I head back after the fireworks when running a challenge.
Day after race (with annual pass): Go to parks for an hour or two to help shake out the soreness. Start drive home around 2:00pm.
I've done Disney World two different ways:
2012 Wine & Dine Half. I arrived in Orlando late Monday evening before the Saturday night half. Did normal parks touring Tuesday through Friday.
Saturday (late night race): Slept in. I had planned to stay off my feet altogether this day, but soon realized that I was going stir crazy sitting around my room and needed to find an outlet for my nervous energy. I decided to head to Epcot, which I chose because I could do things like ride Ellen's Energy Adventure and thus stay off my feet and out of the sun for a very long time, but still be doing something. Left Epcot around 4:00pm. Race went fine.
Sunday: Went to Epcot after sleeping late. Stayed for Illuminations.
Monday: Magic Kingdom and MVMCP. Left the next morning.
This plan was not ideal. I would have preferred to do the parks after the race. But it was this or not do the race at all. Interestingly enough, my ability to complete a half marathon days after getting over a cold and doing 4 days of intensive touring of Walt Disney World before the race told me that I could finish a 10K and Half on back to back days with proper training. This made the idea of doing the Rebel Challenge and Dark Side Challenge not insane.
2017 & 2018 Dark Side:
Wednesday: Red eye to Orlando
Thursday 2017: Expo and Disney Springs. Early bedtime.
Thursday 2018: One park and the Expo. My sister is coming with and has fewer days in Florida than me. Early bedtime.
Friday 2017: Magic Kingdom with breakfast at Be Our Guest. FastPass or short wait times. Dinner and early bedtime.
Friday 2018: 5K with same plan as last year.
Saturday: 10K with a park afterwards. Very light touring. FastPass or short wait times. Stay off feet!!!!!
Sunday: Half with a park afterwards. Again FastPass or short wait times. Watch fireworks to celebrate. Go to bed.
Monday: Sleep in. Tour parks afterwards. Last year I did the Star Wars Guided Tour the day after the race. That was entirely too much walking. I had the blister to prove it afterwards. Will take it easier this year.
Tuesday through Friday: Enjoy the parks. I reserve the right to sleep in at least one day if I want to. Wear my medals around the parks, especially the days immediately following the race.
I understand the reasoning behind staying off your feet before a race. However, any race held on Disney property also involves the ability to spend time in Disneyland or Disney World. So I try to sit down a lot when touring the parks before a race. I may tolerate longer lines after the race (or longest race if doing a challenge), but not before the race. This has worked for me. Maybe I'm compromising my time, but I define a successful race as not being swept.