scjo68
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2002
- Messages
- 1,540
With my 20-month-old, We did Crystal palace for 10:30 breakfast. Pooh and friends were there, Ds loved it. We went on an EMH morning, so experienced Fantasyland and Pooh's thoughtful spot without crowds until our 10:30 ADR. So it was really more of an early lunch. We had nutrigrain bar in the hotel room for "breakfast". Another option is to make an 8:00 ADR for a non-emh morning, and be finished at 9:00 for opening. Lunch would be a good option, too. Make sure you have an ADR. You don't want to be sitting in breakfast at 9:00 or so, beacause that is prime touring time with low crowds and lines. Vitally important for this age, who are not good waiters.
We also did Chef Mickeys at the Contemporary, for Dinner. Mickey, Minnie, Goofy, Chip, Dale, Donald were there. We had a 5:00 ADR, which was the perfect time to go.
You don't pay for these meals till you get there. You won't have to pay for a child under three at all for any buffet or family style meal, they can just eat from the buffet. Now, if you, say, order them chicken nuggets at counter service, you pay for them.
Now, if you want to do Cinderella's Royal Table at the MK castle (a difficult ADR to get, look for info in dining board) Or the Princess Storybook breakfast at Norway in EPCOT, They will charge a $10 deposit to your credit card when you book. Or maybe they just get your cc number in case you don't show up. Either way, for those two meals, you give them you card number over the phone, and you must cancel at least 48 hours before, or they will charge $10 per person if you don't show. The others, you can technically just not show up, but it's nice to cancel as a courtesy.
Both CP and CM meals are quite loud and fun. Lots of music, child participation. If the child likles that kind of thing, great. If they are extremely sensitive to lots of stimulation and easily overwhelmed, A princess meal might be better. Face characters are less intimidating, and the meals are calmer and quieter.
We also did Chef Mickeys at the Contemporary, for Dinner. Mickey, Minnie, Goofy, Chip, Dale, Donald were there. We had a 5:00 ADR, which was the perfect time to go.
You don't pay for these meals till you get there. You won't have to pay for a child under three at all for any buffet or family style meal, they can just eat from the buffet. Now, if you, say, order them chicken nuggets at counter service, you pay for them.
Now, if you want to do Cinderella's Royal Table at the MK castle (a difficult ADR to get, look for info in dining board) Or the Princess Storybook breakfast at Norway in EPCOT, They will charge a $10 deposit to your credit card when you book. Or maybe they just get your cc number in case you don't show up. Either way, for those two meals, you give them you card number over the phone, and you must cancel at least 48 hours before, or they will charge $10 per person if you don't show. The others, you can technically just not show up, but it's nice to cancel as a courtesy.
Both CP and CM meals are quite loud and fun. Lots of music, child participation. If the child likles that kind of thing, great. If they are extremely sensitive to lots of stimulation and easily overwhelmed, A princess meal might be better. Face characters are less intimidating, and the meals are calmer and quieter.
She loved the shows, too. We did Spectro the first night and the look on her face when she saw Mickey was priceless, a total "He's REAL!" expression. She would wake up each day asking to go see Mickey. We did have our moments, but we got through them- it helped that we went back to our hotel (the Poly) each day for a good nap. What made me decide to take her at that age was DIsney's advertising Campaign "Take them while the Magic's Still Real" and it really was true. It was more special because to her, it was all real!