darkwing818
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2011
- Messages
- 3,156
How about a cruise?
We've sailed


How about a cruise?
My family and I have been going to dude ranches every Summer for over 20 years. I love Disney and we go once or twice a year but I won't skip the ranch. All inclusive with food, horseback riding, kids program, campfires, etc. Lots of fun with no TVs or electronics. I highly recommend every family try one. Our current fav is wilderness trails ranch outside of Durango, Colorado. Beautiful country. Close yo Mesa verde national park and not far from Monument Valley one of the greatest sites ever.
Travel as much as you can, it's all good.
Just remember, if your like us you will eventually find there is WDW-and there is everything else, and everything else comes in below WDW. Some things come close, and are even far better in many ways-but we look forward to WDW far more than anything else so far. As a matter of fact-every thing else ends up being crossed off a list (except US/IOA being so close) with no need/desire to return, theres just the next thing on the list to work around the WDW trips.
If you've never vacationed anywhere but Disney, DEFINITELY go somewhere else! Preferably somewhere without a theme park!
We love Disney, too, but there is a great, big, wonderful world out there, and Disney is only one teeny tiny part of it.
I'm not sure what your family is into or how old your kids are, if you have any. But here are a few suggestions:
-New Orleans--explore the French Quarter, take a ghost tour, take a mule-drawn carriage ride, go to Audubon Park to see the zoo, marvel at the grand houses of the Garden District, ride the streetcar, learn how Mardi Gras floats are built at Mardi Gras World, get out of town and take an airboat tour through the swamp, eat yourself silly with delicious food
-Washington D.C.--visits to all monuments and the Smithsonian Museums are FREE! Explore them all! See Charles Lindberg's plane and the Apollo 11 at the Air and Space Museum, see the pandas at the National Zoo, see Dorothy's ruby slippers and the original Star-Spangled Banner at the Museum of American History (they even have one of the original Dumbo ride vehicles from Disneyland!), see a show at the Kennedy Center
-St. Augustine--explore the Castillo de San Marcos, browse through the shops in the Old City, see all the oddities at the Ripley's Believe it or Not museum, learn about pirates at the Pirate and Treasure museum, go to the beach, drink from the Fountain of Youth
Those are just a few examples! Get out there and explore!
I'd recommend:
- Dollywood (TN)
- Busch Gardens (VA)
I'm kind of with you. I've had a pass for the last 7 years and I was initially annoyed at having to make dining reservations but submitted as it was better than sitting outside a restaurant for 90min hoping to get in. That's fine. I just made that the new norm. I like the FP+ deal, to a certain extent, but I really kind of liked winging it more before and getting FPs wherever we ended up. Still, I could make it work.
The prices have gone up noticeably. This is where I'm starting to think, "Ok.. After this AP is done, I'll just start going elsewhere." Gate prices going up is good, in a way, because it keeps the crowds down. The food prices have shot up a good bit, too, over the last year or so. They were pricey before but I figured I was at a nice theme park - it's just how it is. Now it's getting into the, "I think I'm done eating on Disney property"-area for me which, in addition to the reservations, other costs, and crowds, is making me lean to just picking other destinations in the future.
ROFL! It's so true. Our family has been blessed to travel to some amazing places. But nothing has surpassed WDW yet. I never dreamed I would become a WDW fanatic since I tend to be a budget, bare-to-the-bones traveller.
Pixie dust has clouded our vision![]()
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Yep same-it is pixie dust or something, just almost unexplainable really.
Australia and France were our favorites so far, but we would choose being in WDW right now by far.
You find yourself looking at things in awe-but theres just no emotional connection.
Just seems to be so much effort in everything.
With WDW-theres an app for that.
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Interesting Disney Trip Planning Forums > Theme Parks Attractions and Strategies post.![]()
I'm with you and we now vacation in Pigeon Forge often instead of Disney World. Dollywood has festivals that we enjoy. The best part is the Smokies are in the background. We will go three times a year there for the cost of a trip to Disney. Annual passes are cheap by comparison at Dollywood. You can take side trips to Biltmore, for example.
I won't compare Disney to Dollywood; it's not apples to apples. For us, we just enjoy not having a schedule. For us, Dollywood is closer and I like that, as well.
I've been to Disney World over 40 times and I never thought I would stop going there, but we have. We like Busch Gardens in Williamsburg. We took a road trip out West and out East over the last 5 years. Those trips require more time. The more I see away from Disney the more I like not being at Disney. I find Disney to be a complete hassle and a waste of money, now. I think I got spoiled at Disney World with lower crowds when the economy was down and lower costs and free dining promos and so forth. I really liked legacy fastpass and I'm not fond of fastpass plus. There was more street entertainment in years past at Disney.
I won't say I will never return to Disney World, but it will be way less often.
Go to some vacation websites and see what's out there. We enjoy cruises, now, too.
There is life after Disney World.
There is BIG life after Disney World.
DH is a CASTMEMBER and Disney is not as magical when viewed from the inside, listening to Grownups talk about us.
Bottom line, there is so much MORE to do and far less $$$$. Plus we compare the $$$$ at CASTMEMBER prices.
WDW is just too worn around the edges. Too much taken away. DH's last straw was Lights of Winter.
We still find our way to DL---still sparkly compared to WDW. Perhaps it's too close to the Grownups in Burbank to allow it to slide as much as WDW.
Bottom line, like the feeling of Nantucket or Newport at the Yacht Club/Beach Club, try the real thing. New England is fabulous. Love the Wildie? Try one of the great lodges in our glorious National Parks.....I can go on and on.
Cut your budget in half, expose your children to the real thing! They will thank you as they grow up----exposed to so much that is good.....and real.
Two thoughts.
One: you don't need to plan so far in advance. You can decide the night before which park you are going to hit up, and just pick three favorites. Almost everything was still available this way during our Spring Break trip---very crowded parks!---so while you won't get a few things this way, you can still have fun. There are also a surprising number of restaurants with dinner availability when I checked in the morning, same day.
Two: it's a big world out there, and worth visiting. For other theme-park-style family trips, we've done the Smoky Mountains (Dollywood, Splash Country, Ripley's Aquarium, etc.), Williamsburg (Colonial WB, Busch Gardens, Water Country), and the Wisconsin Dells (water park capital, USA). For non-theme-park but still-fun trips: the Lane Guest Ranch in the Rocky Mountains, an Alaskan cruise (we did a Disney one, but lots of others), several Caribbean cruises (ditto), Washington DC, Paris, and many trips to the Outer Banks of NC. We also have trips planned to Sedona/Grand Canyon and Hilton Head, with a Hawaiian trip on the horizon as our Last Family Vacation the summer my eldest graduates from high school. The boy is angling for an Italy trip as well, but that might be his graduation trip. He wants to go so badly that he is contemplating taking Latin in HS---they go once every few years.