GarrettJD
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2003
- Messages
- 1,598
Cast of characters
Garrett, age 27- Your humble Narrator. Dedicated Disney nut who obsessively plans every single detail of his vacation, driving seemingly everyone else in the free world completely nuts with his constant talk about WDW. Is known for being the person you'd better not mention WDW too, as he'll never shut up... and heaven forbid if you say you're GOING to WDW... he'll try to plan your trip for you, too! He is in management at a major mall-based book chain and has singlehandedly sold enough copies of the Unofficial Guide and the Passporter to lay waste to a small forest. Has been to Disney only twice before (1984 and 2003), but is planning on making an annual trip if finances allow (fingers crossed...)
Nikkie, age 29- Music teacher extraordinaire who really needs the annual break from her students (what a great idea... going from a classroom full of screaming kids to a theme park full of screaming kids). Also a devoted Disney fan, especially of Winnie the Pooh. Not quite the rabid WDW aficionado I am, but she's getting there! Made her first trip last year with me after years of planning, and I think she was more sad to leave than I was... so we immediately planned the next trip!
Day 3- Thursday, June 3 AKA "Ladies and Gentlemen, we are experiencing techincal difficulties"
Plan: Epcot all day, Lunch at Le Cellier, Illuminations
Actual:
We woke at 7:00. For some reason, I'm sleeping much better on this trip than I did last year. Mickey and Minnie called, and we hopped right out of bed (no, not literally) to get ready for our day at Epcot. Nikkie had already taken her shower the night before, so she went to fill our mugs while I got in the shower. We had our quick breakfast in the room and left at 8:00.
We waited only about 5 minutes, and we were on our way to Epcot for the first time this trip. I told Nikkie how uttterly disappointed I was that we didn't get personal bus service this morning-- we had to share the bus with other people, of all things. She took my smartass tone as a sign that I wasn't too upset anymore about last night's Fantasmic fiasco. She was right, mostly.
We got to Epcot about 8:20 and were one of the first ones there. At 8:45 they let us in the gate and up to the front of Spaceship Earth. There were some great CM's at opening going over the rope drop procedure. A guy on a Segway was motoring around, yelling things into a megaphone, pumoing up the crowd. It was already 9:00 and he was stalling for time as the character bus hadn't shown up yet. Finally it showed up, we waved hello, then counted down from ten. "LET THE MAGIC BEGIN!"-- and with that, we were in.
OK. The mental debate raged in my head. Should I do Mission: Space, or will I chicken out? We headed past Innoventions and turned toward M:S, but at the last second we turned towards Test Track. I'm a big chicken. Maybe later.
We first stopped to grab Fastpasses for 9:40-10:40, then we hopped in the standby line. We basically walked straight through the queue and got right into the preshow. In no time we were in our test vehicle. Unfortunately, the ride was having some major technical difficulties. Everything was fine until we got past the corrosion chamber. At the "track course A" segment, they said "Alright, let's pick up the pace." Well, we didn't. We went through half the curves puttering along as fast as a tricycle. Then, about halfway through, we suddenly lurched forward in speed, only to slow down to a crawl entering the tunnel, where all the lights were on. No fun. The high speed test went fine, and almost made up for it, but it was kind of disappointing. Oh well, we have FP's... maybe the next ride will go smoother.
We made our way over to the Imagination pavilion and saw that the next Honey, I Shrunk the Audience was a ways off, so we went into Imageworks to email some photos. After emailing a totally ridiculous photo of us to my mom, brother, and another friend, we decided to make our way to The Land.
At The Land, we made our way directly to Living With The Land. Wow, it's deserted in here. I think we may be the only ones. I'm assuming it won't be like this when Soarin' opens here. I'll be glad when it does-- the loss of Food Rocks didn't bother me at all. At LWTL, the wait time was posted at 0 minutes. Zero?! That's the first time I've ever seen that on a sign. It was accurate, however-- we walked right up to the loading area and there was NOBODY there save for a CM. He told us we were going to wait for a few more people before we loaded. I noticed his hometown was in Indiana and we struck up a conversation (I was born in Indiana also.) Turned out his wife is a retired music teacher. He was one of the many friendly CM's we encountered on the trip.
We load on to our boat with a few others, and we're off on our ecological journey. This ride is one of my Epcot favorites, and I got the whole thing on video. We managed to located the hidden Mickeys this time. Boy, do some of those veggies look good. I might have to make a PS at the restaurant here just to try some of them.
We decided to skip Circle of Life since we saw it last year, and headed out of The Land. We made our way over to Ice Station Cool and tried some of the new beverages they installed. I still have to say that the Kinley Lemon and Smart Watermelon are my favorites. I had Nikkie take a video of me while I downed a big ol' swig of Beverly and tried hard not to get sick afterwards.
We left Ice Station Cool and the Fountain of Nations was just starting a show. This is always nice to watch, and I taped most of it. We cut through Mousegear on our way back to Test Track to use our Fastpasses. A minute or so after we entered the FP line, the announcement came-- "Ladies and Gentlemen, we are experiencing technical difficulties." I'm not surprised given the problems on our earlier ride. We decide to stick it out and ended up waiting about 20 minutes before the line started moving again. I decided I was going to try to tape the ride this time, so I was hoping for a front seat. Well, I got my wish-- Nikkie and I were the only ones in our car. The CMs here were doing a poor loading job as many of the cars were dispatced with 2 or 3 empty seats, only adding to the wait time. I'm not sure what was going on here. The ride was great, and everything worked properly this time. We almost got the picture since we were the only two in the car, but we passed it up again. We almost grabbed more Fastpasses for later, but the return time was while we would be back at the resort for our break, so we passed.
I thought we would have time to see Universe of Energy before lunch, so we went over there and got in line. We quickly moved into the first room and watched the hilarious preshow film. After it was over and we were prepared to move into the "theater", an announcement came. You guessed it-- "technical difficulties." We were shown the way out. Grrrrr... we're not having good luck today with stuff working properly.
Due to our "technical difficulties" we have some time to kill before lunch, to we walk over to Innoventions West to find something to look at. We end up at some IBM-sponsored holographic game, and walk right up and play. I'm a big video game fan, and I have to sat that this is one of the WORST video games I have ever played. I end up coming in 1st among the 12 or so people playing, and everyone congratulates me. Big whoop. We poked around for a few more minutes in Innoventions, the decided to head into World Showcase.
After taking some pictures in front of some of the various Flower & Garden Festival displays, we made our way back towards Canada and Le Cellier. We had a few minutes so we walked over to the United Kingdom to see if the Pooh topiary was there, but it wasn't. Oh well. We made our way back to Canada and arrived at Le Cellier about 10 minutes early for our 12:40 PS. We were seated immediately in a half empty restaurant. I suppose the PS wasn't entirely necessary, but it was nice to have anyway. Our server was very friendly and took our orders-- I had a cup of the cheese soup I'd heard so much about, and we both had prime rib sandwiches. Our server brought us bread-- the pretzel bread was especially good. The cheese soup was wonderful, and our sandwiches were terrific as well. The service here was excellent and the food great-- I would eat here again any time.
We left the restaurant about 1:30 and ran right into Off Kilter performing. We watched the rest of their set and I videotaped it. I had to switch to a new tape quickly when I realized I was at the end of the tape. This was due to the fact that I forgot to stop recording last time and, as a result, got a lovely video of the inside of the camera bag for about 40 minutes.
We walked over to Test Track to check out the Fastpass situation, as I really wanted to give TT a try at night. Unfortunately, all the Fastpasses were gone for the day. We decided to make our way out of the park, stopping at Spaceship Earth on the way out. We walked right in and rode. This is still a great ride. I'm glad to hear that they've postponed plans to change this ride to a thrill ride. As a big plus, on this ride there were no "technical difficulties".
We left the park right at 2:00 and got right on a bus back to Pop Century. We got back about 2:20 and Nikkie headed straight for a nap. I walked to Everything Pop to refill our mugs. I stopped by the arcade to play a few rounds of OutRun 2. It's a fun game. I went back to the room and napped until about 4:30. We got back up and prepared to return to Epcot.
As we left our room, the storm clouds began to gather overhead. Remember, ladies and gentlemen, it's not summer in Florida unless it rains every day. Sure enough, the sky opened up as soon as we got to the bus stop. Fortunately we came prepared and donned ponchos. We waited just a few minutes for the bus and arrived at Epcot about 5:00. By the time we arrived, it had stopped raining-- things were looking up. We made our way through the gates and headed straight back to World Showcase, making a left turn towards Mexico.
In Mexico we headed straight for El Rio Del Tiempo and rode with no wait-- seems like this is par for the course. It's a fun ride, and we enjoyed it. Nothing majorly exciting, but it's a nice alternative to Small World while it's under rehab. After the ride I took a couple of pictures of Nikkie wearing a giant sombrero. We watched the Mexican pop band perform for a while-- they were pretty good.
We moved on to Norway where the posted wait for Maelstrom was 15 minutes. We decided to go ahead and brave the standby line, and the wait turned out to be about 5 minutes. We enjoyed the ride-- I always love the way everybody thinks we're going to go over the falls and land in the middle of World Showcase. After narrowly escaping the three-headed trolls, we disembarked and walked straight through the theater, skipping the film (we saw it last year.) I laughed when I saw someone try to leave over the rope and out the side door and a CM was there to stop them (rather rudely, actually.) I thought, this is WDW... you should know that you can't escape without walking through a gift shop, right?
We made our way out of Norway and moved on to Germany, where we spent awhile browsing the shops. I really want to know what's so darn special about the stuffed toys here that makes them worth paying such exoribitant prices for them. I consulted the time schedule and saw that the last performance of Matsuriza started in a few minutes, so we made our way over to Japan.
Nikkie's students performed a song this year based on Japanese drumming, so this was a real treat to see. I videotaped most of the show. The performers are quite talented. All throughout the show, I thought it would start raining, but the rain held off-- for now. (Dramatic music plays.) After the show, we browsed Mitsukoshi Department Store, a real treat for me. I'm a big video game fan, as well as a fan of Japanese anime and manga, and they had a lot of that stuff on display here. (An aside-- Nikkie does not and never will understand my obsession with games. Whenever I try to talk games with her, she simply rolls her eyes at me. Oh well.)
Upon leaving Japan, we decided we wanted to eat dinner, so we started browsing counter-service menus, but nothing seemed too appealing. By the way, why is there no counter-service pasta place in Italy? When we got to Italy, the rain started again. We threw on ponchos and decided that the situation became drastic-- we were going to eat soon, no matter what. What happened next, I'm almost too embarrased to admit.
Yes, ladies and gentleman, faced with the choice of many ethnic culinary delights within arms reach, we made our way to... the Liberty Inn.
For burgers and fries.
(ducks to avoid stuff thrown at him)
Sorry. We were hungry, it was indoors, and it was close by.
The good thing is, it had stopped raining while we enjoyed our exquisite American cuisine. It was nearly 8:00, so we decided it was time to start looking for a spot for Illuminations. However, our first order of business was to make our way over to Canada-- I wanted to try one of the legendary Beavertails. Hearing about how huge these things are, I bought a chocolate hazlenut Beavertail to split with Nikkie. We made our way back around to Italy and got a great railside seat out over the water. Either it's slow, we're early, or the threat of rain is scaring people away.
The weather did look awfully threatening. I was wary of this night turning into another rainout fiasco like last night at Fantasmic. Fortunately, the rain seemed to be holding off. We met a nice couple from Los Angeles who were first-timers for the show. They asked me if I had seen it before, and I told them it was my favorite show at WDW-- I hope I didn't overhype them. Finally, at 9:00, Illuminations started.
I love this show. I have the music playing now, actually. The music is powerful, and the fireworks are amazing. After watching it again, I've come to a conclusion. As good as Wishes is, I like Reflections of Earth more. Why? I think the soundtrack for RoE is much better-- an original compsition, rather than reusing Disney tunes. Also, the pyro and fireworks seem so much closer to you, drawing you into the show more. I love Wishes, but forced to choose one over the other ( a difficult task), I have to go with Illuminations.
It had started raining during the show, but I was almost too entraced to notice. We made our way around World Showcase, listening to the Tapestry of Dreams music and Promise. What a way to end the day.
We made our way with the crowds to the front gate and exited about 9:45. We waited only about 5 minutes for a bus and were back at Pop Century shortly after 10. I almost considered going to fill our mugs, but we were pretty tired, so we decided to go ahead and turn in. I worked on the trip report and set our wake up call. We need sleep because tomorrow is a full day-- an early morning AND an E-ride night. Will we make it? Stay tuned.
Best Moments: Illuminations (absolutely, without a doubt, my favorite thing at WDW.) Our great lunch at Le Cellier.
Worst Moments: Lots of ride breakdowns. The crappy game at Innoventions.
Garrett, age 27- Your humble Narrator. Dedicated Disney nut who obsessively plans every single detail of his vacation, driving seemingly everyone else in the free world completely nuts with his constant talk about WDW. Is known for being the person you'd better not mention WDW too, as he'll never shut up... and heaven forbid if you say you're GOING to WDW... he'll try to plan your trip for you, too! He is in management at a major mall-based book chain and has singlehandedly sold enough copies of the Unofficial Guide and the Passporter to lay waste to a small forest. Has been to Disney only twice before (1984 and 2003), but is planning on making an annual trip if finances allow (fingers crossed...)
Nikkie, age 29- Music teacher extraordinaire who really needs the annual break from her students (what a great idea... going from a classroom full of screaming kids to a theme park full of screaming kids). Also a devoted Disney fan, especially of Winnie the Pooh. Not quite the rabid WDW aficionado I am, but she's getting there! Made her first trip last year with me after years of planning, and I think she was more sad to leave than I was... so we immediately planned the next trip!
Day 3- Thursday, June 3 AKA "Ladies and Gentlemen, we are experiencing techincal difficulties"
Plan: Epcot all day, Lunch at Le Cellier, Illuminations
Actual:
We woke at 7:00. For some reason, I'm sleeping much better on this trip than I did last year. Mickey and Minnie called, and we hopped right out of bed (no, not literally) to get ready for our day at Epcot. Nikkie had already taken her shower the night before, so she went to fill our mugs while I got in the shower. We had our quick breakfast in the room and left at 8:00.
We waited only about 5 minutes, and we were on our way to Epcot for the first time this trip. I told Nikkie how uttterly disappointed I was that we didn't get personal bus service this morning-- we had to share the bus with other people, of all things. She took my smartass tone as a sign that I wasn't too upset anymore about last night's Fantasmic fiasco. She was right, mostly.
We got to Epcot about 8:20 and were one of the first ones there. At 8:45 they let us in the gate and up to the front of Spaceship Earth. There were some great CM's at opening going over the rope drop procedure. A guy on a Segway was motoring around, yelling things into a megaphone, pumoing up the crowd. It was already 9:00 and he was stalling for time as the character bus hadn't shown up yet. Finally it showed up, we waved hello, then counted down from ten. "LET THE MAGIC BEGIN!"-- and with that, we were in.
OK. The mental debate raged in my head. Should I do Mission: Space, or will I chicken out? We headed past Innoventions and turned toward M:S, but at the last second we turned towards Test Track. I'm a big chicken. Maybe later.
We first stopped to grab Fastpasses for 9:40-10:40, then we hopped in the standby line. We basically walked straight through the queue and got right into the preshow. In no time we were in our test vehicle. Unfortunately, the ride was having some major technical difficulties. Everything was fine until we got past the corrosion chamber. At the "track course A" segment, they said "Alright, let's pick up the pace." Well, we didn't. We went through half the curves puttering along as fast as a tricycle. Then, about halfway through, we suddenly lurched forward in speed, only to slow down to a crawl entering the tunnel, where all the lights were on. No fun. The high speed test went fine, and almost made up for it, but it was kind of disappointing. Oh well, we have FP's... maybe the next ride will go smoother.
We made our way over to the Imagination pavilion and saw that the next Honey, I Shrunk the Audience was a ways off, so we went into Imageworks to email some photos. After emailing a totally ridiculous photo of us to my mom, brother, and another friend, we decided to make our way to The Land.
At The Land, we made our way directly to Living With The Land. Wow, it's deserted in here. I think we may be the only ones. I'm assuming it won't be like this when Soarin' opens here. I'll be glad when it does-- the loss of Food Rocks didn't bother me at all. At LWTL, the wait time was posted at 0 minutes. Zero?! That's the first time I've ever seen that on a sign. It was accurate, however-- we walked right up to the loading area and there was NOBODY there save for a CM. He told us we were going to wait for a few more people before we loaded. I noticed his hometown was in Indiana and we struck up a conversation (I was born in Indiana also.) Turned out his wife is a retired music teacher. He was one of the many friendly CM's we encountered on the trip.
We load on to our boat with a few others, and we're off on our ecological journey. This ride is one of my Epcot favorites, and I got the whole thing on video. We managed to located the hidden Mickeys this time. Boy, do some of those veggies look good. I might have to make a PS at the restaurant here just to try some of them.
We decided to skip Circle of Life since we saw it last year, and headed out of The Land. We made our way over to Ice Station Cool and tried some of the new beverages they installed. I still have to say that the Kinley Lemon and Smart Watermelon are my favorites. I had Nikkie take a video of me while I downed a big ol' swig of Beverly and tried hard not to get sick afterwards.
We left Ice Station Cool and the Fountain of Nations was just starting a show. This is always nice to watch, and I taped most of it. We cut through Mousegear on our way back to Test Track to use our Fastpasses. A minute or so after we entered the FP line, the announcement came-- "Ladies and Gentlemen, we are experiencing technical difficulties." I'm not surprised given the problems on our earlier ride. We decide to stick it out and ended up waiting about 20 minutes before the line started moving again. I decided I was going to try to tape the ride this time, so I was hoping for a front seat. Well, I got my wish-- Nikkie and I were the only ones in our car. The CMs here were doing a poor loading job as many of the cars were dispatced with 2 or 3 empty seats, only adding to the wait time. I'm not sure what was going on here. The ride was great, and everything worked properly this time. We almost got the picture since we were the only two in the car, but we passed it up again. We almost grabbed more Fastpasses for later, but the return time was while we would be back at the resort for our break, so we passed.
I thought we would have time to see Universe of Energy before lunch, so we went over there and got in line. We quickly moved into the first room and watched the hilarious preshow film. After it was over and we were prepared to move into the "theater", an announcement came. You guessed it-- "technical difficulties." We were shown the way out. Grrrrr... we're not having good luck today with stuff working properly.
Due to our "technical difficulties" we have some time to kill before lunch, to we walk over to Innoventions West to find something to look at. We end up at some IBM-sponsored holographic game, and walk right up and play. I'm a big video game fan, and I have to sat that this is one of the WORST video games I have ever played. I end up coming in 1st among the 12 or so people playing, and everyone congratulates me. Big whoop. We poked around for a few more minutes in Innoventions, the decided to head into World Showcase.
After taking some pictures in front of some of the various Flower & Garden Festival displays, we made our way back towards Canada and Le Cellier. We had a few minutes so we walked over to the United Kingdom to see if the Pooh topiary was there, but it wasn't. Oh well. We made our way back to Canada and arrived at Le Cellier about 10 minutes early for our 12:40 PS. We were seated immediately in a half empty restaurant. I suppose the PS wasn't entirely necessary, but it was nice to have anyway. Our server was very friendly and took our orders-- I had a cup of the cheese soup I'd heard so much about, and we both had prime rib sandwiches. Our server brought us bread-- the pretzel bread was especially good. The cheese soup was wonderful, and our sandwiches were terrific as well. The service here was excellent and the food great-- I would eat here again any time.
We left the restaurant about 1:30 and ran right into Off Kilter performing. We watched the rest of their set and I videotaped it. I had to switch to a new tape quickly when I realized I was at the end of the tape. This was due to the fact that I forgot to stop recording last time and, as a result, got a lovely video of the inside of the camera bag for about 40 minutes.
We walked over to Test Track to check out the Fastpass situation, as I really wanted to give TT a try at night. Unfortunately, all the Fastpasses were gone for the day. We decided to make our way out of the park, stopping at Spaceship Earth on the way out. We walked right in and rode. This is still a great ride. I'm glad to hear that they've postponed plans to change this ride to a thrill ride. As a big plus, on this ride there were no "technical difficulties".
We left the park right at 2:00 and got right on a bus back to Pop Century. We got back about 2:20 and Nikkie headed straight for a nap. I walked to Everything Pop to refill our mugs. I stopped by the arcade to play a few rounds of OutRun 2. It's a fun game. I went back to the room and napped until about 4:30. We got back up and prepared to return to Epcot.
As we left our room, the storm clouds began to gather overhead. Remember, ladies and gentlemen, it's not summer in Florida unless it rains every day. Sure enough, the sky opened up as soon as we got to the bus stop. Fortunately we came prepared and donned ponchos. We waited just a few minutes for the bus and arrived at Epcot about 5:00. By the time we arrived, it had stopped raining-- things were looking up. We made our way through the gates and headed straight back to World Showcase, making a left turn towards Mexico.
In Mexico we headed straight for El Rio Del Tiempo and rode with no wait-- seems like this is par for the course. It's a fun ride, and we enjoyed it. Nothing majorly exciting, but it's a nice alternative to Small World while it's under rehab. After the ride I took a couple of pictures of Nikkie wearing a giant sombrero. We watched the Mexican pop band perform for a while-- they were pretty good.
We moved on to Norway where the posted wait for Maelstrom was 15 minutes. We decided to go ahead and brave the standby line, and the wait turned out to be about 5 minutes. We enjoyed the ride-- I always love the way everybody thinks we're going to go over the falls and land in the middle of World Showcase. After narrowly escaping the three-headed trolls, we disembarked and walked straight through the theater, skipping the film (we saw it last year.) I laughed when I saw someone try to leave over the rope and out the side door and a CM was there to stop them (rather rudely, actually.) I thought, this is WDW... you should know that you can't escape without walking through a gift shop, right?
We made our way out of Norway and moved on to Germany, where we spent awhile browsing the shops. I really want to know what's so darn special about the stuffed toys here that makes them worth paying such exoribitant prices for them. I consulted the time schedule and saw that the last performance of Matsuriza started in a few minutes, so we made our way over to Japan.
Nikkie's students performed a song this year based on Japanese drumming, so this was a real treat to see. I videotaped most of the show. The performers are quite talented. All throughout the show, I thought it would start raining, but the rain held off-- for now. (Dramatic music plays.) After the show, we browsed Mitsukoshi Department Store, a real treat for me. I'm a big video game fan, as well as a fan of Japanese anime and manga, and they had a lot of that stuff on display here. (An aside-- Nikkie does not and never will understand my obsession with games. Whenever I try to talk games with her, she simply rolls her eyes at me. Oh well.)
Upon leaving Japan, we decided we wanted to eat dinner, so we started browsing counter-service menus, but nothing seemed too appealing. By the way, why is there no counter-service pasta place in Italy? When we got to Italy, the rain started again. We threw on ponchos and decided that the situation became drastic-- we were going to eat soon, no matter what. What happened next, I'm almost too embarrased to admit.
Yes, ladies and gentleman, faced with the choice of many ethnic culinary delights within arms reach, we made our way to... the Liberty Inn.
For burgers and fries.
(ducks to avoid stuff thrown at him)
Sorry. We were hungry, it was indoors, and it was close by.
The good thing is, it had stopped raining while we enjoyed our exquisite American cuisine. It was nearly 8:00, so we decided it was time to start looking for a spot for Illuminations. However, our first order of business was to make our way over to Canada-- I wanted to try one of the legendary Beavertails. Hearing about how huge these things are, I bought a chocolate hazlenut Beavertail to split with Nikkie. We made our way back around to Italy and got a great railside seat out over the water. Either it's slow, we're early, or the threat of rain is scaring people away.
The weather did look awfully threatening. I was wary of this night turning into another rainout fiasco like last night at Fantasmic. Fortunately, the rain seemed to be holding off. We met a nice couple from Los Angeles who were first-timers for the show. They asked me if I had seen it before, and I told them it was my favorite show at WDW-- I hope I didn't overhype them. Finally, at 9:00, Illuminations started.
I love this show. I have the music playing now, actually. The music is powerful, and the fireworks are amazing. After watching it again, I've come to a conclusion. As good as Wishes is, I like Reflections of Earth more. Why? I think the soundtrack for RoE is much better-- an original compsition, rather than reusing Disney tunes. Also, the pyro and fireworks seem so much closer to you, drawing you into the show more. I love Wishes, but forced to choose one over the other ( a difficult task), I have to go with Illuminations.
It had started raining during the show, but I was almost too entraced to notice. We made our way around World Showcase, listening to the Tapestry of Dreams music and Promise. What a way to end the day.
We made our way with the crowds to the front gate and exited about 9:45. We waited only about 5 minutes for a bus and were back at Pop Century shortly after 10. I almost considered going to fill our mugs, but we were pretty tired, so we decided to go ahead and turn in. I worked on the trip report and set our wake up call. We need sleep because tomorrow is a full day-- an early morning AND an E-ride night. Will we make it? Stay tuned.
Best Moments: Illuminations (absolutely, without a doubt, my favorite thing at WDW.) Our great lunch at Le Cellier.
Worst Moments: Lots of ride breakdowns. The crappy game at Innoventions.