jlowejd5
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2004
- Messages
- 590
I'll put our three days at UO over here, as well. If you want to read the whole ginormous thing, the cruise portion is over on the DCL Trip Reports board. Hope you like it!
Some background. It's just DW and I, both 35, longtime Disney geeks. This is our first trip to UO together. I was there a long time ago with my family, and we did a day trip to the California version when were at Disneyland last year and had a really good time. So we decided to tack on three days at UO onto the end of our 5-year anniversary cruise. Here's what happened...
Thursday, February 19th.
Back on land. We knew we had all kinds of time, so we slept until about 7:00 or so, showered, and headed out the door. We sat for a few minutes on Deck 5 overlooking the atrium and watched people leave. Thats always fun, to see who is cool and prepared, and who is freaking out because somethings gone screwy. We wandered off the ship by about 8:15 or so, headed down the escalator, and picked up a porter. I have to say, these folks are worth every dime we tip them. I have to schlep my bags around all the time, so why not find a dude to help me for a couple of bucks. Plus they make it easy because they know exactly where theyre going, so you gain a few minutes of standing around time.
Breezed through customs and headed out to the Budget pick-up area. Again, this is the first time weve experienced this particular form of transportation, so its all new to us. Major kudos to DCL and the porters on how easy they make it to get where youre going. We were the only ones who got on the shuttle at the DCL terminal. We thought, sweet, this will be easy. Then we drove over to the Carnival (I think, I wasnt really paying attention) terminal, and completely filled the shuttle, and left people standing there who couldnt fit on. I guess theres something to be said for the Magical Express, after all. The whole shuttle waiting area was packed full of people, but I have no idea where all they were going (other rental companies, hotels, etc). But, since were vacation ninjas, we quickly (and quietly) worked out our strategery. When we got to the rental place, I would take care of getting the car, and she would handle the baggage. I was third off the bus. Yay. Got our car easily, loaded the bags, and headed out toward our new destination, Universal Orlando.
We had skipped breakfast, so we ended up stopping at a Dennys just outside of Orlando for a quick bite to eat. Once we were done, we headed on to UO and our hotel, the Royal Pacific Resort. Holy cow. What a gorgeous place. Imagine the beauty of the Polynesian, with the advantage of being 30 years newer. I cant imagine staying anywhere else when we come to UO. The bellmen and front desk folks were awesome, and they had a room ready for us when we got there at like 11:00. We were in a water-view room (the pool complex) on the fourth floor of Tower 3. We were actually the very last room in that wing, continuing a long-standing tradition we have of being as far as humanly possible away from the elevators in whatever hotel were staying in. Its become something of a joke at this point. But again, thats a small thing.
The hotel brought the bags up while I went to park the car. We unpacked, relaxed for a few minutes, and headed out to see the parks. The grounds of the hotel are just amazing. The boat ride from the dock over to the CityWalk area is very convenient. I dont think we waited more than about 8 minutes at any point during the stay. Very happy with the transportation.
We had decided to go to Universal Studios first. I had been there forever ago, all the way back in 1991, and I remember almost nothing about it. But when we were in California last October visiting Disneyland, we rented a car and met some friends at the Hollywood version of Universal, and had a really good time. We got our tickets from the little electronic kiosk, which was pretty convenient, and got through the turnstiles and into the park. Now, anybody who knows me wont believe this, but I had absolutely no plan to follow. Normally, Im Pal Justin, the one who knows which shows to go see, which attractions are skippable, and what time the 3:00 parade starts. Plus, occasionally, Ill wiggle my arm and spout out inane Disney trivia. But for this one, I was in full-on wander around mode.
We headed back into the park and just sorta soaked it all in. It was an absolutely gorgeous day, perfect temperatures, a little overcast. It looked like everybody there was stopping at Jimmy Neutron and Shrek 4-D, so we kept walking back in and rode Revenge of the Mummy. A word of warning: UO prohibits any kind of carry-on baggage on about 75% of their attractions, which means no camera bags, backpacks, or anything like that. They have free electronic lockers next to the headliner rides, but I decided to leave the camera bag back at the hotel. Not worth fighting through the crowd. Mummy is awesome. Very cool.
After we got off, we got picked off the street to participate in a tv watching and rating thing. Basically, they showed us seven differently cut previews of the new NBC/Universal series Kings, and we had to tell what we liked and didnt like. I tried to give coherent answers, but I wanted to jackslap the people around me. I could see their monitors, and I saw things like I liked it when the tank blowed up and When your a king life is good and AWESOME!!. (all grammatical errors [sic]) So now I think I have to watch at least the first couple of episodes of this thing. Plus they paid us $10 each, which was cool.
A word about Universal attractions. As a guest at a UO resort, we were entitled to flash our room cards and take advantage of the Universal Express Plus option, which, in Disney-speak, meant we got all-time FastPasses for every attraction and show. Wow. Now, granted, the park was not overly full, but what this meant was that we could do the entire park in about four plus hours. I think the longest we waited was about 10, maybe 15 minutes. And the posted time for the Simpsons ride was 70 minutes when we showed up. Obviously, it would be very hard for WDW to put a similar program in place, simply based on the fact that they have like 70,000+ hotel rooms on property. Day Guests wouldnt ever be able to ride anything. But I can tell you that I will never again visit UO without participating (either by staying there or by buying it). It gave us SO much more free time to see the parks.
After that, we knocked out Jaws, Men In Black, Simpsons, got some lunch at the slowest-moving pizza line ever, did the E.T. Adventure (which made me twitch for Reeses Pieces for a day and a half), then the Horror Make-up Show (which is underrated and really a good time), and then decided that wed pretty much had enough for the day. Jaws is still fun. The MiB ride is better than either Buzz Lightyear (Orlando or Anaheim). The Simpsons Ride is one of the most enjoyable rides Ive ever been on. Its really well done, its funny, and its self-deprecating enough to be funny for the park-savvy guests, too.
We wandered out of the park, jumped the boat back to the hotel, and wandered out to the pool for a while. Eventually, we had to come back in and change for dinner, which was at Emerils restaurant at CityWalk. Now, having just gotten off the cruise ship, we werent expecting too much, but I have to say the food may have been better here than on the Wonder. The service was perhaps the best Ive ever had, anywhere, and I filled out a comment card onsite and sent them an email when I got home to let them know what a fabulous time we had. Amazingly good food, and our table was out on the little porch area so we could watch the rest of CityWalk go by. If you have the opportunity while youre there, I highly recommend Emerils. And, including dessert and a huge tip, the two of us got out of there for about $125. Back to the hotel and crashed out for the night.
Some background. It's just DW and I, both 35, longtime Disney geeks. This is our first trip to UO together. I was there a long time ago with my family, and we did a day trip to the California version when were at Disneyland last year and had a really good time. So we decided to tack on three days at UO onto the end of our 5-year anniversary cruise. Here's what happened...
Thursday, February 19th.
Back on land. We knew we had all kinds of time, so we slept until about 7:00 or so, showered, and headed out the door. We sat for a few minutes on Deck 5 overlooking the atrium and watched people leave. Thats always fun, to see who is cool and prepared, and who is freaking out because somethings gone screwy. We wandered off the ship by about 8:15 or so, headed down the escalator, and picked up a porter. I have to say, these folks are worth every dime we tip them. I have to schlep my bags around all the time, so why not find a dude to help me for a couple of bucks. Plus they make it easy because they know exactly where theyre going, so you gain a few minutes of standing around time.
Breezed through customs and headed out to the Budget pick-up area. Again, this is the first time weve experienced this particular form of transportation, so its all new to us. Major kudos to DCL and the porters on how easy they make it to get where youre going. We were the only ones who got on the shuttle at the DCL terminal. We thought, sweet, this will be easy. Then we drove over to the Carnival (I think, I wasnt really paying attention) terminal, and completely filled the shuttle, and left people standing there who couldnt fit on. I guess theres something to be said for the Magical Express, after all. The whole shuttle waiting area was packed full of people, but I have no idea where all they were going (other rental companies, hotels, etc). But, since were vacation ninjas, we quickly (and quietly) worked out our strategery. When we got to the rental place, I would take care of getting the car, and she would handle the baggage. I was third off the bus. Yay. Got our car easily, loaded the bags, and headed out toward our new destination, Universal Orlando.
We had skipped breakfast, so we ended up stopping at a Dennys just outside of Orlando for a quick bite to eat. Once we were done, we headed on to UO and our hotel, the Royal Pacific Resort. Holy cow. What a gorgeous place. Imagine the beauty of the Polynesian, with the advantage of being 30 years newer. I cant imagine staying anywhere else when we come to UO. The bellmen and front desk folks were awesome, and they had a room ready for us when we got there at like 11:00. We were in a water-view room (the pool complex) on the fourth floor of Tower 3. We were actually the very last room in that wing, continuing a long-standing tradition we have of being as far as humanly possible away from the elevators in whatever hotel were staying in. Its become something of a joke at this point. But again, thats a small thing.
The hotel brought the bags up while I went to park the car. We unpacked, relaxed for a few minutes, and headed out to see the parks. The grounds of the hotel are just amazing. The boat ride from the dock over to the CityWalk area is very convenient. I dont think we waited more than about 8 minutes at any point during the stay. Very happy with the transportation.
We had decided to go to Universal Studios first. I had been there forever ago, all the way back in 1991, and I remember almost nothing about it. But when we were in California last October visiting Disneyland, we rented a car and met some friends at the Hollywood version of Universal, and had a really good time. We got our tickets from the little electronic kiosk, which was pretty convenient, and got through the turnstiles and into the park. Now, anybody who knows me wont believe this, but I had absolutely no plan to follow. Normally, Im Pal Justin, the one who knows which shows to go see, which attractions are skippable, and what time the 3:00 parade starts. Plus, occasionally, Ill wiggle my arm and spout out inane Disney trivia. But for this one, I was in full-on wander around mode.
We headed back into the park and just sorta soaked it all in. It was an absolutely gorgeous day, perfect temperatures, a little overcast. It looked like everybody there was stopping at Jimmy Neutron and Shrek 4-D, so we kept walking back in and rode Revenge of the Mummy. A word of warning: UO prohibits any kind of carry-on baggage on about 75% of their attractions, which means no camera bags, backpacks, or anything like that. They have free electronic lockers next to the headliner rides, but I decided to leave the camera bag back at the hotel. Not worth fighting through the crowd. Mummy is awesome. Very cool.
After we got off, we got picked off the street to participate in a tv watching and rating thing. Basically, they showed us seven differently cut previews of the new NBC/Universal series Kings, and we had to tell what we liked and didnt like. I tried to give coherent answers, but I wanted to jackslap the people around me. I could see their monitors, and I saw things like I liked it when the tank blowed up and When your a king life is good and AWESOME!!. (all grammatical errors [sic]) So now I think I have to watch at least the first couple of episodes of this thing. Plus they paid us $10 each, which was cool.
A word about Universal attractions. As a guest at a UO resort, we were entitled to flash our room cards and take advantage of the Universal Express Plus option, which, in Disney-speak, meant we got all-time FastPasses for every attraction and show. Wow. Now, granted, the park was not overly full, but what this meant was that we could do the entire park in about four plus hours. I think the longest we waited was about 10, maybe 15 minutes. And the posted time for the Simpsons ride was 70 minutes when we showed up. Obviously, it would be very hard for WDW to put a similar program in place, simply based on the fact that they have like 70,000+ hotel rooms on property. Day Guests wouldnt ever be able to ride anything. But I can tell you that I will never again visit UO without participating (either by staying there or by buying it). It gave us SO much more free time to see the parks.
After that, we knocked out Jaws, Men In Black, Simpsons, got some lunch at the slowest-moving pizza line ever, did the E.T. Adventure (which made me twitch for Reeses Pieces for a day and a half), then the Horror Make-up Show (which is underrated and really a good time), and then decided that wed pretty much had enough for the day. Jaws is still fun. The MiB ride is better than either Buzz Lightyear (Orlando or Anaheim). The Simpsons Ride is one of the most enjoyable rides Ive ever been on. Its really well done, its funny, and its self-deprecating enough to be funny for the park-savvy guests, too.
We wandered out of the park, jumped the boat back to the hotel, and wandered out to the pool for a while. Eventually, we had to come back in and change for dinner, which was at Emerils restaurant at CityWalk. Now, having just gotten off the cruise ship, we werent expecting too much, but I have to say the food may have been better here than on the Wonder. The service was perhaps the best Ive ever had, anywhere, and I filled out a comment card onsite and sent them an email when I got home to let them know what a fabulous time we had. Amazingly good food, and our table was out on the little porch area so we could watch the rest of CityWalk go by. If you have the opportunity while youre there, I highly recommend Emerils. And, including dessert and a huge tip, the two of us got out of there for about $125. Back to the hotel and crashed out for the night.