What Happens at the Beach Club... Travels with Teens, Take Two, (PTR) 4/6 p. 29

Oh Dee - So sorry to hear about Mark. Glad he made it home safely. You have had a rough time of it the past couple of weeks. Hugs to you.

Rebecca

Thank you!

I think I am going to stop answering the phone and stop taking texts. Nothing but bad news!

:sad2:


Oh my Dee :hug: sorry about Schooner :littleangel:

You really need to stop pushing around the men in your life..first your Dad, now your hubby...tripped and fell likely story ;) What a crappy birthday..glad he is okay just banged up. Dad gets better, and you get a new patient :hug: Bubble wrap all around! :flower3:

Thanks! I'm gonna miss that big guy! It was sad driving into the farm on Friday and not seeing his face over the fence. And to see Roger the donkey lying down in mourning. But as soon as those kids came over, Roger perked right up!

:)

I will have you know that I have alibis for both of the incidents! Pretty bad birthday for Mark :( I didn't know what to get him for a present, but he suggested "pride" because he left his on the sidewalk.

;)


So sorry about Schooner. You are a great person to work at a rescue...there should be more people like you!

Thank you, April!

I am very fortunate to work where I do- the animals are so sweet and gentle, and I get to see them interacting with kids of all ages. It is nice to know that these animals will have a great future with us.

:goodvibes


I'm so sorry to hear about Schooner. I am sure that he will be missed by all of the workers there and the people who have visited him in the past.

Poor Mark! Of all things to happy when he turned 50! :scared:

Thank you!

I have seen so many beautiful tributes to Schooner on Facebook this week, from people I know and some I don't. He really touched a lot of lives.

:lovestruc

Well, Mark certainly had a birthday that he will never forget!

:upsidedow
 
Again, I am sorry to hear about Schooner, Dee.

And so sorry about Mark's meeting with the pavement. Certainly not the way to spend one's 50th birthday. Hope he is feeling better.
 
Again, I am sorry to hear about Schooner, Dee.

And so sorry about Mark's meeting with the pavement. Certainly not the way to spend one's 50th birthday. Hope he is feeling better.

Thank you, Kathy!

Been thinking of you, too and your family.

Mark is doing better every day. He was pretty sore on Friday and Saturday. Yesterday and today were much better.

:thumbsup2
 
The third Fast Pass I made for this afternoon was for Maelstrom- I knew the attraction would be closing permanently soon, so I wanted to get a last ride in.

I took the little “short cut” from Future World to the World Showcase by the old Odyssey restaurant. This walkway is usually not very crowded. As I was walking along, a CM was approaching from the other direction and she was looking at me quizzically. I thought she was going to ask me if I needed anything, so I said “I’m all set”. She said “I’m just trying to read your shirt.”

So I stopped and moved my camera out of the way and she saw that I was an official member of the Stormalong Bay Sychronized Pool Tube Team. She gave me a high-five and we were both on our way again.


All of the pictures in this section of the report are taken with my big-girl camera.













First stop, Mexico.











I love this pavilion. The inside plaza is so dark and festive and romantic!







To ride or not to ride? The line for the boat ride in Mexico is never very long, but I skipped it this time around.

Adios!


It was time to stroll to the trolls.

Stave Church/Frozen display (I didn’t go in)








A Norwegian Plaza:









And, the ride:


Doh! I didn’t get the standby time in this shot. But I was able to zoom in on another picture: 40 minute wait/3:00 pm

I also didn’t get any decent pictures inside the ride.

When the ride ended, the movie was playing.

For old times sake, I decided to take a seat and watch one last time.

Yeah, right!

I walked to one of the back rows and slipped through!


China!






A show was just finishing.







I continued on, but quickly found myself at an unexpected stop.


Next Up: Don’t Stop the World (I’ll Melt With You)

Click Here
 

Before anything else, so very sorry to hear about the loss of Schooner. The fact that he was part of your seflie practice I'm sure made him very proud and is a very fitting tribute.

Yes, despite the fact that most of the FP selections in Epcot fail to really interest me and I would probably pick Maelstrom anyway, seeing it one more time is a must.

Hahahaha, love the CM encounter. Just great!

Ooh your inside Mexico shorts turned out really good. That's a tough spot.

Awwww, I honestly though you might watch the movie. But I guess a tribute to Maelstrom in incomplete until your skip the movie. (And by the way, I am totally keeping that line for my own TR, lol).
 
Nice pictures with your big girl camera, Dee.

I'm with you...love the Mexican pavilion.

I am so glad we got one last ride in on Maelstrom too. Although not a favorite attraction by any means, it will be sad to see it go (too much change in too short of a time). We were going to actually sit and watch the film but it wasn't showing that day.

Sorry you just missed the film in China.

Oooh...where do you end up next unexpectedly?
 
I too am sorry to hear about the passing of Schooner. I will now tell you about my history with horses to cheer you up!

This is a true story.

My Aunt Vicky loved to play bingo at the church. One night at dinner before going to bingo my cousin Charles (age 10) said to my Aunt Vicky "Mom, if you win the jack pot will you buy me a pony?" My Aunt said "Charles, If I win the jackpot I will buy you anything your little heart desires..."

(You see where this is going... right?)

OK so the thing to understand was that Aunt Vicky lived in the city of Philadelphia and she had a back yard but it was maybe about an acre and it was the site of a Nursery (plants and trees) business the family ran. They were near Pennypack Park however... and this park had a place where the horses were boarded.

So Aunt Vicky wins the jackpot and guess who gets an actual pony!

If you said Charles you would be correct!

So my sister and I, ages 9 and 10, go over to the house to see the pony. Yes that's right, I said the pony was at the HOUSE.

Charles, who was the devil incarnate, asked me if I wanted to get on the pony. I said heck yeah and climbed up. There I am sitting on the pony when all of a sudden I am wondering why I am FLYING up in the air toward the TREE BRANCHES!!! Charles had stuck the pony with a pin so he would buck me.

That was the end of me and horses.... or so I thought.

When I was in college I worked one summer at a Girl Scout camp that featured.... You guessed it... Horse back riding! All those 10 year old girls that were crazy about horses were in heaven and I was petrified of horses thanks to cousin Charles and his bucking pony.

When the horses were delivered to the barn we had an orientation. The barn was a 20 stall wonder with 10 stalls on each side and a narrow pathway in between. We were told that we could go in and pet the horses and give them carrots and what ever the hell else they ate.

I took one look at all those big teethed horses sticking their heads way out into the path way in the barn and I decided that I would wait until everyone else went through and then I would run around the out side of the barn to meet them at the other end. So everybody is happy to see these horses except me. I think I'm slick that I'm going to avoid all those toothy giants and get to the other side with out getting near them...

Only the other horse lovers saw me ducking out and realized that I was... shall we say not the "Horsey" type?

I got busted and they grabbed me and escorted me through twenty sets of giant teeth looking for carrots on me. After that it was the goal of all my friends who worked at the camp to get me as close to those horses as was humanly possible.

They schemed with the camp director to have my group of girls go to the field in the morning and take the horses to their freshly mucked out stalls. I had to help with all sorts of horse maintenance type tasks such as going up to a horse and convincing it that it should follow me back to the stall. Let me tell you that some of these horses had their own ideas about who was the boss and it was NOT ME!

So then my friends at the camp decide that I should learn to ride a horse. It's one thing to have to look a horse in it's GIANT teeth and convince it to follow you back to the barn but it's absolutely out of the question for me to get on one and learn to steer it!

So there I am at the end of the summer taking mandatory horse riding lessons with the youngest campers. All the newbies and me, the college age person who was the only one at this whole camp who was petrified of horses. All the little girls are in heaven that they finally get to spend time with these horses and I am trying to figure out a way just to stay alive while I am near a horse.

So the horse that they gave me to ride was this old nag named Snickers. Snickers was so over being a horse that she was almost acceptable to me. She had that air about her of "I don't give a damn." The other horses were spirited and nippy and jumpy and this horse didn't get along with that horse and there was all sorts of horse drama with 20 horses hanging around. Good old snickers just hung out until it was time to chow down back at the stall. She cared not a whit about anything... THIS was the horse for me!

So now I HAVE to take lessons with the group which involve putting the saddle on the horse (Snickers didn't care) and then getting on the horse and the doing things like getting the horse to move and then getting it to stop. Then you had to turn the thing around or go left or right.

I had NO IDEA what I was doing but here is where Good Old Snickers saved my bacon! Since this was happening at the end of the summer and Snickers had been giving kids riding lessons all summer long Snickers recognized the commands that were being given and she just did what was shouted out by the teacher! Snickers was on AUTO PILOT!

Let me tell you I was really grateful for good old Snickers. I could just get on top of her and she decided what we needed to do. That was just fine with me! Snickers was the boss I was just along for the ride. She probably thought I was an idiot and she would have been correct on that matter.

So this "horse idiot" passes all the tests and I get my beginner's horse driver's License or what ever it was they gave out to campers that finished the test.

My friends at the camp took great joy in saturating me with those horses. I pretty much told them to sleep with one eye open as I was coming for them in the early morning hours... Revenge is a dish best served cold!

So that's my horse story. It turns out that Cousin Charles' pony was one of those neighborhood ponies that got passed around from kid to kid. 'Dusty' was stabled at the park which was a quick horse ride away from my Aunt's house in the city. Most kids beg for a dog but not cousin Charles. Eventually he grew out of his cowboy phase and Dusty the pony was passed along to the next horse crazed kid. Somehow I can't imagine this is happening now with kids, with ponies being passed along to each little Dale Evans and Roy Rodgers until they got bored with the horse.

So that's my horse story. After this experience, horses and I have come to an agreement that they are the boss and I am just a package on top of them that needs to be delivered somewhere... usually whereever the horse decides.

~NM
 
I am at the Magical Express meeting Ninja Mom . I am sorry to report that the pix of Dee and her Donkey are no longer to be found spamming the Magical Express lines.

Signed, Buzzy the fly, your intrepid reporter guy:crowded:
 
I will have you know that I have alibis for both of the incidents! Pretty bad birthday for Mark :( I didn't know what to get him for a present, but he suggested "pride" because he left his on the sidewalk.
Awwww poor guy :hug: As one of the gravity challenged, I'm stilling looking for my Pride:rotfl2: glad he's on the mend!



And AWESOME shots with the big girl camera, you can show me all I've missed with my non-WS loving kids:rotfl: Seriously, GORGEOUS! And I love the CM gave you a high-five so cool :thumbsup2
 
Before anything else, so very sorry to hear about the loss of Schooner. The fact that he was part of your seflie practice I'm sure made him very proud and is a very fitting tribute.

Yes, despite the fact that most of the FP selections in Epcot fail to really interest me and I would probably pick Maelstrom anyway, seeing it one more time is a must.

Hahahaha, love the CM encounter. Just great!

Ooh your inside Mexico shorts turned out really good. That's a tough spot.

Awwww, I honestly though you might watch the movie. But I guess a tribute to Maelstrom in incomplete until your skip the movie. (And by the way, I am totally keeping that line for my own TR, lol).

Thank you for the kind words! :hug:

Schooner was pretty well known in the community, as lots of people come to the farm for tours of the house, festivals, school trips, old-fashioned baseball and just to walk their dogs and hang around. He will be missed by many.

I think he was actually a little embarrassed by his inclusion in my selfie practice- he was hiding his face with a mask.

It was a quick, but fun, CM encounter.

I was pleased with the Mexico pictures. I try to take them every trip, but this time I actually got to stop while taking the picture since I was alone.

Completely traditional tribute to the ride in Norway- sans movie.

:rotfl2:


Dee sorry to hear about Schooner.

Hope Mark feels better soon.

Thank you!

Mark was sore over the weekend, and his lips are still sensitive, but he is mostly back to normal.

:)


Nice pictures with your big girl camera, Dee.

I'm with you...love the Mexican pavilion.

I am so glad we got one last ride in on Maelstrom too. Although not a favorite attraction by any means, it will be sad to see it go (too much change in too short of a time). We were going to actually sit and watch the film but it wasn't showing that day.

Sorry you just missed the film in China.

Oooh...where do you end up next unexpectedly?

Thank you- the outdoor pictures are coming out much better than the indoor ones, but I was really happy with the ones inside of Mexico.

One more Viking ride!

Soon you will see where I stopped unexpectedly (Lisa/Mickeystoontown may be able to guess it...)

:goodvibes


I too am sorry to hear about the passing of Schooner. I will now tell you about my history with horses to cheer you up!

This is a true story.

My Aunt Vicky loved to play bingo at the church. One night at dinner before going to bingo my cousin Charles (age 10) said to my Aunt Vicky "Mom, if you win the jack pot will you buy me a pony?" My Aunt said "Charles, If I win the jackpot I will buy you anything your little heart desires..."

(You see where this is going... right?)

OK so the thing to understand was that Aunt Vicky lived in the city of Philadelphia and she had a back yard but it was maybe about an acre and it was the site of a Nursery (plants and trees) business the family ran. They were near Pennypack Park however... and this park had a place where the horses were boarded.

So Aunt Vicky wins the jackpot and guess who gets an actual pony!

If you said Charles you would be correct!

So my sister and I, ages 9 and 10, go over to the house to see the pony. Yes that's right, I said the pony was at the HOUSE.

Charles, who was the devil incarnate, asked me if I wanted to get on the pony. I said heck yeah and climbed up. There I am sitting on the pony when all of a sudden I am wondering why I am FLYING up in the air toward the TREE BRANCHES!!! Charles had stuck the pony with a pin so he would buck me.

That was the end of me and horses.... or so I thought.

When I was in college I worked one summer at a Girl Scout camp that featured.... You guessed it... Horse back riding! All those 10 year old girls that were crazy about horses were in heaven and I was petrified of horses thanks to cousin Charles and his bucking pony.

When the horses were delivered to the barn we had an orientation. The barn was a 20 stall wonder with 10 stalls on each side and a narrow pathway in between. We were told that we could go in and pet the horses and give them carrots and what ever the hell else they ate.

I took one look at all those big teethed horses sticking their heads way out into the path way in the barn and I decided that I would wait until everyone else went through and then I would run around the out side of the barn to meet them at the other end. So everybody is happy to see these horses except me. I think I'm slick that I'm going to avoid all those toothy giants and get to the other side with out getting near them...

Only the other horse lovers saw me ducking out and realized that I was... shall we say not the "Horsey" type?

I got busted and they grabbed me and escorted me through twenty sets of giant teeth looking for carrots on me. After that it was the goal of all my friends who worked at the camp to get me as close to those horses as was humanly possible.

They schemed with the camp director to have my group of girls go to the field in the morning and take the horses to their freshly mucked out stalls. I had to help with all sorts of horse maintenance type tasks such as going up to a horse and convincing it that it should follow me back to the stall. Let me tell you that some of these horses had their own ideas about who was the boss and it was NOT ME!

So then my friends at the camp decide that I should learn to ride a horse. It's one thing to have to look a horse in it's GIANT teeth and convince it to follow you back to the barn but it's absolutely out of the question for me to get on one and learn to steer it!

So there I am at the end of the summer taking mandatory horse riding lessons with the youngest campers. All the newbies and me, the college age person who was the only one at this whole camp who was petrified of horses. All the little girls are in heaven that they finally get to spend time with these horses and I am trying to figure out a way just to stay alive while I am near a horse.

So the horse that they gave me to ride was this old nag named Snickers. Snickers was so over being a horse that she was almost acceptable to me. She had that air about her of "I don't give a damn." The other horses were spirited and nippy and jumpy and this horse didn't get along with that horse and there was all sorts of horse drama with 20 horses hanging around. Good old snickers just hung out until it was time to chow down back at the stall. She cared not a whit about anything... THIS was the horse for me!

So now I HAVE to take lessons with the group which involve putting the saddle on the horse (Snickers didn't care) and then getting on the horse and the doing things like getting the horse to move and then getting it to stop. Then you had to turn the thing around or go left or right.

I had NO IDEA what I was doing but here is where Good Old Snickers saved my bacon! Since this was happening at the end of the summer and Snickers had been giving kids riding lessons all summer long Snickers recognized the commands that were being given and she just did what was shouted out by the teacher! Snickers was on AUTO PILOT!

Let me tell you I was really grateful for good old Snickers. I could just get on top of her and she decided what we needed to do. That was just fine with me! Snickers was the boss I was just along for the ride. She probably thought I was an idiot and she would have been correct on that matter.

So this "horse idiot" passes all the tests and I get my beginner's horse driver's License or what ever it was they gave out to campers that finished the test.

My friends at the camp took great joy in saturating me with those horses. I pretty much told them to sleep with one eye open as I was coming for them in the early morning hours... Revenge is a dish best served cold!

So that's my horse story. It turns out that Cousin Charles' pony was one of those neighborhood ponies that got passed around from kid to kid. 'Dusty' was stabled at the park which was a quick horse ride away from my Aunt's house in the city. Most kids beg for a dog but not cousin Charles. Eventually he grew out of his cowboy phase and Dusty the pony was passed along to the next horse crazed kid. Somehow I can't imagine this is happening now with kids, with ponies being passed along to each little Dale Evans and Roy Rodgers until they got bored with the horse.

So that's my horse story. After this experience, horses and I have come to an agreement that they are the boss and I am just a package on top of them that needs to be delivered somewhere... usually whereever the horse decides.

~NM

Great story of you and Snickers and your horse history.

I would love to have pictures of you at camp with the horses.

They might make a nice greeting sign at MCO if you know what I mean!

;)
 
I am at the Magical Express meeting Ninja Mom . I am sorry to report that the pix of Dee and her Donkey are no longer to be found spamming the Magical Express lines.

Signed, Buzzy the fly, your intrepid reporter guy:crowded:

I hope you and ~Ninja have a great trip. Don't let the bed bugs bite!

:upsidedow


Awwww poor guy :hug: As one of the gravity challenged, I'm stilling looking for my Pride:rotfl2: glad he's on the mend!

And AWESOME shots with the big girl camera, you can show me all I've missed with my non-WS loving kids:rotfl: Seriously, GORGEOUS! And I love the CM gave you a high-five so cool :thumbsup2

Thanks!

As Mark says "5 days remaining vertical and counting"

Thank you! Just so you know, I would not have had the opportunity to take all of these photos if my kids were in tow!

It was a fun encounter with the CM.

:)
 
I would love to have pictures of you at camp with the horses.

They might make a nice greeting sign at MCO if you know what I mean!

;)

I would love to see those pictures too and would definitely stop to read that sign! NinjaMom - Thanks for sharing your memories with us. You gave us so much detail it felt like we were there. Snickers sounds like a perfect horse.


Dee,

You captured some great pictures, particularly of the outside of Mexico, and the Norway church. Ah the luxury of a solo trip where no one is tapping their toes while you take the perfect shot.

For a moment I completely believed that you were watching the Norway movie. Then I gave my head a shake and realized that of course you didn't. A part of me wants to say I would have watched the movie since it was a last chance, but then I remember that we didn't bother to see the movie either.
 
I would love to see those pictures too and would definitely stop to read that sign! NinjaMom - Thanks for sharing your memories with us. You gave us so much detail it felt like we were there. Snickers sounds like a perfect horse.


Dee,

You captured some great pictures, particularly of the outside of Mexico, and the Norway church. Ah the luxury of a solo trip where no one is tapping their toes while you take the perfect shot.

For a moment I completely believed that you were watching the Norway movie. Then I gave my head a shake and realized that of course you didn't. A part of me wants to say I would have watched the movie since it was a last chance, but then I remember that we didn't bother to see the movie either.


Thanks!

Best tip for taking good photos. "Solo"

I can't remember the exact moment when I realized that you didn't actually have to stay and watch the movie- I think I saw it discussed on the DIS.

:disrocks:
 
I am sorry again about Schooner, what an absolutely gorgeous old boy.
(I did have a good laugh at Kathy's horse stories. I have a few good ones of my own but I'd have to write a novel to fit them all in!)

Man, poor Mark! Sounds like he was really scraped up, hope he's healing now. Not a good way to spend a birthday at all.

Awww a last ride on Maelstrom. I wanted to but couldn't get a Fastpass and the standby was over an hour so I didn't get to. I'm ok with them updating this ride but I admit I'm getting pretty sick of Frozen...

Sent from my iPad using DISBoards
 
I can't remember the exact moment when I realized that you didn't actually have to stay and watch the movie- I think I saw it discussed on the DIS.

:disrocks:

Fortunately, I had reserved a fast pass for Maelstrom at the 60 day window, so I was ready for our last ever ride. We decided to stay and watch the five minute movie, for old times sake. It had been so long since we had been on the Maelstrom that it almost seemed new again. :)
 
I am sorry again about Schooner, what an absolutely gorgeous old boy.
(I did have a good laugh at Kathy's horse stories. I have a few good ones of my own but I'd have to write a novel to fit them all in!)

Man, poor Mark! Sounds like he was really scraped up, hope he's healing now. Not a good way to spend a birthday at all.

Awww a last ride on Maelstrom. I wanted to but couldn't get a Fastpass and the standby was over an hour so I didn't get to. I'm ok with them updating this ride but I admit I'm getting pretty sick of Frozen...

Sent from my iPad using DISBoards

Thank you! It is still difficult to drive into the farm and only see Roger's head peeking above the fence without his buddy Schooner.

Mark is doing better every day. His knuckles are getting itchy where the scrapes are, and his mouth is still tender.

I will hit that milestone birthday in a couple of weeks, so my modest goal is to remain upright throughout the day.

;)

I have only seen Frozen once. Having teen boys really helps prevent the over-saturation of the franchise, and I didn't make it into Hollywood Studios for the Frozen-palooza.

I did enjoy the bonus fireworks, though.

I just hope Elsa has warmed up and does not give us a winter like last year!

:cold:
 
Fortunately, I had reserved a fast pass for Maelstrom at the 60 day window, so I was ready for our last ever ride. We decided to stay and watch the five minute movie, for old times sake. It had been so long since we had been on the Maelstrom that it almost seemed new again. :)

I know I have seen the movie several times, but I don't really remember it well.

:)
 
At the end of my last update, I mentioned that I stopped unexpectedly.

Here.

The Globe and the other pieces for Illuminations were being moved into the World Showcase Lagoon.



Point & Shoot Camera



Same shot with DSLR






I read about this in Lisa’s (Mickeystoontown) trip report, but I don’t think I had actually seen this happen in person.

I didn’t take pictures, but I was surprised (REALLY SURPRISED) at how many set pieces there were.

One after the other. After what seemed like a very long time, the last barge came through and the drawbridge closed.

Don’t Stop the World.

I’ll Melt With You!
(This refers to just how HOT it was out)

My first stop was Germany. I had intended to purchase a couple of treats from Karmel Kuche to bring back home to my boys, but I was afraid they would not hold up in the weather.

I did take a couple of pictures















Then Italy.

This happened!











This is not the Leaning Tower of Pisa. It must be the Leaning Photographer of the Beach Club.


Across the way from Italy






I didn’t really like the clouds in this picture. I am the veteran of enough summer trips to Florida to know that the afternoon of a hot, sunny day often brings rain or lightning storms of epic proportions.

I really hoped to get another dip in at Stormalong Bay to cool down before my planned evening activities, but I had a Plan B in place- if the heavens opened up, I would rush to The Land for the Behind the Seeds tour.


Continuing on (in the next post)

Click here
 












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