| 1. Take
the train to get around the perimeter of the park. You can get from one
part of the park to another in 5-10 minutes this way. Remember that walking
just from the entrance to the beginning of Fantasy Land behind the Castle
takes almost 15 minutes. Main Street / Toon-Town in far flung Fantasy Land
and Frontier Land are the 3 stops. Can park baby strollers at the stations.
2. Stay at a park resort. Has special morning openings
for resort guests and some late nights. Use monorail to get to the park
from the Grand Floridian and use the boat to get back. You avoid an hour
of lines this way especially at night when everyone wants to get on the
monorail. Am told you can park in the Polynesian Hotel parking lot and
pretend you are staying at the hotel. The Grand Floridian is the best of
the 3 resorts (the Contemporary has aged) but if you don’t like walking,
stay in the main building.
3. Go to the park 90 minutes before closing. We
rode the 3 rollercoasters (Space Mountain, Splash Mountain and Thunder
Mountain) which are in 3 of the 4 corners of the park and saw the fireworks
and the Main Street parade in this amount of time although my younger brother
ran out of breath running around with me! Better to spend the day at the
pool when you can do all this in 2 hours and stay cool while you’re at
it. Also look at rainstorms as an opportunity to get things done while
everyone runs for cover. Otherwise, it's amazing how a family can spend
the whole day in the park doing nothing and spend upward of $500 for the
privilege of doing so.
4. If you like music you hear at Main Street or
elsewhere in the park, you can create your own CD of sampled music at the
M Store in Downtown Disney. That’s the only place you can do this. Downtown
Disney is designed very well for little children and they enjoyed parts
of it such as LegoLand even more than the Magic Kingdom.
5. Fast-Pass must be used strategically since it
is of limited value. It is only good for about 8-10 rides and only one
fast-pass can be used in a 2-3 hour period. The best bets here are to either
come early or late and not depend on Fast Pass. In our case, you just had
a family of 12 people standing around for an hour waiting for the Fast
Pass to allow you to get to the head of the line at a particular ride.
6. A character breakfast is a fun thing to do.
[You can order kosher meals if you do so a day in advance although my whole
family wound up eating fruit off the salad bar instead of the stuff under
the plastic.] Various Disney characters come around to the tables and pose
with your family for pictures. They are very professional at what they
do. Interaction with Disney Characters have become an essential part of
the Disney experience; Winnie the Pooh gets down on all 4's and cuddles
up to the babies. It’s soooo cute. If you want breakfast with Cinderella
in the castle, reserve several months in advance although for little kids,
a breakfast with Mary Poppins at the hotel is quite fine and you get others
such as Pinnochio who drop by as well.
7. Walt Disney obviously didn’t believe in a balanced
diet because eating at the park has always been awful. For tuna sandwich
or a hummus and cole slaw sandwich (very good), go to the restaurant in
Liberty Square. I forgot its name but the Square area is a small area.
8. Rent a little go-cart to drive around the park
if any of your party is elderly or handicapped in any way. It is worth
the $35 to be able to drive around all this.
9. Become a travel agent. You get 50% off at Disney
Resorts and either free tickets to the theme parks or significant discounts.
Make sure to arrange this in advance because different parks have different
rules. At DisneyLand in California, you just show your ID at the gate for
the discount; in Florida, you must arrange it in advance with the Travel
Agent's Desk but you can get free passes. The hotel discount was significant;
deluxe rooms at the Grand Floridian are $500 a night and we paid $250 and
it is almost impossible to get these rooms via any third parties. |