I'm quite excited for this one, my friends, as this will cover an area that, for all intents and purposes, is all new to Mirror Walt Disney World. True, a version of this did exist at one point, but for the most part, this is fresh as fresh can be.
Beyond Thunder Ridge, the northern road splits in two. If you were to head to the left, you’d find yourself in Bayou Country, a newly-added sub-area of Frontierland, inspired by the legendary swamplands of New Orleans, Louisiana. (As for where the other path leads, we shall get there very soon.) Now, to some of you reading this, the name may sound familiar. This is because, essentially, it’s a concept that was first devised for Season 18 of So, You Want to Be an Imagineer? in 2020 by Team NuOrbis. And I honestly thought it was too good not to use, especially because I want to make sure that a certain forthcoming E-ticket still has a home in a Magic Kingdom where Thunder Mesa did come to be.
Once you step underneath the trestle the Walt Disney World Railroad travels across, the adventure and daring spirit of the New Orleans bayous begins. As Team NuOrbis said in their initial document, “To provide the setting, the Barataria Preserve will serve as inspiration for Bayou Country. Known for its preservation of its unique environment, the Barataria Preserve is one of the six sites comprising the Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve in Louisiana. The 26,000-acre preserve is filled with nature trails, canoeing experiences, and guided tours that allows its guests to traverse the many swamps, marshes, and bayous within the area.” The trees are tall, the plantlife is thriving, and small waterways dot the landscape, oftentimes housing frogs, much like the ones Tiana and Naveen were turned into. Even the lighting is specifically themed. @Suchomimus suggested that once we step into the bayous, not only do we have kerosene-lit lamps on wooden street poles, but, taking a page from @D Hulk and his tremendous DisneySky concept, “fireflies” – D Hulk described the effect as “simple fibre optic strings blown by fans” – surround the waterways of the bayous, and in the trees and foliage surrounding the entrance and exterior of the area’s big E-ticket attraction. And given what kind of an attraction it is, the fireflies make perfect sense.
The first major point of interest is the second formation in Frontierland’s mountain range. It’s a large mountain scraping the skies. A thundering waterfall pours down from inside a large tree trunk at its peak, from which a familiar treehouse is perched in its branches. Every few seconds a log pours down the falls seemingly filled with...people? Screaming people. What is this, some kind of thrill ride? Well...yes. Yes, it is. This is Tiana’s Bayou Jubilee. Inspired by Disney’s 2009 animated film The Princess and the Frog, Tiana’s Bayou Jubilee invites us to join Tiana, Naveen and Louis, as they prepare for a big Mardi Gras celebration at Tiana’s Palace – the first Mardi Gras since the time when Tiana and Naveen spent the celebration as frogs! And boy howdy, is it going to be quite the celebration! In fact, it’s going to be so big, that preparations are just as big! You see, in the wake of the roaring success of Tiana’s Palace, it was decided to expand the business through the newly-formed Tiana’s Foods, an employee-owned cooperative. Set up within the confines of an old salt mine, one can even see various crops – all of which are real – growing along the side of the mountain. Ah, but where do we come in? Well, Tiana is searching for a most elusive ingredient that can only be found within the bayous, and we get to accompany her on the journey!
The journey is one filled with music, color and laughter. But what happens when our log is sent careening amid perilous whitewater? Well, what happens is the wettest and wildest ride in Disney park history, all culminating in the tallest, wettest drop in the Magic Kingdom. At 50 feet tall, the climactic drop of Tiana’s Bayou Jubilee is the greatest thrill in Frontierland, rivaling the climactic conclusions of the Thunder Mesa Railroad and Western River Expedition only mere yards away. Of course, all we have to do is “dig a little deeper” – or dive – to find our happy end.
At Disneyland in California, Tiana’s Bayou Jubilee served as a re-theme of Splash Mountain, a ride originally themed around the highly-controversial Song of the South. In 2019, ten years since The Princess and the Frog first came to theaters, Disney marked the occasion by announcing that Splash Mountain would, at long last, shed its Song of the South theming in favor of this new, bayou-set adventure. Not only that, the ride would also be coming to Walt Disney World with its own sub-area – the very sub-area we are in today.
At a bend in the bayou waters near Tiana’s Bayou Jubilee, we’ll find the Friendly Firefly Restaurant, named in honor of Ray and Evangeline, and honoring their heritage by serving delicious Cajun dishes and southern fried soul food. In addition to Cajun dishes and Creole dishes, options like Po-boys and the famous “Monte Cristo” sandwich are also on the menu; and for dessert, Tiana’s “man-catching” beignets are all the rage, quite fitting as the bayou denizens often consider the Friendly Firefly a satellite extension of Tiana’s Palace back on the New Orleans mainland. The non-alcoholic Mint Julep Bar is located nearby. The Friendly Firefly also features live music to accompany your meal, often featuring a performance or two by the Nine Old Men, an authentic New Orleans jazz band, so named after the original team of Disney animators.
Moving on, found amid the bayou foliage, we find Prince Naveen’s Cabin, the vacation home for Tiana and Naveen whenever they visit Mama Odie in the bayou. The naturalistic lodging reminds them of how they first fell in love. For this year’s Mardi Gras, Naveen has opened it up to all selling royal exports from Maldonia (such as replicas of Tiana and Naveen’s royal garments, tiaras, crowns, and makeup). Their cottage includes a stone chimney which has a painting of their wedding where they transformed back into humans. Prickly stems come out of the ceiling and contrast the man-made wooden walls. Wooden carvings above the doors honor their companions with Ray and Louis both having their own separate portrait.
On the outskirts of the cabin, guests will find the Greetings Gazebo. With wooden columns, a rounded roof, and a pointed top, it’s not as fancy as what you would find in New Orleans, but still a nice way to get out of the sun. Carved frogs adorn the top of the columns and the gazebo is neither round or square, but shaped like a lily pad with a green floor. It serves as both a meet and greet spot for the characters from The Princess and the Frog – Tiana, Naveen, Louis, Dr. Facilier and Charlotte – as well as a venue to watch the Nine Old Men play! But it’s not just here at the Greetings Gazebo where you can find Tiana and Naveen. Oftentimes, they will leave the bayou and head out for Thunder Ridge to take a ride aboard the Liberty Belle.
Beyond the cabin, we have what I like to call the Bayou Shopping Row, offering many merchants all within one building. Going from left to right, there are three shops here, starting with Tiana’s Supplies and Sweets. For the Mardi Gras celebration, Princess Tiana has renovated a former riverside saloon into a kitchen goods and candy store. Inside, Tiana’s latest cookbook, A Homemade Affair, as well as her other acclaimed cookbooks fills the shelves for purchase for the culinary wizard and the not-so-wizard ones. In addition, standard kitchenware fare like mittens, aprons, and other usable kitchen tools are for sale. Plus, there are plenty of spices and sauces for sale, as well – ingredients for which are among the real-life crops that are grown on the mountainside of Tiana’s Bayou Jubilee! As Tiana is away organizing the celebration, Mama Odie is operating the kitchen and is adding her own unique magic to the confectioneries. Expect elements of magic in the confectionary delights of Mama Odie’s Swampy Delights, ranging from candy objects, caramel apples, chocolate fudge, and the like.
Next door, Jouet du Marais is the resident toy store of the bayou. The interior compared to the nearby Tiana’s Supplies and Sweets is woodsy and rustic. Shelves cover the walls filled with all kinds of playthings. Lanterns hang from the ceiling. A mural is present behind the cashier that shows children playing underneath the stars in the sky.
Finally, there is Mortis’ Clothes Limited. Formerly owned by a trio of frog hunters, the cabin was later bought out by rich Texan businessman Justin Mortis, who became interested in clothing during his time in Europe during the Great War. Mortis’ Clothes Limited sells bayou-themed apparel (clothes, hats, and pins) for the tourists that dropped by for the Mardi Gras celebration. It’s the shortest building on the Bayou Shopping Row, but it has the largest floor space of them all. It has a similar styled rustic interior like Jouets du Marais, but the lanterns have much more of an art-deco style. On the shelves behind the cashier there are antique 1920’s-style shoes, campaign buttons, and hats.
While we are here in Bayou Country, let us spare a moment for the original representation The Princess and the Frog had in the Magic Kingdom. From 2009 to Bayou Country’s grand opening in 2024, the Rivers of America came alive with the music and lifestyle of New Orleans, when Tiana’s Showboat Jubilee took over the Liberty Belle Riverboat! In this show, we joined Tiana, Naveen, Louis, and even Dr. Facilier – as well as a host of dancers, audience participants and a live jazz band – as they turned the Liberty Belle into a Mardi Gras showboat. Of course, the classic Randy Newman-penned tunes from the film were part of the show – “Almost There”, “Friends on the Other Side” and “Dig a Little Deeper”, just to name a few – and there were a few other surprises, as well! For fifteen years, this fifteen-minute celebration took place throughout the day.
Oh, and here is a map detailing where everything is here in this newly-formed sub-area of Frontierland:
At the northern end of Frontierland is Columbia Gorge, an elaborate rock formation marked by five proud waterfalls and a trestle that the Walt Disney World Railroad passes along. It’s quite an elaborate sight, but its purpose is not just for looks alone. The gorge also hides views of what lies beyond it…
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Now, as mentioned before, this came pretty much wholesale from a concept devised for So, You Want to Be an Imagineer?, so all credit goes out to the good people at Team NuOrbis: @AceAstro, @montydysquith-navarro, @Outbound, @pix and @Sharon&Susan! Thank you all very much!
The next post will arrive on Thursday, October 27 -- 45 years and 5 months to the day when the first chapter in a certain film saga first came to theaters. Join me on that day, as we leave the Old West to explore "a galaxy far, far away!"
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Beyond Thunder Ridge, the northern road splits in two. If you were to head to the left, you’d find yourself in Bayou Country, a newly-added sub-area of Frontierland, inspired by the legendary swamplands of New Orleans, Louisiana. (As for where the other path leads, we shall get there very soon.) Now, to some of you reading this, the name may sound familiar. This is because, essentially, it’s a concept that was first devised for Season 18 of So, You Want to Be an Imagineer? in 2020 by Team NuOrbis. And I honestly thought it was too good not to use, especially because I want to make sure that a certain forthcoming E-ticket still has a home in a Magic Kingdom where Thunder Mesa did come to be.
Once you step underneath the trestle the Walt Disney World Railroad travels across, the adventure and daring spirit of the New Orleans bayous begins. As Team NuOrbis said in their initial document, “To provide the setting, the Barataria Preserve will serve as inspiration for Bayou Country. Known for its preservation of its unique environment, the Barataria Preserve is one of the six sites comprising the Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve in Louisiana. The 26,000-acre preserve is filled with nature trails, canoeing experiences, and guided tours that allows its guests to traverse the many swamps, marshes, and bayous within the area.” The trees are tall, the plantlife is thriving, and small waterways dot the landscape, oftentimes housing frogs, much like the ones Tiana and Naveen were turned into. Even the lighting is specifically themed. @Suchomimus suggested that once we step into the bayous, not only do we have kerosene-lit lamps on wooden street poles, but, taking a page from @D Hulk and his tremendous DisneySky concept, “fireflies” – D Hulk described the effect as “simple fibre optic strings blown by fans” – surround the waterways of the bayous, and in the trees and foliage surrounding the entrance and exterior of the area’s big E-ticket attraction. And given what kind of an attraction it is, the fireflies make perfect sense.
The first major point of interest is the second formation in Frontierland’s mountain range. It’s a large mountain scraping the skies. A thundering waterfall pours down from inside a large tree trunk at its peak, from which a familiar treehouse is perched in its branches. Every few seconds a log pours down the falls seemingly filled with...people? Screaming people. What is this, some kind of thrill ride? Well...yes. Yes, it is. This is Tiana’s Bayou Jubilee. Inspired by Disney’s 2009 animated film The Princess and the Frog, Tiana’s Bayou Jubilee invites us to join Tiana, Naveen and Louis, as they prepare for a big Mardi Gras celebration at Tiana’s Palace – the first Mardi Gras since the time when Tiana and Naveen spent the celebration as frogs! And boy howdy, is it going to be quite the celebration! In fact, it’s going to be so big, that preparations are just as big! You see, in the wake of the roaring success of Tiana’s Palace, it was decided to expand the business through the newly-formed Tiana’s Foods, an employee-owned cooperative. Set up within the confines of an old salt mine, one can even see various crops – all of which are real – growing along the side of the mountain. Ah, but where do we come in? Well, Tiana is searching for a most elusive ingredient that can only be found within the bayous, and we get to accompany her on the journey!
The journey is one filled with music, color and laughter. But what happens when our log is sent careening amid perilous whitewater? Well, what happens is the wettest and wildest ride in Disney park history, all culminating in the tallest, wettest drop in the Magic Kingdom. At 50 feet tall, the climactic drop of Tiana’s Bayou Jubilee is the greatest thrill in Frontierland, rivaling the climactic conclusions of the Thunder Mesa Railroad and Western River Expedition only mere yards away. Of course, all we have to do is “dig a little deeper” – or dive – to find our happy end.
At Disneyland in California, Tiana’s Bayou Jubilee served as a re-theme of Splash Mountain, a ride originally themed around the highly-controversial Song of the South. In 2019, ten years since The Princess and the Frog first came to theaters, Disney marked the occasion by announcing that Splash Mountain would, at long last, shed its Song of the South theming in favor of this new, bayou-set adventure. Not only that, the ride would also be coming to Walt Disney World with its own sub-area – the very sub-area we are in today.
At a bend in the bayou waters near Tiana’s Bayou Jubilee, we’ll find the Friendly Firefly Restaurant, named in honor of Ray and Evangeline, and honoring their heritage by serving delicious Cajun dishes and southern fried soul food. In addition to Cajun dishes and Creole dishes, options like Po-boys and the famous “Monte Cristo” sandwich are also on the menu; and for dessert, Tiana’s “man-catching” beignets are all the rage, quite fitting as the bayou denizens often consider the Friendly Firefly a satellite extension of Tiana’s Palace back on the New Orleans mainland. The non-alcoholic Mint Julep Bar is located nearby. The Friendly Firefly also features live music to accompany your meal, often featuring a performance or two by the Nine Old Men, an authentic New Orleans jazz band, so named after the original team of Disney animators.
Moving on, found amid the bayou foliage, we find Prince Naveen’s Cabin, the vacation home for Tiana and Naveen whenever they visit Mama Odie in the bayou. The naturalistic lodging reminds them of how they first fell in love. For this year’s Mardi Gras, Naveen has opened it up to all selling royal exports from Maldonia (such as replicas of Tiana and Naveen’s royal garments, tiaras, crowns, and makeup). Their cottage includes a stone chimney which has a painting of their wedding where they transformed back into humans. Prickly stems come out of the ceiling and contrast the man-made wooden walls. Wooden carvings above the doors honor their companions with Ray and Louis both having their own separate portrait.
On the outskirts of the cabin, guests will find the Greetings Gazebo. With wooden columns, a rounded roof, and a pointed top, it’s not as fancy as what you would find in New Orleans, but still a nice way to get out of the sun. Carved frogs adorn the top of the columns and the gazebo is neither round or square, but shaped like a lily pad with a green floor. It serves as both a meet and greet spot for the characters from The Princess and the Frog – Tiana, Naveen, Louis, Dr. Facilier and Charlotte – as well as a venue to watch the Nine Old Men play! But it’s not just here at the Greetings Gazebo where you can find Tiana and Naveen. Oftentimes, they will leave the bayou and head out for Thunder Ridge to take a ride aboard the Liberty Belle.
Beyond the cabin, we have what I like to call the Bayou Shopping Row, offering many merchants all within one building. Going from left to right, there are three shops here, starting with Tiana’s Supplies and Sweets. For the Mardi Gras celebration, Princess Tiana has renovated a former riverside saloon into a kitchen goods and candy store. Inside, Tiana’s latest cookbook, A Homemade Affair, as well as her other acclaimed cookbooks fills the shelves for purchase for the culinary wizard and the not-so-wizard ones. In addition, standard kitchenware fare like mittens, aprons, and other usable kitchen tools are for sale. Plus, there are plenty of spices and sauces for sale, as well – ingredients for which are among the real-life crops that are grown on the mountainside of Tiana’s Bayou Jubilee! As Tiana is away organizing the celebration, Mama Odie is operating the kitchen and is adding her own unique magic to the confectioneries. Expect elements of magic in the confectionary delights of Mama Odie’s Swampy Delights, ranging from candy objects, caramel apples, chocolate fudge, and the like.
Next door, Jouet du Marais is the resident toy store of the bayou. The interior compared to the nearby Tiana’s Supplies and Sweets is woodsy and rustic. Shelves cover the walls filled with all kinds of playthings. Lanterns hang from the ceiling. A mural is present behind the cashier that shows children playing underneath the stars in the sky.
Finally, there is Mortis’ Clothes Limited. Formerly owned by a trio of frog hunters, the cabin was later bought out by rich Texan businessman Justin Mortis, who became interested in clothing during his time in Europe during the Great War. Mortis’ Clothes Limited sells bayou-themed apparel (clothes, hats, and pins) for the tourists that dropped by for the Mardi Gras celebration. It’s the shortest building on the Bayou Shopping Row, but it has the largest floor space of them all. It has a similar styled rustic interior like Jouets du Marais, but the lanterns have much more of an art-deco style. On the shelves behind the cashier there are antique 1920’s-style shoes, campaign buttons, and hats.
While we are here in Bayou Country, let us spare a moment for the original representation The Princess and the Frog had in the Magic Kingdom. From 2009 to Bayou Country’s grand opening in 2024, the Rivers of America came alive with the music and lifestyle of New Orleans, when Tiana’s Showboat Jubilee took over the Liberty Belle Riverboat! In this show, we joined Tiana, Naveen, Louis, and even Dr. Facilier – as well as a host of dancers, audience participants and a live jazz band – as they turned the Liberty Belle into a Mardi Gras showboat. Of course, the classic Randy Newman-penned tunes from the film were part of the show – “Almost There”, “Friends on the Other Side” and “Dig a Little Deeper”, just to name a few – and there were a few other surprises, as well! For fifteen years, this fifteen-minute celebration took place throughout the day.
Oh, and here is a map detailing where everything is here in this newly-formed sub-area of Frontierland:
At the northern end of Frontierland is Columbia Gorge, an elaborate rock formation marked by five proud waterfalls and a trestle that the Walt Disney World Railroad passes along. It’s quite an elaborate sight, but its purpose is not just for looks alone. The gorge also hides views of what lies beyond it…
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Now, as mentioned before, this came pretty much wholesale from a concept devised for So, You Want to Be an Imagineer?, so all credit goes out to the good people at Team NuOrbis: @AceAstro, @montydysquith-navarro, @Outbound, @pix and @Sharon&Susan! Thank you all very much!
The next post will arrive on Thursday, October 27 -- 45 years and 5 months to the day when the first chapter in a certain film saga first came to theaters. Join me on that day, as we leave the Old West to explore "a galaxy far, far away!"
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