I am SO excited to have booked another trip to WDW and Orlando! It’s ‘super-Saturday’ here in the UK. Back-to-back rugby matches….. so DH is happy. I am NOT a fan of watching sport, so instead, I’ll start my pre-trip report!
BACKGROUND – How did this all begin?
Per my intro-post, I was bitten by the Disney bug more years ago than I care to remember when my two sons were small. Our youngest was 3 when we first visited Euro-Disney in 2001. I am a reformed Disney sceptic. To me Disney was just a large corporation, set on exploiting parents, via their kids, to maximise profits. However, we were able to incorporate an overnight stay into return leg of a holiday in France and, in the spirit of “don’t knock it ‘till you’ve tried it” and “I’m sure the kids will enjoy it” off we went…..
Well…. I was blown away (and DH and the kids quite liked it too). We have very few photos from this trip but they are amongst the first digital photos we have. We must have bought our first digital camera just before this holiday. Our youngest, aged three is in the photo below. (I delayed posting this until I had checked with everyone that they are comfortable with me uploading their photos.)
I’m not an amusement park fan. Nor do I particularly like roller-coasters. What I loved was the theming and the element of surprise. A first trip always stands out. I loved the fact that, for most rides, you can’t walk up and take it all in at a glance. There’s an element of the unknown. On a couple of occasions I thought we’d come to the end of the attraction to discover we’d only reached the end of the pre-show! I also love the fact that life (with all its attendant demands) is put on hold. From the moment you enter “the bubble” it’s just fun. Pure, unadulterated fun. Even without the rides, the atmosphere is unlike anything, anywhere else.
The ticket price seemed good value too. My recollection is that a single day ticket then cost just over £50 GBP. On our drive home we stopped off at Yorvik (a Viking themed, semi-educational attraction in York) and paid £35 GBP for a single, adult ticket. The Vikings didn’t move….. It was just stationary tableaus with sound-effects and ‘midden smells’. After barely more than an hour we’d seen everything and we were ready to leave. .... It was so disappointing in comparison.
Since our first trip we’ve made many more over the years, typically every three to four years to either Disneyland Paris or to Orlando, staying both on and off-site (incorporating days at Universal too). Every trip has been great. Our trips have been interspersed with other memorable holidays but there’s just something about the Disney trips that makes them stand out.
Still seem to have very few photos from our 2003 EuroDisney trip. As I recall, the memory cards didn’t hold very much then. Eldest son below (just turned 10 then).
My photos are nowhere near the quality of many posted on the forum. (I am in awe of those posted by @fractal!) But, I hope they liven up my musings and my trip down memory lane. We upgraded our digital camera for our first Florida trip in 2004 and incorporated a trip to the Kennedy Space Centre.
I miss the parade at Animal Kingdom. It was a real favourite. I had the photo below as my screen-saver for years. Makes me smile every time I see it.
Our eldest was so happy to win one of the awful dinosaur toys in the fairground games at Animal Kingdom. Even now he insists on trying to win another one… Youngest was toothless at this point! Note the ‘peely-wally’, blue Scottish lack of a sun-tan look that we all have. This will be a theme of all our pics, regardless of the year.
Watching the Blues Brothers at Universal. Still love to see them.
One of the odder parts of the parade in 2007! I don’t remember them looking quite like this in Fantasia…..
A poor photo but another parade I miss. The night-time, electric parade. Can’t remember what it was called.
To be continued.....
BACKGROUND – How did this all begin?
Per my intro-post, I was bitten by the Disney bug more years ago than I care to remember when my two sons were small. Our youngest was 3 when we first visited Euro-Disney in 2001. I am a reformed Disney sceptic. To me Disney was just a large corporation, set on exploiting parents, via their kids, to maximise profits. However, we were able to incorporate an overnight stay into return leg of a holiday in France and, in the spirit of “don’t knock it ‘till you’ve tried it” and “I’m sure the kids will enjoy it” off we went…..
Well…. I was blown away (and DH and the kids quite liked it too). We have very few photos from this trip but they are amongst the first digital photos we have. We must have bought our first digital camera just before this holiday. Our youngest, aged three is in the photo below. (I delayed posting this until I had checked with everyone that they are comfortable with me uploading their photos.)
I’m not an amusement park fan. Nor do I particularly like roller-coasters. What I loved was the theming and the element of surprise. A first trip always stands out. I loved the fact that, for most rides, you can’t walk up and take it all in at a glance. There’s an element of the unknown. On a couple of occasions I thought we’d come to the end of the attraction to discover we’d only reached the end of the pre-show! I also love the fact that life (with all its attendant demands) is put on hold. From the moment you enter “the bubble” it’s just fun. Pure, unadulterated fun. Even without the rides, the atmosphere is unlike anything, anywhere else.
The ticket price seemed good value too. My recollection is that a single day ticket then cost just over £50 GBP. On our drive home we stopped off at Yorvik (a Viking themed, semi-educational attraction in York) and paid £35 GBP for a single, adult ticket. The Vikings didn’t move….. It was just stationary tableaus with sound-effects and ‘midden smells’. After barely more than an hour we’d seen everything and we were ready to leave. .... It was so disappointing in comparison.
Since our first trip we’ve made many more over the years, typically every three to four years to either Disneyland Paris or to Orlando, staying both on and off-site (incorporating days at Universal too). Every trip has been great. Our trips have been interspersed with other memorable holidays but there’s just something about the Disney trips that makes them stand out.
Still seem to have very few photos from our 2003 EuroDisney trip. As I recall, the memory cards didn’t hold very much then. Eldest son below (just turned 10 then).
My photos are nowhere near the quality of many posted on the forum. (I am in awe of those posted by @fractal!) But, I hope they liven up my musings and my trip down memory lane. We upgraded our digital camera for our first Florida trip in 2004 and incorporated a trip to the Kennedy Space Centre.
I miss the parade at Animal Kingdom. It was a real favourite. I had the photo below as my screen-saver for years. Makes me smile every time I see it.
Our eldest was so happy to win one of the awful dinosaur toys in the fairground games at Animal Kingdom. Even now he insists on trying to win another one… Youngest was toothless at this point! Note the ‘peely-wally’, blue Scottish lack of a sun-tan look that we all have. This will be a theme of all our pics, regardless of the year.
Watching the Blues Brothers at Universal. Still love to see them.
One of the odder parts of the parade in 2007! I don’t remember them looking quite like this in Fantasia…..
A poor photo but another parade I miss. The night-time, electric parade. Can’t remember what it was called.
To be continued.....
Last edited: