As we made the 10 mile walk from the bus stop to the front entrance we saw a family pulling wagons.
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Any child-holding vehicle that is “pulled” rather than “pushed” is supposed to be prohibited in Disney parks. It really irks me that Keenz designed their wagon (which is actually a lot larger than the ones pictured above) to be “pushed”, thus creating a loophole which allows their monstrosity into the parks. Anyway, we were all curious what would happen when this family tried to enter DHS.
But first, Woody would have scan his finger a second time before he could be admitted.
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The wagon family made it through security (how?) and the tapstiles (again, how?) before they were detained by a Cast Member.
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A “suit” arrived shortly and we watched the dad turn around with both wagons and move towards the exit.
However it wouldn’t surprise me if the family was somehow “compensated” for their mistake.
Where did we go first?
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We had a FP for Slinky Dog later on, but we also wanted to ride Alien Swirling Saucers. The standby wait was posted at 30 minutes when we entered the queue.
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We inched our way along. A chirpy CM announced over the PA: “Welcome to Alien Swirling Saucers! Each saucer fits 2, or 3 if you are traveling with preschool toys.”
Soon the line stopped moving forward. There was another chirpy announcement: “Some of our saucers have stopped swirling and your wait time may be increased. We apologize for this minor technical difficulty.”
We shrugged and continued to wait. But when a supervisor and maintenance arrived, we began to suspect there might be a significant issue at hand.
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When we eventually got close enough to see into the attraction, one side was completely down.
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The standby line was at a standstill and we were trapped in it. More maintenance workers arrived.
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Every five minutes the same chirpy announcement played: “Some of our saucers have stopped swirling and your wait time may be increased. We apologize for this minor technical difficulty.”
After about the fourth time Woody blurted, “I’m sorry, but if 50 percent of your attraction isn’t working, I’d consider that more than a MINOR problem!”
We waited a long, boring 75 minutes until it was our turn. It was the longest we’d waited for an attraction in
many years. (Woody’s record is 2 1/2 hours for Rocket Rods in Disneyland with our boys. It broke down several times during their wait. Mine is 2 hours for the same ride, same trip....the boys loved it that much!)
Woody snapping a pic of his gals.
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Though the two minute payoff wasn’t worth a 75 minute wait, we still laughed in delight as we went ‘round and ‘round.
We exited just as the second side began operating again.