Trip Report The Solo Circle Tour of Asia - CONCLUDED!

To all who come to this happy thread, welcome.

Whew! So I just recently completed a super-frantic, super-awesome solo tour of the great Asian theme parks! Why solo? In order to travel fast, light, and to my own interests. Perfect for cramming so much wonder into two weeks!

This trip took me to Hong Kong and Japan. And to which parks?

Ocean Park
Hong Kong Disneyland
Universal Studios Japan
Tokyo Disneyland
Plus the absurdly jaw-dropping Tokyo DisneySea!!! :joyfull::joyfull:

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And since so much of Asia’s appeal extends beyond theme parks, I dedicated an equal amount of time to exploring many fascinating cities: Hong Kong, Osaka, Kyoto, and Tokyo :D

Most trip reports start by introducing the travelers. In this case it’s just me (migrating over from the Imagineer boards):

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This past winter, I broke up with my longtime girlfriend, in part because while in France we learned that she detests international travel. I love it, and that trip rekindled a long-dormant bug. So too did an impromptu side-trip to Disneyland Paris during a snowstorm, my first Disney park beyond California. That visit got me looking to Asia...

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I’m a Disneyland Passholder. I’ve never been to Walt Disney World (I know, I know:eek::eek:) nor Shanghai Disneyland. (Those can be future trips.) I generally visit Disneyland once a month, usually with zero planning. Sometimes I pop in to do a single ride and leave. Disneyland locals are a strange breed. Which means until recently I’ve never even stayed in a Disney hotel! So there’s plenty of new-to-me goodness in this trip report.

This’ll be a very in-depth report – unless everyone wants me to skip ahead to just the Disney parks :bookworm: – full of photographs, park observations, and hopefully advice for anyone who’s ever considered a trip to the other East Coast. It’ll be fun! :p

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Up next: Days 1 & 2, because with time zones that’s how long it takes to fly to Hong Kong and get settled in.
 
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D Hulk

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
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Parades, Shows, and Stretching Out My Day

They say there are two all-star E-tickets in Hong Kong Disneyland: Big Grizzly Mountain and Mystic Manor. There are actually four. The other two, surprisingly to me, are both live stage shows: “Mickey and the Wondrous Book” and “Festival of the Lion King.”

As I learned from the Imagineers that morning, Disneyland locals don’t like shows. Guilty as charged! Shows lack replay value, and that matters when you visit multiple times a year. Plus, show times are tricky to plan FastPasses around. More infrequent Disney World visitors get more from shows. When you’re vacationing, touring from morning to night, shows help break up a busy day and let you sit and relax productively. Plus there’s that escape from the humidity.

This is my first time as a Disney Park tourist, rather than daytripper, and suddenly shows sound. The timing is perfect to begin with “Mickey and the Wondrous Book” in Fantasyland’s Storybook Theater. This recently replaced a “Golden Mickeys” show, and by all accounts the new production is superior.

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On paper, it’s nothing amazing. Mickey gets magically sucked into a gigantic book, while Olaf of all freaking characters is spat out. (Cantonese Olaf is shockingly tolerable.) The book pages turn and reveal new worlds, with projection animation akin to “Mickey and the Magic Map.” It’s then another “greatest hits” attraction, just a semi-random assortment of song & dance numbers from assorted Disney movies. What sets this apart and makes it exceptional are those ineffable qualities I can’t name, that infectious performance energy and spirit which is intrinsic to live theater. The songs are all staged in a Bollywood manner, which doubtlessly caters to Southeast Asian tastes. The Bollywood stylings really make it distinctive! There’s mesmerizing lighting and engaged dancing. I can’t decide in the end if I prefer the raucous King Louie number or the sultry Genie routine the best.

Following the show, there’s half an hour until the midday Flights of Fantasy parade. Grabbing a chilled mango drink along the way, I join others in the hub. Guests are lightly scattered, as my pics have shown, and there’s the unique spectacle of seeing parade crowds fight for shade instead of for sightlines. It really is ludicrously muggy outside. I feel tremendous sympathy for those poor cast members in the full-body character suits! Slowing down after the morning rush, I examine the hub and its pleasures.

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Now, just like a Disneylander, I’ve totally forgot to mention Hong Kong’s castle this whole time. That’s the first thing Disney Worlders glom onto! Yeah, it’s simply Disneyland’s castle. It’s small. I like the small castle. I grew up with it. Disneyland is a perfect theme park anyway. The castle fits Disneyland's scale, while Hong Kong's somewhat wider walkways reduce its appeal. Plus the castle feels like the copy it is. The castles shouldn’t be copied! (That goes for you too, Tokyo Disneyland!) But since this castle is getting completely redesigned into an original creation, there’s no need to kvetch further about what’s there now.

That mountain range behind it is HKDL’s coolest feature.

Also, I think Space Mountain might actually be closer to the hub, roughly in the Matterhorn location. That makes things feel cramped.

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Flights of Fantasy emerges. It sloooowly oozes down Main Street from the north. The big gimmick here is hot air balloon floats, with different balloon designs befitting the assortment of franchises they’ve selected this time. It’s a pretty neat parade. Honestly, I’m more focused on the air conditioning, for though I’m standing outside in scattered shade, I can feel refreshing cool air flowing from the Plaza Inn restaurant some 30 feet away. That’s some powerful AC right there! And considering all I’ve eaten since breakfast is squid meat, it’s high time for a high tea.

Hong Kong’s Plaza Inn is actually a sit-down dim sum palace, decorated like a vintage Hong Kong Victorian tea house, which is an inviting look. Sitting down again I realize how dehydrated I’m getting, so the first thing I order is the menu’s most ridiculous-looking drink. And juuuuuust as it’s arriving, dizziness kicks in -

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Actually, the reason for that weird blurry photo is because I’d just been dive-bombed by a parakeet! Seriously.

Slowly it dawns on me, with pizzicatto strings playing on the soundtrack, that the Plaza Inn is absolutely swarming with parakeets. They’re in the rafters, on the red lanterns, camouflaged in the patterned carpet, and everywhere devouring dim sum debris. Everyone else takes them in stride, guests and servers both. Chinese restaurants often feature birds in cages, so I wonder if they’re encouraging the parakeets to swarm. Ultimately it’s a charming wrinkle to an otherwise-standard dim sum a-la cart meal (good quality for in-park grub, still incomparable to the Hong Kong street food).

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This meal is perfectly timed, and I reach Adventureland’s Theater in the Wild just in time to be seated for “Festival of the Lion King.” This is a theater-in-the-round pageant retelling of The Lion King, contextualized as a celebration in King Simba’s honor. They’re retelling him his own life story! (And really badmouthing his uncle.) All the animal costumes and props are imaginative and technically astounding, which is a common thread with all live Lion King productions, from Broadway on down. I think Animal Kingdom has this same show.

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As with “Wondrous Book,” what makes this bog-standard movie recap feel exciting and alive are those undefinable live performance tics. It’s the pulse from the audience, the joy of the players, and altogether it makes for a rousing and glorious show. Even the bilingual caveat, where Cantonese monkeys translate the English dialogue, barely slows it down. A majorly wonderful surprise, one of this park’s best offerings!

Afterwards, I’m pretty well recovered. Ready to tackle rides once again, I have two options: I can do all the assorted spinners and clones which already exist in Disneyland CA, for completionism’s sake, or I can just keep on riding Big Grizzly and Mystic Manor. I choose to just keep on riding Big Grizzly and Mystic Manor.

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Wholly accurate model of Mystic Point in the queue

That actually sums up my final few hours in the park. Two rides on Mystic Manor, one on Big Grizzly, repeat ad nauseum. Lines hovered at 5 minutes throughout, making this a cinch. No regrets! They’re the parks best, most unique rides, and the point of a visit. Mystic Manor especially grows on repeats, helped by different trackless routes for each car. My goodness, what a warmhearted and exceptional ride that one is!

So here at the end, how is Hong Kong Disneyland altogether? Does it exceed its reputation?

Yeah, sure. At least, it’s getting there. Grizzly Gulch and Mystic Point are exceptional unique creations, and better still they exude a distinct personality (quaint, lighthearted, cartoonish) which I suspect will become Hong Kong Disneyland’s defining attribute as it evolves. It needs more stuff at that level, and one hopes that new mini-lands for Frozen and Marvel, plus a rebuilt castle, will be just that. The live entertainment, which doesn’t rely upon scale or layout, is truly exceptional, a great way for tiny HKDL to earn its keep. Many of Hong Kong’s shows and parades have already migrated to Anaheim, to rapturous applause, so that’s a big point in this small park’s favor.

The opening day stuff pales in comparison. Main Street, Adventureland, Fantasyland and Tomorrowland all need more content and distinct identities. I’ll leave it at that. The city of Hong Kong is great, if you’re nearby it’s absolutely worth seeing this park. It’s fun, it’s evolving, it’s ludicrously easy to tour.

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It’s still light out once I find myself headed down Main Street for the exit. I’m slightly tempted to do a circle tour on the railroad, but choose against it. (A YouTube video watched that night confirms there’s little to it but a neat Toy Story Martian gag.) I’d’ve stuck around had they been running the Paint the Night parade that evening – to date my favorite Disney parade ever. I eagerly anticipate its transfer to DCA. They weren’t though. The fireworks alone weren’t enough to keep me inside, since again I watched them from the hotel room. Besides, I gotta be up well before dawn tomorrow because the next destination is TOKYO DISNEYSEA!!!

Up next: Day 6 – Park-Hopping from Hong Kong to Tokyo
 

Suchomimus

Well-Known Member
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Parades, Shows, and Stretching Out My Day

They say there are two all-star E-tickets in Hong Kong Disneyland: Big Grizzly Mountain and Mystic Manor. There are actually four. The other two, surprisingly to me, are both live stage shows: “Mickey and the Wondrous Book” and “Festival of the Lion King.”

As I learned from the Imagineers that morning, Disneyland locals don’t like shows. Guilty as charged! Shows lack replay value, and that matters when you visit multiple times a year. Plus, show times are tricky to plan FastPasses around. More infrequent Disney World visitors get more from shows. When you’re vacationing, touring from morning to night, shows help break up a busy day and let you sit and relax productively. Plus there’s that escape from the humidity.

This is my first time as a Disney Park tourist, rather than daytripper, and suddenly shows sound. The timing is perfect to begin with “Mickey and the Wondrous Book” in Fantasyland’s Storybook Theater. This recently replaced a “Golden Mickeys” show, and by all accounts the new production is superior.

37164133590_8121a96b31_z_d.jpg

On paper, it’s nothing amazing. Mickey gets magically sucked into a gigantic book, while Olaf of all freaking characters is spat out. (Cantonese Olaf is shockingly tolerable.) The book pages turn and reveal new worlds, with projection animation akin to “Mickey and the Magic Map.” It’s then another “greatest hits” attraction, just a semi-random assortment of song & dance numbers from assorted Disney movies. What sets this apart and makes it exceptional are those ineffable qualities I can’t name, that infectious performance energy and spirit which is intrinsic to live theater. The songs are all staged in a Bollywood manner, which doubtlessly caters to Southeast Asian tastes. The Bollywood stylings really make it distinctive! There’s mesmerizing lighting and engaged dancing. I can’t decide in the end if I prefer the raucous King Louie number or the sultry Genie routine the best.

Following the show, there’s half an hour until the midday Flights of Fantasy parade. Grabbing a chilled mango drink along the way, I join others in the hub. Guests are lightly scattered, as my pics have shown, and there’s the unique spectacle of seeing parade crowds fight for shade instead of for sightlines. It really is ludicrously muggy outside. I feel tremendous sympathy for those poor cast members in the full-body character suits! Slowing down after the morning rush, I examine the hub and its pleasures.

37391352272_a01d7d569b_z_d.jpg

Now, just like a Disneylander, I’ve totally forgot to mention Hong Kong’s castle this whole time. That’s the first thing Disney Worlders glom onto! Yeah, it’s simply Disneyland’s castle. It’s small. I like the small castle. I grew up with it. Disneyland is a perfect theme park anyway. The castle fits Disneyland's scale, while Hong Kong's somewhat wider walkways reduce its appeal. Plus the castle feels like the copy it is. The castles shouldn’t be copied! (That goes for you too, Tokyo Disneyland!) But since this castle is getting completely redesigned into an original creation, there’s no need to kvetch further about what’s there now.

That mountain range behind it is HKDL’s coolest feature.

Also, I think Space Mountain might actually be closer to the hub, roughly in the Matterhorn location. That makes things feel cramped.

37421133381_731f46cbc4_z_d.jpg

Flights of Fantasy emerges. It sloooowly oozes down Main Street from the north. The big gimmick here is hot air balloon floats, with different balloon designs befitting the assortment of franchises they’ve selected this time. It’s a pretty neat parade. Honestly, I’m more focused on the air conditioning, for though I’m standing outside in scattered shade, I can feel refreshing cool air flowing from the Plaza Inn restaurant some 30 feet away. That’s some powerful AC right there! And considering all I’ve eaten since breakfast is squid meat, it’s high time for a high tea.

Hong Kong’s Plaza Inn is actually a sit-down dim sum palace, decorated like a vintage Hong Kong Victorian tea house, which is an inviting look. Sitting down again I realize how dehydrated I’m getting, so the first thing I order is the menu’s most ridiculous-looking drink. And juuuuuust as it’s arriving, dizziness kicks in -

37391356192_07f1b8e6d5_z_d.jpg

Actually, the reason for that weird blurry photo is because I’d just been dive-bombed by a parakeet! Seriously.

Slowly it dawns on me, with pizzicatto strings playing on the soundtrack, that the Plaza Inn is absolutely swarming with parakeets. They’re in the rafters, on the red lanterns, camouflaged in the patterned carpet, and everywhere devouring dim sum debris. Everyone else takes them in stride, guests and servers both. Chinese restaurants often feature birds in cages, so I wonder if they’re encouraging the parakeets to swarm. Ultimately it’s a charming wrinkle to an otherwise-standard dim sum a-la cart meal (good quality for in-park grub, still incomparable to the Hong Kong street food).

36769930943_6ea2cdfae2_z_d.jpg

This meal is perfectly timed, and I reach Adventureland’s Theater in the Wild just in time to be seated for “Festival of the Lion King.” This is a theater-in-the-round pageant retelling of The Lion King, contextualized as a celebration in King Simba’s honor. They’re retelling him his own life story! (And really badmouthing his uncle.) All the animal costumes and props are imaginative and technically astounding, which is a common thread with all live Lion King productions, from Broadway on down. I think Animal Kingdom has this same show.

37373764986_6db84f6c12_z_d.jpg

As with “Wondrous Book,” what makes this bog-standard movie recap feel exciting and alive are those undefinable live performance tics. It’s the pulse from the audience, the joy of the players, and altogether it makes for a rousing and glorious show. Even the bilingual caveat, where Cantonese monkeys translate the English dialogue, barely slows it down. A majorly wonderful surprise, one of this park’s best offerings!

Afterwards, I’m pretty well recovered. Ready to tackle rides once again, I have two options: I can do all the assorted spinners and clones which already exist in Disneyland CA, for completionism’s sake, or I can just keep on riding Big Grizzly and Mystic Manor. I choose to just keep on riding Big Grizzly and Mystic Manor.

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Wholly accurate model of Mystic Point in the queue

That actually sums up my final few hours in the park. Two rides on Mystic Manor, one on Big Grizzly, repeat ad nauseum. Lines hovered at 5 minutes throughout, making this a cinch. No regrets! They’re the parks best, most unique rides, and the point of a visit. Mystic Manor especially grows on repeats, helped by different trackless routes for each car. My goodness, what a warmhearted and exceptional ride that one is!

So here at the end, how is Hong Kong Disneyland altogether? Does it exceed its reputation?

Yeah, sure. At least, it’s getting there. Grizzly Gulch and Mystic Point are exceptional unique creations, and better still they exude a distinct personality (quaint, lighthearted, cartoonish) which I suspect will become Hong Kong Disneyland’s defining attribute as it evolves. It needs more stuff at that level, and one hopes that new mini-lands for Frozen and Marvel, plus a rebuilt castle, will be just that. The live entertainment, which doesn’t rely upon scale or layout, is truly exceptional, a great way for tiny HKDL to earn its keep. Many of Hong Kong’s shows and parades have already migrated to Anaheim, to rapturous applause, so that’s a big point in this small park’s favor.

The opening day stuff pales in comparison. Main Street, Adventureland, Fantasyland and Tomorrowland all need more content and distinct identities. I’ll leave it at that. The city of Hong Kong is great, if you’re nearby it’s absolutely worth seeing this park. It’s fun, it’s evolving, it’s ludicrously easy to tour.

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It’s still light out once I find myself headed down Main Street for the exit. I’m slightly tempted to do a circle tour on the railroad, but choose against it. (A YouTube video watched that night confirms there’s little to it but a neat Toy Story Martian gag.) I’d’ve stuck around had they been running the Paint the Night parade that evening – to date my favorite Disney parade ever. I eagerly anticipate its transfer to DCA. They weren’t though. The fireworks alone weren’t enough to keep me inside, since again I watched them from the hotel room. Besides, I gotta be up well before dawn tomorrow because the next destination is TOKYO DISNEYSEA!!!

Up next: Day 6 – Park-Hopping from Hong Kong to Tokyo
Animal Kingdom does in fact have Festival of The Lion King, so you aren't hallucinating.
 

newhorizons1

Well-Known Member
I love the stark contrast of St. John’s Cathedral against the skyline.

The views from those coasters at Ocean Park are just amazing!

You are incredibly brave eating mystery meat and mystery dim sum.

So the “Disney Bubble” effect – when we went to Japan and the Europe we began both of those trips by visiting Disney parks (actually we went to Normandy the day we arrived in Paris before visiting Disneyland Paris, which was amazing!). I actually loved traveling that way because foreign travel is stressful. Adapting to a different way of life is stressful. Not knowing the language is stressful. But Disney is familiar. It was nice having those days to get settled into our travel routine with something that is so familiar in the middle of something that is so foreign. Next time I will feel much more comfortable just venturing out into the city first though.

I have never watched any ride through videos of Mystic Manor. I’ve read about the story, but I want to save the attraction for when I am actually there. However, I have read numerous times that it is just the best!
 

amjt660

Well-Known Member
Thank you for your report on HKDL.
I am going on a Friday night/all day Saturday so expect crowds to be a little bit more that what you experienced
(although I am having trouble figuring out your day of the week - Day 5 at HKDL was a Tuesday??)

Looking forward to your take on TDL and TDS.
I have done it solo twice and I will be interested to see if we had similar approach/touring plan.

Max
 

D Hulk

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
This trip report is great. You have already inspired me to add several things to my bucket list.
Glad to inspire you in some small way!

Enjoying this report - went to UK just before park opened but not for long enough to visit many places. This just might inspire me to go back again.
There's plenty to see, more than I had the time to do. (Macau was flooded from a typhoon.) There's always more to see!

Loving the report! I've seen videos of Mystic Manor but I'm sure real life is so much better.

After reading a TR here a few months back on Shanghai DL, I'm amazed at the contrast with pace and crowd behavior.

Big Grizzly and JC seem like great rides.
I've heard about some unique quirks with the Shanghai DL guests. I'm curious about what you've heard.

Agreed 100%.

Animal Kingdom does in fact have Festival of The Lion King, so you aren't hallucinating.
Is it really good in AK too? Am I nuts for loving it in HK?

I love the stark contrast of St. John’s Cathedral against the skyline.

The views from those coasters at Ocean Park are just amazing!

You are incredibly brave eating mystery meat and mystery dim sum.

So the “Disney Bubble” effect – when we went to Japan and the Europe we began both of those trips by visiting Disney parks (actually we went to Normandy the day we arrived in Paris before visiting Disneyland Paris, which was amazing!). I actually loved traveling that way because foreign travel is stressful. Adapting to a different way of life is stressful. Not knowing the language is stressful. But Disney is familiar. It was nice having those days to get settled into our travel routine with something that is so familiar in the middle of something that is so foreign. Next time I will feel much more comfortable just venturing out into the city first though.

I have never watched any ride through videos of Mystic Manor. I’ve read about the story, but I want to save the attraction for when I am actually there. However, I have read numerous times that it is just the best!
The more I travel internationally, the more comfortable it becomes. It's more stressful oftentimes when traveling with others, if they're leaving their comfort zones. Doing this trip solo, I had the freedom to really play to my own travel strengths, which was very freeing. Disney is a warm blanket when abroad, absolutely, so a great way to do some more adventurous stuff.

Thank you for your report on HKDL.
I am going on a Friday night/all day Saturday so expect crowds to be a little bit more that what you experienced
(although I am having trouble figuring out your day of the week - Day 5 at HKDL was a Tuesday??)

Looking forward to your take on TDL and TDS.
I have done it solo twice and I will be interested to see if we had similar approach/touring plan.

Max
Day 5 was a Monday, actually. Sorry if it's confusing. Wanted all the remaining weekdays for TDL & TDS.

I'd be curious about your HKDL crowds, and your general impressions. And if the weather has improved since mid-September.
 

amjt660

Well-Known Member
Day 5 was a Monday, actually. Sorry if it's confusing. Wanted all the remaining weekdays for TDL & TDS.

I'd be curious about your HKDL crowds, and your general impressions. And if the weather has improved since mid-September.
I wish wish wish I could have gone to TDR on a weekday
Both my trips were on Sat and Sunday ( because I had to work during the week)

I will be doing a mini report when I get back from HK ( and I finish my DLR trip report)

Actually it would be cool if you could go through my current TR
With all your DLR experience I am sure you could help me out and clear up some things

Max
 

D Hulk

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
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Day 7: Flight to Tokyo, and the Glorious Hotel Miracosta

The whole crucial point of this trip was to see the renowned Tokyo DisneySea. This park has astounded me since its 2001 opening, the creative zenith of theme park design artistry. I couldn’t have hyped it up in my mind more if I’d tried! (Somehow, DisneySea actually exceeded this hype!) A nagging anticipation hounded me throughout my final night at the Hong Kong Disneyland Resort, and again I awoke sometime around 4 AM.

The flight to Tokyo’s Narita Airport was at 8 that morning. Too early to reach Hong Kong’s airport via MTR, I took a quick 10 minute taxi – arranged days prior by the exceptional staff of Hollywood Hotel.

My flight was with Hong Kong Express, a tiny budget airline who exclusively fly in and out of Hong Kong. The flight was eventless and no-frills in the Southwest Airlines style. The Pringles can I scarfed down in the airport amounted to the day’s breakfast.

Tokyo’s airports are joyfully efficient, a drastic contrast to Beijing. In fact, efficiency is a major theme of touring Japan. Despite a long line, I breezed through customs in 5 minutes. Before leaving the terminal, I collected a pocket mifi hotspot device from the post office, something I’d arranged for ahead of my travel dates. I stopped at the first of many Japanese vending machines, a ubiquitous sight, for a refreshing bottle of Pokari Sweat. How do they get the Pokari to sweat so much? Summers in Hong Kong.

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It took a little doing to locate the Airport Limousine which travels to Tokyo Disney Resort. Despite the name, it’s a bus. Ultimately, I opted against waiting an hour for the direct Miracosta line in favor or the generic DisneySea line. It dropped me off at the park entrance, not the hotel entrance, but that’s a minor inconvenience to get there early.

On this bus I meet the last Americans I’ll see for over a week – a couple from Texas also on their dream vacation. I out myself as a Disneyland guy with the phrase “good neighbor hotels,” and we all gush endlessly about what DisneySea has in store for us.

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For my first visit to possibly the world’s greatest theme park, I’m pulling out all the stops! Hotel Miracosta, baby! Comparable perhaps only to Aulani as the best Disney hotel, I’m told, Miracosta has the distinction of being inside a theme park. People talk about dramatic introductions to Disney Parks, like taking a boat across the Seven Seas Lagoon. For me, the gradual reveal provided by Miracosta check-in is my favorite to-date.

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Hotel Miracosta is done in a rustic sunbaked Mediterranean style, with its entry facades resembling a tiered, sloping Tuscan village. A stone fountain at the drop-off circle is in the fashion of Rome’s Fountain Trevi, depicting in aging rock a dozen mythical sea creatures. You smell a faint sea breeze from the nearby Tokyo Bay. Every surface looks costly. No expenses have been spared. John Hammond would be pleased.

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The cupola dome lobby, though somewhat small, is equally impressive. A bronze model ship conjures up images of the Age of Exploration, seated beneath a hand painted mural depicting gods for each of DisneySea’s seven ports-of-call, plus the expansion pad. Miracosta (which translates to “Look at the huge expenses!”) is a luxury 5-star hotel, sure, but the Mediterranean theming feels warm and casual, rarely stuffy and formal.

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Check-in is slightly strained due to a language barrier. I’m lucky enough to have managed a Miracosta booking at all from the States! Little in their website seems geared for a non-Japanese crowd. Like FastPass+ in Disney World, reservations must be booked exactly 6 months in advance at midnight local time, and prior to that moment I made sure to enter all my stats and do all my translations to overcome any speedbumps. Even then, an internet rumor suggested Miracosta only takes foreign MasterCards, but that might be outdated info since my Visa went through without issue. Five minutes later the entire hotel was sold-out (and for mid-September, mind you). Somehow, I’d gotten a Portofino Bay room!

(Other viewing options are for the Venetian canals or the Tuscan plaza facing the Monorail. These were never considered. The Portofino view was my mail goal!)

I’m here now, I’m super stoked, and the concierge is carefully trying to explain dinner reservations and park tickets. I opt for the three-day bundled package, which disallows park-hopping before the third day, and asks that you state which park you’ll visit on which day. This is fine by me. And as a Miracosta guest, I receive a complimentary Evening Entry ticket for that night after 6.

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While the front desk is fine-tuning my booking, I explore the hotel’s public areas. I’m quickly drawn to a staircase promenade overlooking the entire Mediterranean Harbor entry area – a postcard perfect view of DisneySea’s Portofino Bay and its jaw dropping central Mt. Prometheus volcano icon beyond. This mouth-watering view only increases anticipation!

Soon a rather campy busboy, unskilled in English but very eager-to-please, leads me over a footbridge over the park entrance vestibule towards my room. Miracosta hugs the entire perimeter of the park’s Portofino Bay, serving as a 5-story berm, and my room is on the furthest end. It’s a long walk, frankly, and disorienting the first few times. Per my booking, this room peers into the park, with more postcard perfect views of my future wife Mt. Prometheus. Here on the far end I can even see Tower of Terror and the S.S. Columbia sailing ship, plus the infinite Tokyo Bay beyond.

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Yes, this is from my hotel window!

This view is something I would spend hours examining. DisneySea teems with movement – the waves, the guests, gondolas and steamers and train cars. The volcano erupts hourly, with towering flames from a repurposed jet engine (!). The seaward boundary is blurred, making it feel like the ocean is an extension of the park itself. Goodness is it transporting!

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The energetic busboy lingers, frantically engaging me in a game of “find the hidden Mickey.” He’s proud of this hotel! He should be! I locate maps in the Magellan style with mouse-shaped islands. The park’s compass-and-globe logo is another Mickey. There’s a tapestry over the bed depicting the Fab Five as Renaissance explorers. All these Disney character infusions are classy and unobtrusive, nicely integrated with the hotel’s Italian theme which is itself well-chosen and well-executed. The interior décor was redone around a year ago, which greatly improves what might already be Disney’s best hotel.

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With slightly over an hour before Evening Entry, I sit overlooking Mediterranean Harbor. Cracking the window slightly (all it will allow), the sounds and smells of DisneySea flood in. That’s the big draw of an in-park room – an intoxicating romantic Old World charm which never dissipates. Hotel Miracosta sure ain’t inexpensive – it’s the height of off-season, so it’s at its cheapest still. As the trip’s huge splurge it really and truly is justified with these park views and atmosphere!

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Soon, one of those minor vacation hiccups occurs. My cell phone cord has swiftly frayed into oblivion, and can’t charge my device. One leisurely minibar Kirin later, I race desperately to the front desk to awkwardly explain the problem in English. Bless Miracosta’s staff, despite the language issue and even the tech issue (they don’t carry American electronics accessories in Japanese hotels), they swiftly locate a replacement charger in a dungeon underneath the hotel’s gift shop. This I purchase, along with a small DisneySea lapel pin (my sole personal souvenir of the trip, if you believe that). Crisis averted! Disney’s foreign hotel staffs have delighted me nonstop!

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At last the hour draws near! I proceed giddily down that staircase promenade from earlier to the hotel’s secret park entrance. Soon I’m in a bustling Italian plaza, equal parts Venice and Portofino (and maybe a little Lake Como). The sun sets behind my beloved Mt. Prometheus, giving the already-golden façades incomparable warmth. Encasing the shops and dining patios is Miracosta, many floors up, guests visible inside their rooms creating a lived-in ambiance without compare.

Every single surface teems with detail, and I honestly start to get a little dizzy from the visual overload. Nightfall is swift. I’m in an all-new theme park at night. Soft lantern lighting provides little lighting for a park which has now receded into darkness. With 4 hours before the park’s nightly closure, I’m keen on relishing this gem of a park to its fullest!

Up next: Nighttime in DisneySea
 

D Hulk

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
The view from your room is AMAZING! I'm afraid to ask, but if you don't mind divulging how much the hotel cost it would truly sate my curiosity. I'm loving the pictures and the details. Thank you so much for sharing your adventure!
You're welcome, I'm having a lot of fun reliving my travels. Glad you're enjoying it.

Miracosta cost around $500 a night. The cost goes up during peak season, and rooms without that incredible Portofino view are cheaper. It was wholly worth it!
 

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