I want to take my daughter to Disneyland but need some advice

   / I want to take my daughter to Disneyland but need some advice
  • Thread Starter
#21  
I was going to send you a PM to see if you made the trip and any tips you had. I guess I can forget that;)

Ava is fearless as long as she has me or her Poppa with her. She didn't like the shaking stairs in the fun house though. For the most part I think she will enjoy herself there. She saw the picture of the merry go round as I was looking over the one website and got all excited. Having never been there I don't know what to expect but I am assuming there is more to do then just roller coasters because I can not ride those. I know Ava would be just as happy riding the merry go round all day:rolleyes:

I just want to take her before she starts school next fall and I have to work around the school schedule, my schedule and my parents schedule as I want them to come and they want to come. Plus fall is hunting season so that isn't a good time, summer is too hot so it leaves winter (lots of holidays) and spring (not too much to do early spring except for some spraying which can be adapted for this trip.
 
   / I want to take my daughter to Disneyland but need some advice #22  
When I took the kids we found that after two days we needed to take a day off to hang out by the pool and rest a bit.
 
   / I want to take my daughter to Disneyland but need some advice
  • Thread Starter
#23  
I was wondering about that, I was thinking 3 days max but will look into two days as I don't need to see everything and Ava will be happy just meeting the princesses, seeing the castle and fireworks and riding the Merry go round and what ever else is there.
 
   / I want to take my daughter to Disneyland but need some advice #24  
Robert, I have not read the whole post, and my advice may not work out for this year, but in my opinion the single most important aspect of a trip to Disney World, especially with a 4 year old, is timing.

If you look at a graph of park attendance there is a 3 week period that is by far the lowest attendance of the year and that time period is now. Between Thanksgiving and Christmas the park is virtually empty compared to peak times. We did this several years ago and trust me, it was awesome. I'm not making this up, we did not wait in line for anything and we were there for 5 days and 4 nights. Don't get me wrong, for the big events like the parades and fireworks at Epcot it is crowded! But that's because everyone comes to that one area. But as far as rides and shows, not waiting. I'm not a theme park kind of guy and I had a fantastic time.

Two other points that may have been shared already:

1) During the Magic Kingdom fireworks show, go to the Contemporary hotel, the pyramid shaped one that the monorail goes through and go to the top floor. There is a restaurant there. You have to walk through the restaurant to get out on the balcony but it is the best seat in the house for that fireworks show. It's not a 'secret' place and it is not a big balcony so go a tad early and its worth it.

2) Stay in the Wilderness lodge if at all possible. I loved it and they take you by boat to the Magic Kingdom.

Finally, fine tune your visit. Decide what you want to see and bag the rest. We did not care for thrill rides or movie themed stuff so we skipped the Studio theme park. We like Animal Kingdom and Epcot most and I liked the Magic Kingdom because it brought back memories of going there when I was a kid.
 
   / I want to take my daughter to Disneyland but need some advice
  • Thread Starter
#25  
Thanks George, I would like to see the fireworks from the balcony but Ava would not be so understanding at her age if we quit playing just to go stand on a balcony. She will want to play until the fireworks started exploding.

I read your post in Eddies thread about the timing thing and I wish I could go right now but I am not in any condition to drive 18 hours. I am also worried about waiting till next year this time because Ava is suppose to start preschool and I don't want to pull her out of school.
 
   / I want to take my daughter to Disneyland but need some advice #26  
My wife is the one that makes most of the Disney decisions around here. She likes it but I would rather buy a tractor with the money. My sister met us there many years ago, just after potty training her son. She kept telling him that if he didn't learn to pee pee in the potty, he wouldn't get to meet Micky. He did, so we stood in line to meet Micky and have a picture taken. As they motioned for him to come forward, he ran up yelling at the top of his lungs,
"Micky, I pee pee'd in the potty". Micky started laughing so hard he actually had to sit down to stop. You would have had to been there, but Micky was tickled pink by that scene.
You will find that anything to do with Micky is more money than you were expecting. There are ways to save some, but all in all it is expensive to keep the theme park running and it has to come from somewhere. If you want to make Seaworld a part of your visit, advise me and I will see about getting a couple of tickets for you. Probably won't be able to get more than 2, but if you want to visit Seaworld, it might help. We used to get 10 tickets a year but AB removed the retired families from the list of ticket people that get tickets.
David from jax
 
   / I want to take my daughter to Disneyland but need some advice #27  
Eddie,

There are lots of non roller coaster type rides at DW that are lots of fun. The Buzz Light Year ride I mentioned is a blast. Two people get in the car which moves along a track. There are two "guns" in the car that you shoot at the bad guys. As well there is a joy stick that move the car 360 degrees to help you shoot the bad buys. Took us most of the first ride to notice the joystick. :eek::D You are shown your points during the ride and at the end you find out if you made Space Cadet or Admiral. :D:D

But there are also some rides that barley move that can scare your socks off....

The Aquarium at Epcot is also very well done. We managed to visit it at 8:00ish one night. VERY few people in the place so the kids could run around and look at the fish, dolphins, turtles and sharks. Usually the place is packed and not so easy to see things. If you daughter likes animals she will like he aquariuim. It has a ride modeled after the Nemo movie(s).

Disney can be expensive but it depends on what you eat. On the trip down and back we where spending $20 for breakfast and lunch for the four of us at fast food places. At the parks we spent about the same for the same kind of food. Of course you can spend more easily. DW is setup to try to get as much money out of you as possible mainly with the clothes, toys, junk, that is all over the place. At the Magic Kingdom move as quick as possible through Main Street where most of the shops are located.
I'll get back to moving quickly in a minute...

At the resort they wanted $5 for a Bud! :eek: NOT!

This last trip we stayed at Caribean Beach Resort. Its a half mile walk from end to end. They have a full size bus that just drives around this one resort to move people around. Because of moblity issues with the family we had to take the bus around the resort to eat. This cost alot of time especially for breakfast. Our next trip we are taking breakfast foods, there are small fridges and microwaves in the rooms, so we can fix a quick breakfast and hit the parks. You really want to do this as early as possible to avoid the crowds and the heat if it is hot out. We are also going to bring lunch food since the kids get burnt out after 4-6 hours in the park. Might as well eat back in the room than in the park. Also I'm bringing beer. :D:D:D

One trick to avoid the crowds is to get to the back of the Magic Kingdom ASAP. There is a train at MK at the front gate. After getting into the park, wait for the train and it will take you around the park. You can get off in Frontier Land which has some roller coaster type rides or go to the new mini park called Toon Town. Never seen this before but its made for the smaller kids. They had a blast in there. Getting on the train also avoids Main Street. :D

At Epcot you can take a boat across the lake which saves alot of walking. The kids had as much fun riding the train, the boats, and the busses as they did the rides. :)

Unfortunately at Animal Kingdom there is no way to get around but to walk. But my general crowd rule still works. If there is a fork in the path and the crowd goes left then you go right.

George also mentioned going to the Contemporary Hotel and the California Grill to watch the fireworks. Unless you eat in the restaurant you can't do this anymore. They have changed the elevators such that you can only get to the Grill from the second or third floor. There is a reservation desk right by the elevator and they have someone controlling it as well. I think they did this for two reasons, one to stop the congestion in the resteraunt as well as for security.

Security is much tighter and obvious now adays. All of my family used to live in Orlando. I grew up running around Disney. Can you tell? :D In all of the time I have been there prior to the last trip this fall, I saw ONE Police officer/Security Guard. Just one. And he had popped out of a door on a side alley. I'm sure most people did not notice him. Now, there are guards and POlice at the front gate. If you have a bag, its checked prior to entering a park. I see guards in the park as well.

The resorts can be expensive to stay in. The one we just stayed was something like 13-16 points per night Sunday to Thursday night. The owners sell the points for $10-12 per night. Friday/Saturday night are more expensive. The prime holiday seasons like XMAS and New Years are expensive. There are lower priced resorts in Disney. Also there is an RV camping resort. I don't know if they have tent camping. If you have a trailor or RV that might be the way to go.

Because of the expense we had a slight mindset to try to do as much as possible, i.e., stay in the parks as long as we could and ride as much as we can. That just does nto work with small kids. Like I said, our kids had a ball riding the Disney buses, the boats, and the train. Now my oldest love the Yeti Ride, Space Mountain, the log ride and the rapids ride but they had lots of fun just moving around Disney. And they had a blast in the swiming pool at the resort. The resort had lots of pools near the building but there was one pool with "rocks", a bridge and slide(s). With heated water. But it was too far from the room so I never showed this one to the kids. :eek: Just the regular pool was a blast for them.

My point is that dont get caught up in spending all of your time in the park unless the young one wants too. There are plenty of other things she might want to do like the pool. The resorts also have kid stuff to do and baby sitting services so mom and dad can get a break. There might be an age limit though. We got "forced" into a trip to the beach last summer that cost almost $1,000 for 3 nights. I don't like the beach. Nothing for me to do. Not much for the kids to do either. Hated it.

The thing that hit me was that if we had just gone to the Disney Resort and NEVER went to the parks, the kids would have had more fun at Disney World playing in the pools, the playgrounds, and riding the buses, etc, then they did at the beach. Heck they only where on the beach a few hours a day anyway.

This trip we did was very important though the kids did not realize it. My parents went and my dad hates DW and crowds. Surprised he made the whole trip without leaving. :D But the kids got some great memories with each other, Mom and Dad, and most importantly Grandma and Papa.

And that was the point of the whole trip.

Later,
Dan
 
   / I want to take my daughter to Disneyland but need some advice #28  
N80 brings up a very important point that I forgot. The week before Christmas the parks are relatively empty. After Christmas is peak.
 
   / I want to take my daughter to Disneyland but need some advice #29  
Robert I really like your intentions and am glad to see you are feeling well enough to be thinking about future trips. My one thought about Disney, given your injuries, is you will be doing a great deal of walking. There is no way around it. My advice would be to make sure you are up to full speed before you book anything. In some ways I wonder if Disney isn't even a better experience when a child is a little older than four. Much of there stuff is so sophisticated it is over whelming for an adult.

A little side story. Two years ago my then 30 year old daughter decided Disney World is where she wanted to get married. The Disney people have a complete staff for hosting and planning weddings as well as a wedding chapel over looking the Magic Kingdom. They do a first class job all the way with extras like behind the scenes tours and private reserved areas for wedding parties at the big events. We had a great week and a wonderful wedding experience.

After writing the check the one thing I am sure of is, that mouse had plenty of cheese that winter.:eek: :eek: :eek:

MarkV
 
   / I want to take my daughter to Disneyland but need some advice
  • Thread Starter
#30  
I don't think I am going to be able to make it down there this spring. I have a problem with my dealer and I am afraid I am going to have to spend most if not all of my insurance money just to get my tractor back:mad:

Given all the problems I am currently dealing with I think I will just scale back the trip and try to take her to some place closer that she will enjoy for now.

I really would love to see her face when she gets to meet Cinderella and see her castle but the forces that be are pointing me to another year:(

However, this thread has been very helpful to me so I know what to expect when I do go.
 

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