Mur's World of Disney

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Walt Disney World Ready for Hurricanes

No, not the Carolina Hurricanes - though I would certainly be tickled should the Canes win the Stanley Cup and head off to the Happiest Place on Earth.

No, I mean a real hurricane. NOAA has added Walt Disney World to its list of StormReady communitys.

This is really something people have known for years, and something I found out first-hand last year during Hurricane Wilma. Many people in Florida head to Orlando - and Walt Disney World - when a storm threatens their areas near the coast.

Walt Disney World is a great place to wait out such a storm. They have their own power plants and infrastructure. They have plenty of hotel rooms, and their Storm teams are great with any contingencies. We were stuck at Port Orleans - Riverside during Wilma, and while we had to vacate our room at check-out (it was our departure date), they did a great job of having things for kids to do in the lobby. Mickey and Goofy, Minny and Pluto even took turns greeting guests and signing autographs. They had the cartoons running, and coloring tables set up. Food service was top-notch, with everything open. The experience was great - as magical as Disney can make a hurricane experience, they did.

Now, the night before we had Not So Scary Halloween Party tickets, and that wasn't quite as magical an experience. I hope for this year they have Hurricane Contingency plans. It was very disappointing to take your child trick-or-treating in the rain, only to find that the trick or treat stations have vanished or moved (without the balloons marking them moving). The parades and fireworks were delayed long enough that we left before they apparently ran.

They knew there was going to be bad weather - we had seen Tommorowland Noodle Terrace employees moving all the chairs backstage during the 3pm parade, and when asked why, they stated it was for the hurricane. So why didn't they have contingency plans for trick-or-treating or other things for the party? My suggestion - have secondary stations for treats in places like the Noodle Terrace, El Pirate y El Perrico, and other covered locations that are not open during the party. Mark them boldly, or list them on the map somewhere. Make sure people understand what's going on with the parades and fireworks. Put more characters out in covered areas if necessary.

Ultimately, my husband sent a letter to WDW and we received some compensation for our disappointing adventure. It's the first time we've had a complaint, and mostly the problem was poor planning. If they knew a hurricane was coming, they should have been able to do *something* differently if they weren't going to cancel the party!

Anyway. Off my rant and onto cudos for NOAA and the Disney Resorts! If a hurricane ever threatens my area of North Carolina, I'll pack everyone up and head to Walt Disney World! If nothing else, it's a good excuse.

Mur!

Thursday, May 18, 2006

80 days!

So I was talking to my 4 year old daughter a few days ago about how long it was going to be until our trip. It was like 85 days and she said that was a long time. So I suggested that every 10 days (e.g. 80 days, 70 days, etc) we do something special to get ready for the trip. She thought that was a great idea.

I asked her ,"So what do you want to do at 80 days?"

Her answer? "Pack."

Maybe my May 5th blog wasn't too far off the mark. Even for a 4 year old.

Instead I have some crafts that we wanted to do. Either things to make for all of her cousins, or some crafts we can collect the pieces for and all put together when we are there - if we ever have 15 minutes free in the villa that the kids aren't eating, sleeping, swimming or running around getting ready for a park...

Okay, so it's probably not terribly likely that much crafting will be done by children at the happiest place on earth.

Anyway, I'm interested in hearing how other people count down the time to their trip with their kids. I've seen the countdown chain idea before. We tried it once, but my daughter was a little too young for the concept, I think, and didn't quite get it. Any other ideas?

Here's mine to start, and what I think I'll do when I get home:
We will sit down together and put down something to do to get ready every 10 days on the calendar. So today, with 80 days to go, we'll do this. At 70 days to go, we may make crowns for her cousins. At 60 days to go, maybe we'll make t-shirts. At 50 days to go, we'll decorate her home-made autograph book. Etc. At 10 days, we'll probably start the packing, and continue to do that for the last 10 days. I think that week+ I'll put things on the calendar like "Make sure we have breakfast food packed" or "Do laundry and pack the Disney shirts we want to take". Then we'll X off days and do the tasks on the calendar as a family when we get to those days.

It's an idea. I'll see how it works.

Mur!

Monday, May 08, 2006

Disney Dining Plan

First, the countdown - just 80 days left! Less than 3 months from now I will be enjoying the heat and crowds at my favorite place! Yay!

Anyway, today I wanted to comment on the Disney Dining Plan. Being a DVC member, I'm happy to see they extended the plan to DVC members staying on points, without needing to purchase a ticket to make it a "package". Our upcoming trip was originally planned to be 6 nights in 2 2-bedroom villas with my husband's family (14 in all). I had mentioned adding the dining plan to one room and trying to extend the use to everyone when we made the initial reservations, but my husband was resistant to the idea. He thought it'd be too confusing.

Sometimes, he takes some time to warm to an idea.

When the free dining offer came out, we added 5 more nights to the end of our trip, added tickets and free dining, and made seating reservations. Then, we found out when my daughter starts school - she'd miss 3 days that week! Since she really didn't want to miss her first day of school (though we thought she'd have been fine) and everyone recommended against it (though the teacher would have been okay if we'd decided to do it), we re-booked through AAA for the week before our original trip instead. So instead of 5 nights and free dining, we have 7 nights of paid dining.

And my husband, who pretty much holds the purse strings, signed off on it. Who'm I to complain?

After rescheduling all of our meals, we were set. Then, the husband started to think. While sometime this can be a painful thing, when it's Disney-related, it usually means there's a bonus in the works.

Now he thinks maybe we should spring for dining for one room, to help defray overall dining costs.

We can save quite a bit of money. We're looking at about $400 per meal for the 2 buffet dinners currently planned for the entire group. We'd just about break even if we add another dinner, and then the counter service lunches and snacks would be gravy. Coordination is probably a non-issue.

The main question is, is that an acceptible use - i.e., using dining credits for one room for people in two rooms?

Mousesavers (http://www.mousesavers.com) has this as a hint in getting the most out of your dining plan.

I checked allearsnet (http://www.allearsnet.com) but didn't see it listed on their DDP information at all.

I sent an email to DVC back in January, and received a reply from Pepe in Member Services that stated that we do not need to use all of our credits for people in the room - that we can use them for others as well - but that we will be limited only to the credits for that single room. Great! That's exactly what we wanted to know, and from a semi-offical source (I'll be printing this out just in case).

I don't believe the Walt Disney World site or any of the Dining Plan informational materials directly from Disney specify one way or the other. I did read some threads on one of the web boards (the Disboards, I think) that people had both success and failures in attempting to use their dining credits in this way.

We're not trying to cheat Disney out of money. In fact, the places we're eating are all buffets, so are really not the best "value" for the plan we could get, versus table service. We are intending to pay for the plan (as we're on DVC points, though our reservation is during the free dining period). The credits we are using could be used by those in the room if necessary (though that could make coordination difficult), but it's unlikely that those in the other room would get full benefits out of purchasing the plan for themselves (due to some dietary restrictions).

We have time to make the decision as to whether to add the plan to the room (or rooms as the case may be). I have to say, though - from looking at our 7-night plans for the 3 of us, we're going to save some money over what we would spend to eat at the same restaurants with cash.

Granted, on cash, we'd eat mostly counter-service and not spend anywhere near the same amount. But for the convenience of having it pre-paid (and pre-budgeted), and being able to try places we wouldn't ordinarily go without having to worry about how much we're spending - or tips! - I'm hoping it'll make our trip that much more enjoyable and relaxing.

Friday, May 05, 2006

Long-term packing tips

Only 93 days left. Boy does the time fly.

Not.

Of course, my husband laughs at me when I talk about planning. And he is thoroughly tickled that I've already started to pack. Fortunately, we're driving so the little bits and bobs I'm squirreling away will have transportation space to Florida. Should we find cheap airfare, I'm going to have some problems packing.

But when packing for a trip that's still over 3 months away, there are some things to remember:

1. Don't pack perishables.
Okay, so this should be common sense. Butter, milk, bread, hot dogs, New York Strip - these things should be purchased at your destination for freshness. But almost *everything* has an expiration date on it these days. We recently went through our pantry and you wouldn't believe how much expired food we had. So pay attention to dates, even on boxed or canned food that you would think would have a long enough shelf life. Trust me - peanut butter granola bars that are even a couple of weeks out of date can be truly nasty.

2. Don't pack stuff you need.
This list includes things like underwear, tooth brushes, swim suits, your child's favorite teddy. Of course, if you pack like me and just accumulate things in an out-of-the-way box, retrieving such items isn't difficult. At least, not soon after you pack them. However, 2 months from now when you find that that extra toothbrush you thought you had has gone missing and your current one has been dropped in the toilet by your dog, you'll go nuts trying to figure out where you put it, and end up spending top dollar at the 24-hour mini mart just so your teeth can be sparkling white for your huge client presentation which you have to leave for at 5 am to get your flight to Timbuktu...

Okay, I ramble, but you get the point. Leave the stuff you're going to use over the next 80-some odd days alone.

That's the stuff you pack 14 days before you leave.

3. Don't let your kids pack anything
See 1 and 2 above. Kids will not consider either of them. So you'll probably end up with stale crackers, and a child crying for his favorite toy 3 weeks before you leave. A toy you won't find until 2 weeks before you leave, when you start the bulk of the packing and rearranging of currently packed items.

A toy you didn't even know had *been* packed.

Another reason not to let your kids pack is that they don't know what to pack and what not to. Children under the age of about 7 won't consider the necessity of things like underwear, socks, extra shoes, camera batteries, etc. However, they'll likely think that their gigantic stuffed Pooh-bear is a must-pack, since Pooh has to see himself at the Crystal Palace! Or they'll remember they need to pack extra shorts, but forget to pack any shirts. Remember the tootpaste, but not the toothbrush.

You get the idea.

4. Don't let your husband pack anything but his own stuff.
See number 3. Actually, my husband's a pretty good packer - he's likely to get more room out of a suitcase than I am. But I still make sure that I pack all of my clothes, all of my children's clothes, toys, accessories, food, electronics, etc. Even I tend to forget something, but if I left it up to him, I'd be afraid we'd forget something critical. Like the camera. Or the kids.

Not that he would.

But it's worth my piece of mind to make sure I pack the bulk of the stuff before he even considers it time to pack. Hence packing more than 3 months out. Then, when it's time to get down to the real packing, it's a matter of "We don't really need this" before we go rather than "Darnit, I forgot that!" when we get there.

5. Pace yourself.
Have a plan of what you want to pack when. Packing helps make the trip seem that much closer. If you pack a little bit each week, you'll feel a bit closer to your trip in the "Hey! I'm packing my cruise clothes for my cruise in only 7 months!" fashion. It makes the vacation seem sooner than the "Darn it, there are those cruise clothes still hanging in my closet. And they'll be there for another 6 whole months!" view of things, even if the timing is still exactly the same.

6. If you have animals, make sure they don't get closed into whatever you're packing in.
You don't want to find Kitty in that rubermaid container 3 months from now. 'Nuff said.

7. Know where you've put the stuff you've packed.
It's best to have one central location, but if you're tucking away little nifty surprises for the kids, that's difficult to do. So make sure you know where everything is. Try to keep as much of it together as possible. You're more likely to forget stuff if you have things in your sock drawer than if you have a dedicated shelf to put everything on. And if you must put the kid's surprises somewhere they might see them, wrap them in their sibling's underwear. They won't look any further. (Note: this may not work for your husband)

8. Have fun, and don't let anyone tell you you're crazy!
This vacation is yours as well as everyone else's. If your method of anticipation is early packing, obsessive planning, and scouring bulletin boards for the most recent news to try to make sure your plans are the best possible plans, that's great! Just enjoy it! If you're all stressed about it and not enjoying it, take a break and don't do it! It defeats the purpose of extending the trip by pre-living it.

Vacations are about relaxing, enjoying life, and seeing things you don't see every day. This is true even if it's a stay-at-home break, though most people probably don't realize it. So don't get stressed about making your vacation perfect. If you're not an obsessive planner, you'll still have a great time. If you don't pack until the day before you leave, you'll be fine - anything you forget can be picked up at the nearest Wal*Mart.

But if you're like me and extend each vacation as much as possible by living it over a few times before you even leave, just keep in mind that everything can go wrong even with the best plans, and have fun anyway. I usually plan out our days, then when we get there, rearrange in the morning to best fit what's going on *then*. What we think we want 5 months from now may not be what's the best thing to do when you get to that day. I've done this enough times to not have too many expectations, regardless of how much I pack and plan.

So if you're going to pack early, do it becase you're enjoying it, not because you'd be stressed not to. You're far more likely to forget essentials (kid's bedtime toy/story, neccesary medication, etc) if you're stressed about remembering everything. Nothing is irreplaceable, and even if it is - it's still at home if you forgot it! So don't worry, and enjoy hiding little things away for later.

Wednesday, May 03, 2006

Some comments on recent Disney news

There are a couple of topics I've seen on multiple Disney boards/sites that I wanted to comment on.

First, Kudos to the Disneyland (CA) visitor who was named the 2 billionth park visitor yesterday! All I have to say is, I envy you that Golden Ticket! Lifetime admission to all 11 Disney parks worldwide... That's 4 Disneylands, Tokoyo DisneySea, the Magic Kingdom, 2 Disney Studios, California Adventure, Epcot and Animal Kingdom - Wow!

I have to admit - my first order of business would probably be a whirlwind tour of all of the Disneyland/Magic Kingdom parks as a matter of comparison. Well, assuming I had the time and money, of course - for the most part, ticket costs are really secondary to other expenses. But still - awsome!

And the second thing - testing of a non-spinning Mission: Space. Now, I'm not opposed to this trial, and not *really* opposed to running a non-spinning bay when there's enough interest for it. However, I hope the people riding this tamed-down version realize they're not really riding Mission: Space. It's kind of like running a Soarin' theater without raising the rows of seats - you get the basic idea, but the pure genius of the Imagineers doesn't come through.

I really liked one of the suggestions on a thread on rec.arts.disney.parks - use CyberSpace Mountain-like capsules to simulate the ride without taking up a centrifuge bay. I imagine that sort of a setup somewhere in the Mission: Space building would actually make lines for both types or fides shorter in the long run.

95 days!!

Only 95 days to go until my next trip to my favorite place on earth - Walt Disney World! We're doing 2 whole weeks - I cannot believe it! Even with that length of time, I'm sure we won't see everything we want to see. But we'll do our best!

My intention with this blog is to comment on recent events touching the Walt Disney Company, the Disney parks (everywhere!) and things even vaguely Disney-related. I hope to include tips for Disney park-going to go along with links to my favorite sites for Disney information. While I'm away or after I return, I plan to use the blog to post thoughts/comments on the trip as well as full trip reports. And maybe someday I'll figure out how to put up pictures, too! (Flickr may be my best friend... I'm not sure yet)

So hold on tight, keep your hands and arms inside the vehicle at all times, and enjoy your stay here at Mur's World of Disney!

Have a Disney Day!