Apologies in advance for the lack of jungle mouse coasters and Jinma spinners in this report.
The last time I went to Florida was nine years ago, at the same time of year. It’s Chinese New Year, so I always get a decent chunk of holiday (usually 10-12 days), but every few years it falls a bit differently and I ended up with a straight two weeks this time. Obviously, Florida is a very long-haul trip from Hong Kong, so those extra days are needed for the travel time (24 hours of travel plus a 13-hour time difference).
Last time I’d been, this was a relatively quiet time of year. I’ve since read many times that quiet periods just don’t exist anymore, and this turned out to be true. The CNY dates this year also fell during a UK half-term holiday and there were a bunch of local school trips and cheerleading groups around as well. That's all fine. I don't get to choose my holidays and I'm sure it was still better than trying during the Easter or Summer holidays. Weather-wise, it's perfect as well.
As I’d done before, I stayed at a Disney hotel for the first few days to take advantage of the transport and early park entry, which turned out to be pretty essential to having a decent day. I stayed at All Stars Music last time and didn’t like it much at all. I chose Pop Century this time, which is in the same bracket as All Stars, since the prices were reasonable and it now has the cable car for very quick connections to Epcot and Hollywood Studios.
I was at the hotel by around 8am, left bags and immediately jumped on the bus to Animal Kingdom. On the way, I bought a "Lightning Lane" pass (new words for fast pass) for Flight of Passage since I could see on the Disney app that it already had a decent-sized queue, and I was not going to do that after being awake for around 36 hours by this point.
Animal Kingdom
I didn’t take a huge number of pictures here. The only new stuff was Pandora, but I obviously wanted a few rides on Everest as well.
I’m not sure how familiar people are with the current fast pass system at Disney World, but there’s basically a paid system, called Genie+, which works like the old free one, where you can select a ride every couple of hours. A handful of the most popular rides aren’t included, but an “individual lightning lane” can be bought separately. This was the case for Flight if Passage. This worked out for me since I didn’t want/need the whole Genie+ thing for the whole park. I think I paid $15 for it.
With the individual passes, you choose your own time based on availability, so I gave myself around an hour, joining the regular, 30-minute queue for Navi River Journey in the meantime. I didn’t take pictures of/in the rides themselves, just general “Pandora” pictures. You’ve all seen these a million times before, which will be true of literally everything I post in this report, but here they are anyway:
I really liked Navi River Journey. It doesn’t seem to get much love, but as a “ride-a-boat-and-look-at-stuff” attraction, it’s very good. It goes without saying that the final animatronic is amazing, and I thought the soundtrack was gorgeous. It's just an overall lovely experience. Flight of Passage was very good, but I was expecting more based on the unanimous praise it always gets. “You can feel it breathing between your legs!!” You can feel (and hear) some very obvious bits of machinery moving somewhat in sync. It’s excellent for a simulator, but honestly, it’s just a ‘roided-up flying theatre when it comes down to it. Meh.
Like I said earlier, I didn’t take many pictures, so I’ll just throw them in randomly and punctuate them with bits of unconnected text describing other stuff I did.
I got three rides in on Everest using the single rider queue and waiting about 5 minutes each time when it was on a 30-45-minute queue. I really enjoyed it before, and maybe even more so this time. I’m not a fan of how the backwards “surprise” is executed – there’s literally nothing else that could happen at that point and you’re held for more than enough time to figure it all out – but the backwards section itself is fab, as is the big drop out of the mountain.
I did the safari ride thing, but didn’t really see very much this time. Not that bothered since it really is just generic zoo animals presented somewhat nicely.
I did the two shows, Lion King and Nemo, neither of which I’d rated very highly before. Lion King was still crap, just so cheap-looking and lacking any form of real cohesion, but I enjoyed the Nemo show more than I had last time, which isn’t saying much.
Tough to be a Bug is always vastly entertaining when the kids inevitably start screaming in absolute terror. Such an underrated attraction which will likely disappear soon.
Dinosaur was a bit of a disappointment. I’d really enjoyed it before. I don’t know if things have been removed or don’t work anymore, but I don’t remember so much of it being in total darkness with f**k all to look at last time. I think it’s fairly safe to say that this is on its way out.
It doesn’t seem like it, but I’d had a pretty full day here by the time I left an hour or so before closing. It was definitely the best choice of park given the complete lack of sleep since it’s generally not as busy as the others and, with less to do, is a bit more relaxed.
Next up: Magic Kingdom
The last time I went to Florida was nine years ago, at the same time of year. It’s Chinese New Year, so I always get a decent chunk of holiday (usually 10-12 days), but every few years it falls a bit differently and I ended up with a straight two weeks this time. Obviously, Florida is a very long-haul trip from Hong Kong, so those extra days are needed for the travel time (24 hours of travel plus a 13-hour time difference).
Last time I’d been, this was a relatively quiet time of year. I’ve since read many times that quiet periods just don’t exist anymore, and this turned out to be true. The CNY dates this year also fell during a UK half-term holiday and there were a bunch of local school trips and cheerleading groups around as well. That's all fine. I don't get to choose my holidays and I'm sure it was still better than trying during the Easter or Summer holidays. Weather-wise, it's perfect as well.
As I’d done before, I stayed at a Disney hotel for the first few days to take advantage of the transport and early park entry, which turned out to be pretty essential to having a decent day. I stayed at All Stars Music last time and didn’t like it much at all. I chose Pop Century this time, which is in the same bracket as All Stars, since the prices were reasonable and it now has the cable car for very quick connections to Epcot and Hollywood Studios.
I was at the hotel by around 8am, left bags and immediately jumped on the bus to Animal Kingdom. On the way, I bought a "Lightning Lane" pass (new words for fast pass) for Flight of Passage since I could see on the Disney app that it already had a decent-sized queue, and I was not going to do that after being awake for around 36 hours by this point.
Animal Kingdom
I didn’t take a huge number of pictures here. The only new stuff was Pandora, but I obviously wanted a few rides on Everest as well.
I’m not sure how familiar people are with the current fast pass system at Disney World, but there’s basically a paid system, called Genie+, which works like the old free one, where you can select a ride every couple of hours. A handful of the most popular rides aren’t included, but an “individual lightning lane” can be bought separately. This was the case for Flight if Passage. This worked out for me since I didn’t want/need the whole Genie+ thing for the whole park. I think I paid $15 for it.
With the individual passes, you choose your own time based on availability, so I gave myself around an hour, joining the regular, 30-minute queue for Navi River Journey in the meantime. I didn’t take pictures of/in the rides themselves, just general “Pandora” pictures. You’ve all seen these a million times before, which will be true of literally everything I post in this report, but here they are anyway:
I really liked Navi River Journey. It doesn’t seem to get much love, but as a “ride-a-boat-and-look-at-stuff” attraction, it’s very good. It goes without saying that the final animatronic is amazing, and I thought the soundtrack was gorgeous. It's just an overall lovely experience. Flight of Passage was very good, but I was expecting more based on the unanimous praise it always gets. “You can feel it breathing between your legs!!” You can feel (and hear) some very obvious bits of machinery moving somewhat in sync. It’s excellent for a simulator, but honestly, it’s just a ‘roided-up flying theatre when it comes down to it. Meh.
Like I said earlier, I didn’t take many pictures, so I’ll just throw them in randomly and punctuate them with bits of unconnected text describing other stuff I did.
I got three rides in on Everest using the single rider queue and waiting about 5 minutes each time when it was on a 30-45-minute queue. I really enjoyed it before, and maybe even more so this time. I’m not a fan of how the backwards “surprise” is executed – there’s literally nothing else that could happen at that point and you’re held for more than enough time to figure it all out – but the backwards section itself is fab, as is the big drop out of the mountain.
I did the safari ride thing, but didn’t really see very much this time. Not that bothered since it really is just generic zoo animals presented somewhat nicely.
I did the two shows, Lion King and Nemo, neither of which I’d rated very highly before. Lion King was still crap, just so cheap-looking and lacking any form of real cohesion, but I enjoyed the Nemo show more than I had last time, which isn’t saying much.
Tough to be a Bug is always vastly entertaining when the kids inevitably start screaming in absolute terror. Such an underrated attraction which will likely disappear soon.
Dinosaur was a bit of a disappointment. I’d really enjoyed it before. I don’t know if things have been removed or don’t work anymore, but I don’t remember so much of it being in total darkness with f**k all to look at last time. I think it’s fairly safe to say that this is on its way out.
It doesn’t seem like it, but I’d had a pretty full day here by the time I left an hour or so before closing. It was definitely the best choice of park given the complete lack of sleep since it’s generally not as busy as the others and, with less to do, is a bit more relaxed.
Next up: Magic Kingdom