Pages

Showing posts with label FL 2012. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FL 2012. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

The Beach.

We started out in the Indian Shores area, then drove up to Honeymoon Island State Park to end the day. 



Our kids have never been to a proper beach (not a lake beach) and were over the moon about all the water, beautiful sand, sea birds, and shells.  After so many high intensity days of busy parks, spending a day at the beach was perfect; and we nearly had it all to ourselves.  If our trip had been longer we would have spent the rest of it by the water.



If I had been editing these I would have removed all those random people and made you think we had it entirely to ourselves.









We took home 20 lbs of shells (not including a really neat- and heavy- rock I had to bring home) and some great memories.


Sunday, December 9, 2012

Animal Kingdom.

Hands down this is the best Disney park.  We were so excited to take our kids here!  Not only do they love animals (especially Grace) but it's such a neat experience to "travel" to different parts of the world.  (The food is also awesome there, by the way.)

Is it exactly like being in another country?  No.  But it's much cheaper than going there, you get exposed to lots of amazing animals and environments, the staff is friendly and knowledgeable, and I think it can really inspire kids to want to explore the world someday.










































Patie's Thoughts on the Wizarding World.

11-28-12

The first thing we did was go to Ollivanders wand shop.  My sister got chosen to do a demonstration.  She got a birch wand with a unicorn hair core.  Everyone else got to choose which wand they wanted. I chose Luna Lovegood's wand; the part you hold onto is carved to look like a tulip that is going to open.

At Hogwarts I went on a ride and it looked like you were flying through Hogwarts.  The part that I thought was creepy was the spiders drooling on us and the Dementors in the chamber of secrets.

I went on a roller coaster that was based on Buckbeek the hippogriff.

At Honeydukes I got Bertie Botts Every Flavor Beans* and a jar of U-No-Poo.  On the bottle it says "You Shouldn't Be Worrying about You-Know-Who, You Should Be Worrying about You-No-Poo."

My Dad went on a roller coaster that I wanted to go on** but I was 5 inches too short.  After my Dad went on it he said I would have liked it but it might have gotten me scared.  It goes upside down and in circles. 

At lunch we ate at the Hogs Head and got frozen butterbeer.  It tastes sort of like butterscotch.  We also had chicken legs and wings corn on the cob, carrots and broccoli.

Two hours after lunch we got some more butterbeer.  I got really cold because I went on two water rides and I got soaked on the first one and even wetter on the second.

*They are every bit as wonderful and awful as you would expect.

**Patience is a roller coaster warrior.  We actually took the girls to the Wizarding World twice; this day, and again on the Saturday before we came home.  That day Jim rode the dragon coasters over and over again while the girls spent their allowances.  They're intense, and he loved it.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Hogsmeade.

This day.  It was just awesome. 


Jim and I were able to take Grace and Patience aside for a day and finally visit Hogsmeade.  It's hard to explain what these books mean to us; the beginning of a lifetime of voracious reading for the girls, the bond we can share with them as fellow Potter nerds- it's just special.


Rowling's creation is like a fine croissant.  An expertly crafted recipe inspired by centuries of experience, followed to the letter, layer upon layer upon layer falling together- and yet at first bite you need know none of this.  It is simply good.  That is the amazing thing about Harry Potter. 


It was very special to walk around this place and, in a small way, see these wonderful books come to life; sharing it together.  Just incredible fun.


After arriving we stopped at Ollivanders first.  Of course every Potter reader worth their salt knows this is an outpost of the true Ollivanders, which is in Diagon Alley.

The queue was short, because it was early in the day, and then it was time to enter the shop.  Guests are admitted in small groups- adding to the intimacy of the experience.  The Ollivanders employees are incredibly well-trained and absolutely wonderful.  In all other places in the park I enjoyed the atmosphere and the fun of seeing so many details come-to-life, but, the man in Ollivanders was so in character and invested so much in what he was doing that I found myself forgetting he was playing a part.

We told the girls very few details about what we'd experience in Florida- they just had the basics.  This way, if we missed something, no one knew to be disappointed.  So they didn't know what was coming at the Wizarding World, other than Hogsmeade, Honeydukes, etc.  That was exciting enough.

They didn't know, for instance, that Ollivanders was not just a trip through a shop, but was first an experience- a wand choosing ceremony, in which one child is chosen from each group (15-20 people) to experience the ceremony for themselves, just like Harry.

And so we entered into the dark, hushed shop, and this amazing, kind, incredible "wandmaker" turned. to. Grace.  She had no idea what was coming and was stunned.  He asked her name, and began presenting wands for her to try.  Wand after wand, none "fit".  She spoke lumos and got lightning, etc.  (Yes of course this is all pretend but it seems so very real.)

And then he presented her with a birch wand, 13 inches, reasonably pliable, unicorn hair core.  He (again, wonderfully in character like the kindest, wisest, most wonderful Santa Claus of a man you have ever met) told her this wand was particularly well-suited to those as loving and creative as she, that it would be especially useful in spells of protection and healing.  He seemed such a spot-on judge of her character; it was disarming.  (Full disclosure, this is when I lost it and started to cry.)

She took the wand, and, well, it chose the wizard.  It was wonderful and so well-done.  And, she had no idea to expect it, which made it all that much better.

When the ceremony was through we were shown out of the shop.  Everyone cleared out, and as we passed the wandmaker Patie said nothing but stopped in front of him and looked up.  He could have brushed her away, reminding her it was time to exit, but he didn't.  He was so kind (especially in knowing she was Grace's sister and would feel left out.)  He suggested a wand that would be particularly good for charm work, and she was more than satisfied. (Patie identifies very much with Hermione, who is also particularly good at charms.)

It was just a wonderful, wonderful experience we'll never forget.  Grace has been high as a kite about it ever since (once the shock wore off.)


Honeydukes, The Three Broomsticks, Hogwarts, Butterbeer, Pumpkin Juice, all of it was wonderful.  I'll let the pictures say the rest.


Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Magic Kingdom.

Crowded, crazy, loud, iconic, worth it, and fun.

Several years ago Jim and I went to Disney World without kids (Grace was about 6 months old and we left her behind.)  It was really fun; we honestly enjoyed it very much.

Now I can't imagine ever going without my kids- how could I possibly enjoy this when I would be constantly thinking of how much they would love it?  I would just miss them. 

P.S. The new Fantasyland is going to be great.  What we saw was awesome.


You must always take the ferry first.  Then when you're exhausted you take the monorail.  But the ferry first.  Always.










After hearing the song about 200 times on one of their Disney compilation CDs, the kids finally visited the Enchanted Tiki Tiki Tiki Tiki Tiki Room...







Patie's journal for the day:

11-27-12: Disney World

I went on a spaceship roller coaster and I couldn't see anything.  It went really fast.  Only my mom, me, and dad liked it.

I also went on a ride called Splash Mountain.  I got kind of wet.  And I went on one called Thunder Mountain Rail Road.  It was fun and fast.

We got ice cream because we could not find my mom and my sisters and grandma.  It was tasty.


Monday, December 3, 2012

SeaWorld.

Our first big stop was SeaWorld.  It's fun, it's clean, it's not too crowded (especially the rides for kids.) 



We had a great time, saw a few of the shows, and at the end we got to feed some dolphins; who can't love a dolphin?  Seriously they are the Tom Hanks of animals.














Here's an excerpt from Patie's journal, followed by more shots from the day:

11-26-12: Second Day
I touched a sting ray. 
I went on a rollercoaster that got me wet.
I went on a spinning teacups ride. 
I went swimming.
My sisters and my brother and my grandma, grandpa and my mom fed dolphins. 
I saw a shark that was half a foot longer than my brother and my brother is 48 inches tall. 
I went to three shows.  In one I saw Shamu the killer whale.  There was one with sea lions and otters.  In the end of that one an otter started chasing a man with a sword in its mouth.  It was funny.  And another one with dolphins.