A Green band which signifies the wearer has been measured to be greater than 117cm... Indiana Jones, Raging Spirits looping roller coaster, and Journey to the Center of the Earth, here we come! We were high fiving ourselves all the way to the first ride. Even the measuring lady got a high five from William!
We had trucked it all the way to the "Lost River Delta" at the back of the park to get the good rides while the lines were still short. Indiana Jones was closed for the moment, but the Raging Spirits roller coaster with a 360 loop was right next door and it seemed like the perfect initiation for a newly qualified coaster rider!
Here's a picture of William in front of the loop after his first ride. He loved it and we whipped right around and did it again! We then did Indiana Jones. William was a bit scared from the content (skulls, snakes, spiders, blow darts, and a close call with a big stone ball... not sure what his issue is... ;-) ) and elected not to try it again.
We then headed to Mysterious Island with a pretty convincing volcano. In a crater in the side of the volcano is...
...Captain Nemo's secret base for his explorations into the depths of the Earth and Sea. It is a wonderfully convincing Jules Verne world complete with a Chinese restaurant where we ate lunch.
The 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea ride didn't take the big Nautilus that was docked in the bottom of the crater, but we had a much more cozy submarine that provided a fairly convincing illusion of diving to the depths, fighting off a giant squid and discovering a deep water intelligent society. Journey to the Center of the Earth was our favorite taking a six person Rocket Rod type vehicle through the various environs of the book including a volcanic vent belching fire and a giant monster before being accelerated to safety out the volcano. William declared it the scariest and the most fun of the rides.
Port Discovery was next with some low impact rides like Aquatopia (in the video) where automated "boats" are navigated about the ride by some method of antennae and sensors. It was kind of fun since the cars didn't all follow the same path. They just kind of turned and twisted in random ways until the ride was done. We also did the Storm Rider, which is a simulator plane ride into the eye of a super storm full of brazen flying techniques and a lot of mishaps. Fun.
We then took the electric train to the "American Waterfront" where there was some pretty convincing representations of old US port towns.
The only things that give it away are the Disney perfectness of it and the odd demographic tilt to the Asian...
Our main goal in this area was the Tower of Terror. By this time, William was wary of the new class of rides he was qualified to ride and had been off and on about doing the Tower. We shamed him into it saying that even 102cm kids could ride this one... though, we did have concerns that he would have nightmares of falling. He ended up loving it. They have a different story line than the one in California and I thought it was actually pulled off a bit better.
1 comment:
Disney Sea is so fun! I definitely want to go again as when we went it was pretty busy. But Olivia is pretty small and so is Claire making it difficult to ride the big rides. But still fun we loved the Mermaid Lagoon as Olivia was in heaven there :)
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