Tips about Keep The Magic Alive

Check the local TV listings for the Travel Channel and the Food Network. Both regularly have programs featuring Walt Disney World. - Mike
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I like to look at my Disney vacation pictures from years gone by and see how the parks have changed and relive my wonderful vacations. I also subscribe to the Disney Magazine. I have the Fantasmic CD and a CD I made at the Imagination Pavillion with all Disney songs from the parks/rides. - Connie La Tempa
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We've found a great way ~ Internet radio "hub" Live 365 has a number of broadcasters/stations that play Disney music - everything from soundtracks to ambient park music, even some sound bites from attractions! We don't realize how we relate hearing ambient park music to "feeling" like we're there, until we listen to it at home! Just go the the Live 365 website, and search "Disney" or "Walt Disney World". A list of stations that play that music are listed, complete with short descriptions of the type of music they play. It's a great way to feel like you're at the park, when you're at home! - Cindy W.
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One of my favorite things to do for a quick Disney fix, when a trip is not in the near future is play a video I bought on a previous trip. This video travels throughout the 4 theme parks showing the various attractions (the name escapes me..."Around the World"?). I think you can still purchase it from WDW directly. Also the free promotional planning tapes/DVD from Disney are loads of fun. Sometimes I'll even watch a Sing-Along tape with the kids (Campout or Beach Party at WDW or even Disneyland fun). Finally, Some days I just listen to my CD's of the theme park rides and show. It is a great way to remember the fun had on the last trip and anticipate the next trip. - Holly Bryfogle
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Visit a Disney Store...if you can still find one in your area! 🙂 -Tony
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To keep the Disney fun going between trips, I bought a small dry-erase board, hung it in the bathroom, and my husband and I take turns playing Hangman. The answers we come up with are anything Disney related from Disney movies to the parks to something we've read on AllEars®.Net. We've been playing for many, many months and still haven't run out of creative answers. We even made up fun rules like if one of us happens to guess the answer before guessing any letters, the winner gets a one-hour massage from the other person. (This is challenging, but very possible!) - Paulette Kusmierz
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My wife and I took our daughter to WDW when she was three years old. Wanting to remember all that we did, we kept a journal of each day's activities. The pictures were later put into a scrapbook, but we did something else that has paid great dividends since. We incorporated the journal with numerous pictures (some were our pictures scanned in, some were "borrowed" from Disney.com and AllEars.Net) and created a newsletter in Microsoft Publisher. Now, whenever my daughter (who is now five) wants to relive the experience, we pull out the eight-page newsletter and give it a read. It has really helped her keep the memories of her first trip to WDW alive!!! - Steve Grohne
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My two kids, 6 & 10, are fairly messy, especially the 6 year old. Whenever we ate in the parks, I took extra napkins just in case. If there were any cleans ones left I put them in my backpack instead of throwing them away. When I cleaned out my backpack at the end of the day, I put any leftover napkins in our suitcase. When we got home, I put the Disney World napkins in the kids' lunchboxes. It keeps the magic alive. - Kim Mulquin
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I really enjoy scrapbooking, especially from my Disney trips! One way I have found to really jazz up my Disney pages (for free!) is to use the Disney paint chips from Home Depot. Many of the colors are cut into a Mickey shape that can be peeled from the backing paper and placed into a scrapbook. - Susan Kolmetz
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What my girlfriend and I do is take two scrapbooks -- one for me and one for her. Each night, before going to bed, we take a minute to write down our best moments for that day. When we get back home we trade the books. It's fun to see the trip through the eyes of your loved one. It brings back memories that you may have skipped, and it helps you understand each other even more. Planning the next trip is then easier, because you have a better idea of what the other one would rather do. This could easily be done with a whole family. - Sylvain, Montreal
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I wanted to add to the suggestion about sending postcards signed by Disney characters. On the first morning of our trip in November, I excused myself from breakfast with my family at the All Star Sports food court to pick up two postcards from the shop in the lobby. I wrote notes to each of my sons with specific details from the night before at Epcot and signed a favorite character's name on each. It was fun to write in a style that I thought Dumbo or Stitch might use. I popped them in the mailbox and returned to breakfast. After we got home, my sons received their postcards and were amazed to not only get mail from Disney World, but to have the character know just what they did. It worked like a charm and made the magic continue even after we were home. - Julie Morgan
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This is particularly popular with our kids (ranging in age from 9 to 14) during the return trip when we drive. We do a "game show" style quiz on our trip and at our location (either at WDW or on the Disney Cruise). For example, if we are doing a Jeopardy-style quiz, and we just returned from a WDW vacation, we will use categories such as Epcot or Magic Kingdom or resorts. Questions (or rather "answers") could be destination-related ("This is a ride at Epcot that takes place in a boat.") or specific to our trip ("This was the first ride we rode on Tuesday."). The way we play it, we rotate through each child and let them pick the "value " of the question. The higher the value, the tougher the question. We give a better pin to the winner and other pins to each of the "players!" - Sonney from Maryland
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Although it hasn't even been a year since our last trip, reading through the ALL EARS(tm) newsletter makes me yearn for the day when we will take another. So, as I read through the newsletter itself, especially the tips section, I find lots of great ideas that I know I'll want to use for our next trip. I cut and paste them into a 'note' in Outlook that I entitled "WDW tips," to look at and sort through before we go to see the Mouse again. It makes me feel better -- almost as if I were already planning a trip. - Maria Mounsey
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