Tips about ChildId, Epcot, Magic Kingdom, Resorts and Souvenirs

All Resorts - In the room at the hotel, there typically isn't any place to store your bathroom stuff. Toothbrushes, makeup, medicines, shaving supplies, or whatever else ends up sitting on the counter where it either gets moved or is subject to cleaner overspray when the staff comes in to make up the room. My wife found this tip on a cruise ship website and it worked great for our Disney trip over Thanksgiving. She found a clear plastic hanging shoe holder, the kind that has pockets for holding individual shoes. We hung this in the closet and put all our bathroom stuff in there. It was out of the way, but easy to see where individual items were. The holder went down to the floor, too, so we could put things our 5-year-old needed towards the bottom so she could get them herself. Everything had a place so the bathroom countertop was completely clear when we left for the parks each day. - Pete Johnson
0 Users found this helpful.
Contemporary - Though you can't just go to the top floor of the Contemporary to watch the fireworks, you can go to the third floor lookout (or the stairwells of the 4th-14th floors). Also, remember that the monorails stop when there are perimeter fireworks. - Kenny
0 Users found this helpful.
Fort Wilderness - We seem to arrive at Fort Wilderness late in the afternoon after driving for several days. After setting up, it's too late to visit any of the parks. What we do is take the boat over to the Wilderness Lodge for some minor shopping (the Orlando paper) and then over to the Magic Kingdom. We don't go in, but exchange our vouchers for the park tickets. By that time of day, there's no line but a couple of Cast Members are still on duty. If we time it right, we can watch the fireworks from the boat on the way back. - David and Dayle Youngs
0 Users found this helpful.
We have been several times to WDW throughout the past several years, with and without our daughters. Now that they are all grown up, we seem to visit WDW more often without them. They always get a postcard or two from us to let them know we are thinking of them. On our latest trip we started what we call our "audio postcards." While we were in Pirates of the Caribbean we called them on our cell phone and instead of saying "Hi" we put the speaker phone option on just as "Yo Ho, Yo Ho, a pirate's life for me" could be heard. After a few moments of that I quietly said (so as not to disturb others in our boat), "We're having fun and guess where we are." They LOVED it, and we used several more opportunities during our visit. Some easily recognizable sounds are "Dead men tell no tales,""It's a small world after all," the "zapping" sounds from Buzz Lightyear, and the drummers from the Japan pavilion. There were so many opportunities once we got started. We just had to be careful not to disturb our fellow park-goers with our phone. Toward the end, we didn't even have to say anything; we just let Disney do the talking for us. - Jodi and Jim M.
0 Users found this helpful.
Epcot - I have a tip for keeping children occupied while waiting for the fireworks at Epcot. On our last trip to Disney, we wandered into the Toy Soldier at the United Kingdom before we went to get a place to sit for the fireworks. While we were in the store our 3 1/2-year-old son saw a Thomas the Tank Engine puzzle he wanted. We bought it for him and let him put it together while we waited for the fireworks to begin. It completely occupied his time and by the time he was finished, it was almost time for the fireworks. We are planning another trip in November 2005 and this time I am going to pack some of his puzzles into Ziplock bags to take with us. He will have something to do while we wait and we won't have the box to take up a lot of room in our bag. - Tiffany Lueck
0 Users found this helpful.
Epcot - I have a tip for keeping children occupied while waiting for the fireworks at Epcot. On our last trip to Disney, we wandered into the Toy Soldier at the United Kingdom before we went to get a place to sit for the fireworks. While we were in the store our 3 1/2-year-old son saw a Thomas the Tank Engine puzzle he wanted. We bought it for him and let him put it together while we waited for the fireworks to begin. It completely occupied his time and by the time he was finished, it was almost time for the fireworks. We are planning another trip in November 2005 and this time I am going to pack some of his puzzles into Ziplock bags to take with us. He will have something to do while we wait and we won't have the box to take up a lot of room in our bag. - Tiffany Lueck
0 Users found this helpful.
Grand Floridian - We found that the Gasparilla Grill at the Grand Floridian Resort provided decent food at just a small premium over counter service in the theme parks. The food available poolside at the waterside pool was very expensive; however, you could get a tray from Gasparilla's and bring your food out to the pool. - Michael Gizzi
On the same idea as the kid ID tags, when we took our last trip we had five children under 8 years old in our family, and there were 20 of us in total. In the past I had witnessed parents frantically searching for lost children, so I wanted to put something on the kids without giving out too much information. My kids love the popular rubber-band type bracelets, so I picked out plain-colored ones (not multi-colored). We actually used the Mickey icon ones from Disney World, and with a permanent marker wrote "parents' cell #" on them. We then instructed the kids to, if lost, alert the nearest Cast Member and show them the bracelet. It worked well, but luckily we did not have to put them to use! - Lisa Legere-Fraser
0 Users found this helpful.
A recent tip of the week reminded me of something I used with my son years ago. We used a luggage tag with a closed flap so that the information wasn't "exposed" unless needed. We placed the tag with mom's and dad's names, the name of our hotel, and telephone numbers -- not home information or room numbers (that information would be very valuable to thieves!) -- on a belt pack that our son wore all the time. In addition, we picked a secret password. He knew to only go to people with a Disney tag or if they used the password. Don't use Mickey as a password at WDW -- way too obvious. Our son picked Bugs Bunny. He said nobody at WDW would say, "Bugs sent me!" We also taught him that if he ever got lost at WDW to stay in one place and just yell, "Help!" Cast Members are everywhere and trained to zoom to emergencies. I felt he was safer and the belt pack was the perfect carrier for his autograph book and pen. - Malinda Orrico
0 Users found this helpful.
The last time our family went to Disney World, our granddaughter was 2 years old. She could communicate pretty well, but if a child is scared, it can be difficult. What my daughter did was write her cell phone number on the inside front of her daughter's T-shirts with a permanent marker. You couldn't see it unless you looked on the inside hem. All my granddaughter needed to do was to show a Cast Member the hem of her T-shirt and they could call her mother's cell phone in the park. I thought it was a great idea. - Marie Kuhn
0 Users found this helpful.
When we travel to the World, we make sure to purchase as much as we can on our Magic Band. On one hand, there's no need to carry cash around, but the real benefit for frequent visitors is that at the end of your stay you get an itemized list of all expenditures. We still pay for it all with cash when we check out. After we get home and are settled in from our trip, we go through the list and use it to track exactly where we spent our money (dinner, lunch, toys, etc.). Doing this allows us to budget almost exactly how much money we will need for our next trip and there's no need to save all of your receipts to do it. - Fred Block
0 Users found this helpful.
Having once been lost for a terrifying five minutes in Disney World when I was a child, I have tried various tips mentioned in your newsletter to spare my children this experience. The hand holder at Wal-Mart didn't work, especially by the buses! I am not a seamstress, so putting their names in every shirt just isn't an option. Someone said to try these name tags that fasten to their shoes, except I thought the price was a little steep. Before we left on our last trip, I was in a store's luggage department. I purchased two waterproof luggage tags. I attached them to my kids' belt loops and stuck the tag in their pockets. It had all the important information on it, including our cell phone numbers. The kids knew if they were lost to go to a Cast Member and show them the tag. The best part about it is that the tags cost only $3 for both of them. - Laura Littner
0 Users found this helpful.
I wanted to expand on a tip given this week from Alea Laughery in regard to taking pictures of your kids in each country in Epcot. We do this every year and some other ideas we have done: playing an instrument, waving a flag, eating a candy or treat not from a restaurant and taking a picture with a cast member from that country. My son gets excited every time and is always coming up with what he wants to do. (He came up with the instrument idea!) Next trip... Toys! - Lisa H.
0 Users found this helpful.
I wanted to expand on a tip given this week from Alea Laughery in regard to taking pictures of your kids in each country in Epcot. We do this every year and some other ideas we have done: playing an instrument, waving a flag, eating a candy or treat not from a restaurant and taking a picture with a cast member from that country. My son gets excited every time and is always coming up with what he wants to do. (He came up with the instrument idea!) Next trip... Toys! - Lisa H.
0 Users found this helpful.
When my wife and I are at WDW we always send postcards home to our parents. Each parent gets their own postcard for each day that we are at WDW. It is a lot of fun finding the right card and writing the right message. Last year, while at breakfast at 1900 Park Fare, we had all the characters sign each card and we didn't add any message of our own. Our parents got the cards and couldn't figure out what was going on, since they had been reading our messages explaining what had happened on each day. They loved them! We later found out that these cards were our parents' favorites and are the ones that they show to other family members first. - Ray & Cindy Kuykendall
0 Users found this helpful.
1 26 27 28 29 30 48