Julie and I grew up near Disneyland and went quite a bit
growing up. Our kids? Not so much.
That was the way it was until Christopher found out what he was
missing. Because of this “Disney Awakening”
we have been to Disney parks in California, Florida, Hong Kong, and Tokyo. So since we were planning a trip to Shanghai
we HAD to plan a trip to Disney’s newest Park – Shanghai Disney.
The park opened just 3 years ago in an area of Shanghai that
could only have been named by government body: The Shanghai International
Tourism and Resorts Zone. There are just
a handful of hotels in the area and we selected the Courtyard by Marriott as it
was close (with a shuttle), new, and reasonably priced.
Our rooms were reasonably sized and well appointed (lots of
marble everywhere). They were actually
nicer than we expected them to be. What
was missing was hooks to hang towels on.
It was kinda odd that there were no towel bars or hooks. The other thing that was in short supply was
a bathroom mirror. There was a small
one, about 8” in diameter, that pulled out from the wall. On day 2 we found another one on the back
side of the closet door so you could see how you looked, but that was it.
We checked in and headed to Disney Town for a late
lunch. We decided to buy our tickets for
the next 2 days as well. Luckily one
cast member spoke decent English and she was able to help us. The 2-Day tickets set up back about $150
each, not too bad.
When we were buying them they asked for our passports which
were back in the room. I got them to
accept my Singapore ID card and they dutifully logged my FIN number (Foreigner
Identification Number) in the ticket record.
I needed to show it the next day and we would be issued the actual
tickets. We left a little apprehensive,
but the next morning it worked fine.
We hopped the first shuttle the next morning (7am!) and were
in the entrance line quickly. We were
with an American and British couple who live in Beijing, working in
education. Now line etiquette is
different in China—you push where you can.
But the five of us did a pretty good job of blocking anyone trying to
move ahead of us. We were though the
security and entrance lines and in the park by 8:45. Success!
Shanghai Disney is known for its long lines and this was a
Saturday, the busiest day of the week.
We had the Disney App (pronounced A-P-P in China) and logged in our
tickets via QR code (what else?). We
selected a FastPass for Tron later that afternoon.
We headed off to Pirates of the Caribbean as the wait lines
were short first thing in the morning.
Growing up in Orange County California, Julie and I have probably been
on Pirates of the Caribbean at least 200 times, so we know the ride well—or
thought that we did.
Looks familiar, but just the bones are left |
We were loaded in the boat and took off. There is no Blue Bayou or swamp cabins at the
beginning and you launch immediately into the “pirate experience”. Rather than the deep voiced “Dead Men Tell No
Tails” there is a higher pitched voice saying something in Mandarin. We floated through a variety of scenes and all
of a sudden I realized that we were moving sideways in a controlled
manner. This was NOT the Pirates that we
knew.
Without spoiling if for those that will go someday, let me
just say that this is a very different and much more immersive experience. More like one of the Harry Potter rides at
Universal Studios in Orlando. And I had
no idea that it would be different than what I was used to which made it kinda
special for a sixty-year-old. (Special
enough that we went on it several more times during our stay at Disney.)
Forkie |
Disney can also be masters of illusion. While there were a lot of people at the park,
it never really felt crowded. Very wide
pathways that always have plenty of room to pass people. And the pathways were always curving this way
and that so there were never a lot of people in your field of vision. They also pumped in bird sounds. We heard a lot, but saw few. After a while we realized that the chirps
weren’t from actual birds, but speakers.
Tron |
We enjoyed the rides.
Many, like Peter Pan, were quite familiar. Others were new, like Tron. This is an indoor/outdoor roller coaster
(think of Space Mountain) in which you are straddling a Tron cycle instead of
sitting in a rollercoaster car. A very
different experience and one that was a little hard on my neck as you are
leaning forward and straining your neck upwards to see where you are going.
Soaring was much like the other versions, but with two
exceptions. First the ending of the
around the world flight is in Shanghai, which is quite appropriate. The other difference in the introduction/safety video. It was all in Mandarin and seemed to be a
mystical story that was being told.
While we didn’t understand it we enjoyed it.
Of course we had to wait for the fireworks over the castle
at the end of the night. The Disney fireworks
displays are so much different from the ones I remember in the past. With synchronized video projectors they use
the entire castle as a screen and the coordination of projection, music, and
fireworks is impressive.
So we found a good spot near the entrance and staked our
ground. Now unlike the other parks we
have been to there were not taped off zones to sit and walk. They just grew organically as people
came. Soon we were having to defend our
space as more and more came. God forbid
if there had been an emergency and some of us or all of us needed to leave
quickly.
I have learned in China that you have to be somewhat aggressive
when waiting in line—it is the complete opposite of Singapore. But in the chaos I had a chance to talk with
my neighbor in the crowd. He asked where
I was from and then gave me a big “Welcome to Shanghai!”. One of my favorite things about travel is the
people you meet.
Perhaps one of our favorite rides wasn’t a ride at all. It was the Alice in Wonderland
maze. It is a walk through area where you go from
area to area, based on the story. There
are little things to see and play with, and each area is very different from
the one before and the one after. Really
liked it as we hadn’t seen anything like it before, it was a new
experience. And it as that way for
everyone.
We realized that was one of the things we like most about
Disney Shanghai—being only 3 years old meant that visiting Disneyland was a new
and different experience for almost everyone.
Even adults had kid like smiles and grins on their faces.
And that is our best memory of Shanghai Disney. Not the rides, the food, or the buildings—it
was the smiles on people’s faces, young and old.
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