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Disneyland Paris Trip Report - first time visit 7th-10th April

Mick

TS Member
So having made my first ever dedicated overseas theme park trip, to Europe's most visited no less, and having taken many many pictures and took copious notes, I felt I would use these to provide a detailed and dedicated trip report!

The trip was booked in January of this year, leaving Birmingham early on Tuesday, and returning late on Friday. Staying in Santa Fe for all three nights, with the best part of four days to experience the resort. As the party was two adults in their early thirties, the main focus was to experience as many of the rides, shows and attractions as possible, and just to enjoy and take in the atmosphere in the various areas. Character meets and fine dining weren't a priority.

I've decided that I'll break the report down into a day-by-day account, with final conclusions/reviews after that. So here goes!


Day 1 - Tuesday 7th April

Day 1 started with a 01:30 wake up call, in order to catch the 06:00 flight from Birmingham to Charles De Gaulle airport. Armed with only carry-on luggage, there were no issues with either the airport or the flight, and we touched down in Paris around 08:30. The immigration queue was slow moving but we managed to get through just in time to navigate the many escalators to the train station at the bottom, and book and board the 09:43 train to Marne-la-Vallee-Chessy. Taking only 11 minutes and literally dropping off on the doorstep of the resort, this was an absolute godsend. Had we missed this train it was around two hours until the next one, or take the much longer and more complicated RER network, or book an Uber which would also take much longer. Disembarking the train, we'd booked the Disney Express luggage service which is on the top floor of the station, and they took our suitcases with the promise that they'd be waiting for us at Santa Fe when we went to check in later. They also gave us our Magicpasses, which would work as a room keycard, as well as our park entry tickets, and that is where we immediately headed!

Leaving the train station it's literally impossible to get lost, the DLP security check is right in front of you. As the time at this point was around 10:15, the queues were fairly long but quick moving, and we were soon through, and decided that as our first visit, we absolutely had to visit the Disneyland Park first. Even before entering the park, the first impressions are absolutely breathtaking: the gardens are immaculate, statues and water features aplenty, the sun shining, the music, the beautiful Disneyland Paris hotel, everything about it was just so special. Again, there were some queues to enter the theme park itself, directly underneath the hotel, but we got through quickly again, the cards we'd been given at Disney Express working perfectly as intended.

Entering the park and the first thing we were greeted by was Mickey Mouse welcoming the crowds from the railway station! Couldn't have had a more fitting welcome. As we ambled down Main Street USA, without a plan other than to take in the VIBES and get our bearings, the first thing that was apparent was just how busy it was. Easter holidays, 25 degree weather, the grand opening of Disney Adventure World and the World of Frozen, it was no surprise, but initially it was quite overwhelming. We ambled down Main Street USA towards the castle, and the first land we saw was Adventureland, and so the very first attraction that we did was the rather low key Aladdin walkthrough Le Passage Enchante d'Aladdin, which was a cute little walkthrough with some nice scenes. Queue times were already very high at this point and whilst we continued to explore Adventureland we saw that "it's a small world" had a 10 minute queue listed on the app, so we headed into Fantasyland for our first proper ride of the trip! We ended up waiting 20 minutes rather than 10, and I think most people know what the ride offers, but I enjoyed it! The sheer number of moving parts inside, and the creativity of the various scenes and little Easter eggs inside meant there was plenty to see.

After getting off "it's a small world" we'd been awake for around 9 hours and were starving, but a lot of lunch places don't open until 11:30, so after a bit more wandering and exploring of Fantasyland we went back into Adventureland as Colonel Hathi's Outpost Restaurant was already open, and I had a Micky 4 cheese pizza which was €12. Was a pretty average quality pizza, but was much needed at the time. After the pizza, with queues still high, we went to queue for the 12:30 showing of The Lion King: Rhythms of the Pride Lands. I sort of knew what to expect, but it was still a quality and entertaining show, rattling through more or less all of the main songs from the film. I've seen opinions that it's better than the London show, which I wouldn't necessarily agree with, but as far as theme park shows go it's absolutely world class.

Leaving the Lion King, we went into Frontierland for the first time as Phantom Manor had an advertised 20 minute queue, although we were naughty people here as we accidentally went up the Premier access line undetected (the cast member was standing in the way of the main entrance having a discussion with a large group), and so got a walk on. It was well themed, but it didn't leave a particularly lasting impression on me. I think by this point, the tiredness of being up so long combined with the heat were starting to have an impact. After this we went to Main Street as A Million Splashes of Colour was about to start it's 14:15 parade. It's a short parade, but it's fun, brings feelgood VIBES, and the song is still stuck in my head even now!

After this parade, and a mooch in some of the shops around Main Street, we left the park and took the walk through Disney Village, also mooching in some of their shops, to go and check in at Santa Fe. Easily signposted and advertised as a 20 minute walk, it didn't feel that long and is a very pleasant and easy walk. We grabbed our luggage, then went to reception to have our Magicpasses updated to give us our room access. We were in the Lightning McQueen block which is one of the better blocks for walking to and from the resort! The room itself was very simple and a bit dated, but this was expected as the cheapest hotel, and served our purpose as a place where we'd sleep and spend little other time in.

After a couple of hours much needed rest and chill, we took the walk back to Disney Village and chose the quick and lazy option of McDonalds, €10 for a meal you can't really go wrong though, and then we chose to spend the evening in Adventure World! Again initially just exploring and finding our bearings, we chose our first ride to be Ratatouille: L'Aventure Totalement Toquee de Remy. We joined the queue at 18:20, which was advertised at 50 minutes, and for whatever reason moved incredibly slow and took an hour and a half. Painful, and I think impacted my enjoyment of the ride as I came off feeling a bit underwhelmed and still bitter about the wait. A shame given it was one of my more anticipated rides, but it would redeem itself...

It was then time to go and explore the World of Frozen, but first stopping to enjoy a Tiana choux pastry with vanilla ice cream for €6, from Chez Marie near the lake and this was absolutely delicious. We then entered The World of Frozen and joined the advertised 60 minute queue for Frozen Ever After, but we earned some of the painful Ratatouille queue back, as we were off within 45 minutes! I thought it was a really really great ride, some great animatronics, and was just something that put a smile on my face throughout, (nearly) everyone loves Frozen. By the time we'd left night had fallen and the land, and the whole park itself, just looks so beautiful in the dark. And queues were finally starting to drop, so we got a near walk on of Avengers: Flight Force, which was the first coaster of the day, and was enjoyable if not a little rough. After this, we got a near walk of Raiponce Tangled Spin, which has to be one of the best themed teacup rides anywhere in the land, and even moreso at night.

By this time it was approaching 22:00 so we settled into a position around the lake to wait for the 22:40 Cascade of Lights show. I'd avoided watching or reading anything of this in advance so I went blind, my thoughts on it were all positive, it was a great visual spectacle, and a perfect way to end a first ever Disney day. After the show it was the walk back to Santa Fe, lights went out around midnight, and the 22 and a half hours of being awake were finally over! Only the 28,443 steps today.

TLDR:
Travel day, Disneyland Park for Aladdin walkthrough, Small World, Lion King show, Phantom Manor and a Million Splashes of Colour parade. Checked into Santa Fe and then evening in Disney Adventure World for Ratatouille, Frozen Ever After, Avengers Flight Force, Tangled Spin, and Cascade of Lights show.

Would add some photos in to break up the wall of text, if anyone can point me to the best way.
 
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It's a shame that Phantom Manor didn't leave a lasting impression. I personally found the catacomb sequence very impactful.
I understand your opinion regarding Ratatouille, though.
 
It's a shame that Phantom Manor didn't leave a lasting impression. I personally found the catacomb sequence very impactful.
I understand your opinion regarding Ratatouille, though.
What I found with Phantom Manor, and some of the other indoor rides later in the trip, was that sometimes other riders were particularly loud/chatty, which distracted from the immersion and the story, in particular when most of the dialogue is in French. Made it a bit tough to follow what was happening beyond ‘slightly cool haunted house with some good animatronics and effects’.
 
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Day 2 - Wednesday 8th April

Day 2 started with an intended 07:00 alarm, however we were up at 05:50 due to the alarm from the adjoining room. Not ideal, Santa Fe clearly doesn't have the thickest of walls. Anyway, no harm done, we got ourselves up and ready and out of the room by 07:45 to take advantage of the Extra Magic Hour 08:30-09:30, one of the best perks of staying onsite. The morning's plan of attack was to get plenty of rides in at the main park.

We were some of the first queuing at around 08:00, were let into Disneyland Park not long after 08:15, and were on and off the first train of Big Thunder Mountain not long after 08:30, which was a great start! One of the best themed rollercoasters I've ever ridden, but was slightly underwhelmed, was a bit stop-starty for my liking and I thought it would've been quicker, although admittedly that may have been expected with the first train of the day. Anyway straight after BTM was out first venture into Discoveryland this trip, and a walk-on to Star Wars: Hyperspace Mountain. I loved this, it felt as quick as Flight Force but I found it much smoother. It was then straight off Hyperspace Mountain and another walk-on of Buzz Lightyear Laser Blast, which was a really fun shooting ride, and actually made me miss Duel at Alton Towers! Although this was by far the best shooting ride I've done for both theming, sound effects, operations, and the quality of the guns. And I'm a sucker for anything Toy Story related. As what was an incredibly successful and rewarding Early Magic Hour was coming to close, we joined a 5 minute queue for Autopia, though it was quite clear from the operations it would be much longer than this, and it ended up being around half an hour. It was good to get on it, but we're not really the intended audience for the ride, and whenever I see rides like this with such a massive footprint, I can't help but feel the land could be so much better used! Though Autopia remained popular with large queues for pretty much the whole duration of our trip.

By the time we'd got off Autopia, Early Magic Hour was over and Discoveryland was already looking so much bigger, but we were able to get a near walk on of Star Tours, which considering that it's 'only' a simulator, I found incredibly fun, even if I couldn't quite follow the story. After this it was straight across to Pirates of the Caribbean, it had an advertised 15 minute queue which was more or less accurate. I was able to appreciate the excellence of the ride, the quality of the theming, the scenes and the animatronics, but had the most irritating loudmouth foghorn sitting behind me, who spent the whole ride excitedly pointing out every single thing to her son. 'Oh look at that dog!', 'Look at that man swinging!', 'Look at her up there!' and so on and so forth. Very irritating for me, but I'm glad she had a good time :D.

As I'd been awake for hours and hadn't had breakfast, I bought a vastly overpriced bag of Lays from Pirates exit shop, and we were in positon near to the castle by 11:00 for the 11:30 Disney Stars on Parade. Much like A Million Splashes, it's just such a feelgood, the floats are spectacular, the characters are great fun, and everyone watching is just having such a relaxed, enjoyable time. Once the parade had passed, we dispersed and went to Toad Hall in Fantasyland and had fish and chips and a Toad cupcake for lunch. The meal was alright, worse quality than a regular chippy in my opinion but €12 for the meal, €4 for the cupcake (which was lemon flavoured and really nice), and €4 for a Coke (which is extortionate) wasn't bad value for a theme park.

After lunch, with the park being not pretty rammed, it was time to swap parks and enter Adventure World, where our first port of call was the 13:35 showing of Together: a Pixar Musical Adventure. Apart from knowing it featured loads of Pixar characters, and that it was highly rated, I didn't know what to expect from this, and I was astounded by its creativity, its music, and more than anything it's sense of fun. I had a permanent smile on my face, such a great show. Upon leaving this we unintentionally stumbled upon the Disney Marching Band, led by Minnie Mouse on Adventure Way. The super talented band playing some classic Disney songs in the beautiful sunshine just added to the feel-good. A short chill in Adventure World followed, where Alice and the Mad Hatter were doing an impromptu appearance, and then headed to get ready for the 15:10 showing of Mickey & The Magician. Again, I went in mostly blind, and completely loved all aspects of the show, from the surprises, to the songs and the magic. Both Together and Mickey & The Magician are so cleverly performed in parts English and French, in a way that it's still very easy to follow. Upon leaving the show, grabbed a delicious Mike Wazowski biscuit from Sweet Delights in World Premiere for €5, which I'd highly recommend. And then it was time to leave the park and have an hour in the hotel. At this point I realised I'd gone from around 11am to 4pm in theme parks without doing a single ride, and had still had an excellent few hours, the shows and parades surpassed by high expectations.

At around 17:30, we were back in McDonalds for tea, which was shambolically busy, and then it was an evening back in Disneyland Park, first port of call was Indiana Jones and the Temple of Peril, a 15 minute queue for a ride which was as rough as expected, I wouldn't have wanted to wait long for it. We then stopped at Cool Post for a Mickey ice cream for €4.50, which was desperately needed as it was still very hot. Ambling back towards the castle we caught the 19:15 A Million Splashes of Colour again as it was working its way around the castle, would've been rude not to stop and enjoy it again! We then managed to get on Les Voyages de Pinocchio, with a 10 minute queue, and it went at breakneck speed, felt like we were getting off 60 seconds after getting on! We then did a walk on ride on Le Pays des Contes de Fees, which was a lovely calm boat ride with some great little set pieces of various films. In most parks around the world this would be a premier boat ride, in Disney its about the fifth best!

We then continued our productive evening in the park by getting a walk on Star Tours, where we had an even better run than the morning! We got an English speaking version, that featured more popular characters Darth Vader, Yoda and Boba Fett, and as it was in English, I perfectly understood what was going on! The re-rideability of Star Tours is such a USP. Then as we were in the area managed a re-ride of Hyperspace Mountain on a 20 minute queue, which was just as fun as the morning. By this point it was getting dusk, so we did a quick walkthrough of La Galerie de la Belle au Bois Dormant and around 21:00 started camping outside the castle for the evening show, but not before grabbing a takeaway from Casey's Corner - hotdog, Mickey mousse dessert, and a coke for around €20.

The wait for the evening show was laborious, though the floor felt surprisingly comfortable after two days of so many steps, though you have to get used to people encroaching on personal space, it felt a bit dog eat dog. But anyway, we made it to 22:40 and Disney Tales of Magic, which had just the most impressive projection mapping and fireworks. It felt such a spectacle, and I know it used to have drones, but I didn't really feel it was weaker for not having them. At the end of the show it was time for the very slow filing out up Main Street, and the walk back to the hotel, another day done, another 33,233 steps done - feet in absolute bits.

TLDR:
Disneyland Park - Big Thunder Mountain, Hyperspace Mountain, Buzz Lightyear Laser Blast, Autopia, Star Tours, Pirates of the Caribbean, Disney Stars on Parade
Disney Adventure World - Together, Minnie's Marching Band, Mickey & The Magician
Disneyland Park - Indiana Jones, A Million Splashes of Colour, Le Pays des Contes des Fees, Star Tours, Hyperspace Mountain, la Belle au Bois dormant, Disney Tales of Magic
 
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Day 3 - Thursday 9th April

Day 3 started in the exact same way as the previous day, being woken by next door's 5:50 alarm :mad:. Never mind, it meant we were up early and ready to use our Extra Magic Hour again, this time in Adventure World. Again, we were let into the park early, straight to the ride with the consistently longest queue, Crush's Coaster. Happily this opened ahead of the advertised 8:30, and we got a more or less walk on. Really well themed on the inside, and it was fun, but slightly over-rated and I'd hate to actually have to wait the advertised times for it. After Crush it was across to Avengers Campus to ride Spider-Man W.E.B. Adventure, this was an advertised 5 minute, but once we got into the station there was a short delay due to some issues , and we got off around half an hour later. I thought this was an underwhelming ride, entirely screen based and by about half way through the arms were hurting and I sort of gave up. Next was The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror, which was an advertised 5 minutes and I was a bit nervous of this one, not being a huge fan of drops, as well as a bit of fear of the unknown! But my nerves were misplaced, it was so much fun, from the moment of entering the queue to leaving the exit shop it was incredible, I absolutely loved. The last ride that we managed in the Early Magic Hour was Slinky Dog Zigzag Spin, which I don't have a great deal to report, it is what it is. But another very successful Early Magic Hour, managing to get on four previously unridden rides for the first time. Well worth the early wake up.

We entered the queue for RC Racer almost bang on 9:30, and this was an advertised 5 minute queue that ended up being 20 minutes, there seemed to be a trend throughout where we'd enter what was an advertised short queue, and not long after joining the queue time would jump up. The ride itself was ridiculously short, but quick and fun, and even gave views of the castle and Hyperspace Mountain. After this one we headed up to the World of Frozen, to have a sit down and wait for the Celebration in Arendelle show on the water. It's not the best for viewing unless you get there early, we tried for this earlier in the trip and aborted mission as we were stuck behind so many people and aren't the tallest, so this time we were ready and early. The show itself is okay, nothing particularly special in itself but added to the energy of the area, sadly we only had puppet Olaf rather than the animatronic. After this, we headed to Flight Force, to re-ride on a 35 minute queue, sadly it was another ridiculously slow moving queue and after an hour, not far from the station we were told the ride had gone down and to exit the queue. The one saving grace being that we were given a Premier pass to use when the ride reopened, which having suffered many similar fates at other theme parks without so much as a sorry, I was very grateful for. But that concluded our morning in Adventure World, five new rides ridden and one new show seen still made it a good and productive one.

Lunch was eaten at The Earl of Sandwich, where I had a delicious chicken sandwich, brownie and Coke for around €15, and then headed back to the hotel for a short break.

We returned around 15:30 and went into Disneyland Park, where the first port of call was Cafe Hyperion for a Mickey cookie, Mickey ice cream and Sprite, for around €13, much needed snacks. We then watched the 16:30 showing of Mickey's PhilharMagic, which was entertaining though not particularly 4D as advertised, more 3D with some wind effects. We then had to bite the bullet and finally join a long queue for Peter Pan's Flight. Fantasyland at this point was so bustling and vibrant, with character meets all over the place, it's such a cute and pleasant area to be in. At the point of joining it was an advertised 55 minute queue, and it was more or less spot on, and didn't feel so painful. The ride itself was pretty good, but a bit janky, and very short! I could certainly appreciate the charm and appeal of it though.

After Peter Pan, it was approaching 18:00 and we decided to head back into Adventure World, first port of call being the Hollywood Gardens in World Premiere, for a cheeseburger meal and cupcake dessert, for around €22. Generic quick service meal that was perfectly edible. We then used the Premier access we'd been given that morning for Avengers: Flight Force, and were in and out in around 10 minutes, and had a much smoother ride this time around! I think I still prefer Hyperspace Mountain, but this ride made it a much closer contest. With long queue times we decided to give Ratatouille a go in the single rider queue, advertised at 15 minutes, we'd been in there around 10 minutes when the ride announced it was closing due to technical issues, so we left the queue.

Upon leaving the Ratatouille queue line we exited to heavy rain, thunder and lightning, which wasn't ideal! We scampered the short distance to Cars Road Trip, which had an advertised 25 minute queue, but more importantly offered shelter in the queue line. The advertised queue time was spot on, and I've got to be honest bar the one scene, this ride felt a complete waste of land, and like Autopia the day before I was contemplating just how much more they could do with the land. However, it was well worth doing as by the time we left the ride, the storm had passed, and Ratatouille had reopened, and that is where we returned, getting walk ons in single rider, and ending up in the same car! I enjoyed this infinitly more on day 1, I don't know why that was, but I came off having very much enjoyed and with my faith in the ride restored. Following the success of the Ratatouille single rider, we gave the Frozen Ever After single rider a go, and the advertised 20 minutes was spot on. Again, we got the same boat, and I got a lot wetter than I was expecting! Great ride though. It was then time for another ride on Tower of Terror, with a 15 minute queue, and as much as I loved it in the morning it was even better this evening, with a better cycle too. This ride was a real surprise hit with me this trip.

After getting off Tower of Terror it was around 22:00 and we had a few choices on how to spend the last hour, but we chose the option of getting back to the hotel earlier and getting a slightly earlier night, in preparation for our check out day. Only the 28,305 steps today.

TLDR:
Disney Adventure World - Crush's Coaster, Spider-Man W.E.B. Adventure, Tower of Terror, Slinky Dog, RC Racer, A Celebration in Arendelle
Disneyland Park - Mickey's Philharmagic, Peter Pan's Flight
Disney Adventure World - Avengers Flight Force, Cars Road Trip, Ratatouille, Frozen Ever After, Tower of Terror
 
Next was The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror, which was an advertised 5 minutes and I was a bit nervous of this one, not being a huge fan of drops, as well as a bit of fear of the unknown! But my nerves were misplaced, it was so much fun, from the moment of entering the queue to leaving the exit shop it was incredible, I absolutely loved.

I genuinely think it’s the best ride I’ve ever been on top to bottom (theming, experience, queue, immersion). Especially when you don’t really know what it is.

Love the creativity put into the concept.
 
Day 4 - Friday 10th April

It appears that our neighbours had moved out, as we didn't get the 5:50 wake-up call today, and instead had a 'lie-in' until 6:30. After a shower and packing we were dropping off our luggage at around 7:45 and headed to Disneyland Park for our final use of the Early Magic Hour. The plan to get another early ride on Big Thunder was changed as it didn't open on time, and so we went to Discoveryland and started our day with rides on Hyperspace Mountain and Buzz Lightyear Laser Blast, both as fun as the previous day. This park doesn't seem to have quite as much to offer in the early hour as Adventure World, so with limited choice, we joined a 5 minute queue for Dumbo the Flying Elephant, which ended up experiencing technical problems so we weren't getting off the ride until half an hour later. This had its advantages though, as come 9:30 Pirates of the Caribbean was opening on time, and was able to get an early walk on, and it was a fantastic ride, much improved on the first ride I had on it. I did have to put my phone torch on at a couple of points in the queue line though, it's real dark! It was then a ride on Star Tours, a 15 min queue that was more or less spot on, where we had another great, and vastly different ride to the previous two times.

It was then time to stock up on breakfast/snacks, a pain au chocolate from Cable Car bake on Main Street for €2, and a Mickey Marshmallow and some chocolate from La Confiserie de trois fees in Fantasyland, spent about €15 in there, a great selection to choose from, could've brought a lot more. It was then around 10:45 and time to find an excellent spot for a sit and the enjoy the 11:30 Disney Stars on Parade, which was as feelgood as the first time, but even better due to our improved position, near to the stage by the castle, able to see them snake round from Fantasyland and all the way round the plaza and off down Main Street. We then headed to Cafe Hyperion for lunch, which was a chicken burger meal for €16, and had the added bonus of a band rehearsing on the stage inside there. We then spent a short time having a final wander around the park, taking photos, seeing La Taniere du Dragon under the castle, and leaving the park around 12:45.

It was then time for a very relaxed afternoon in Adventure World, we watched Minnie's Disney Marching Band again at 13:05, watched Together again at 13:30, and Mickey and the Magician again at 15:10. There was a lot of chilling and enjoying the vibe in between, and afterwards enjoyed a hotdog from the Fan-Tastic food truck in Avengers Campus for €10.50, and saw Spider-Man performing on the roof. After a bit more relaxation and soaking up the atmosphere, we left around 17:00 and had a browse through the shops in Disney Village.

By 17:45 we were at the train station, collecting our luggage and ready for the 18:26 train back to the airport, which was on time and took 11 minutes. Navigating the massive airport was pretty straightforward with not too many queues, and the 21:45 flight back to Birmingham went without a hitch, and we were back in the country by about 22:15. Steps for the day a much more reduced 20,999.

And that concluded the trip, and what a first trip to DLP it was! I'll put one final post up giving my main takeaways from the trip, favourite rides and shows etc, but in summary, everything about the resort completely surpassed my high expectations, and I've very much caught the Disney bug!

TLDR
Disneyland Park - Hyperspace Mountain, Buzz Lightyear, Dumbo, Pirates of the Caribbean, Disney Stars on Parade, La Taniere du Dragon
Disney Adventure World - Marching Band, Together, Mickey & The Magician
Travel home
 
Overall Thoughts
The presentation of both parks is absolutely second to none, just being in and around the parks is an experience in itself. Operations both around the park and on the rides were near faultless, and I didn't come across a single member of staff who was anything but happy, helpful and on top of their game. There were some examples of rides going down, or queue times not being particularly accurate, but across the whole four days this was the exception rather than the rule. I had some reservations about going in the Easter holidays so soon after the Adventure World grand opening, and the resort was reported as sold out for every day of our trip, but if this is how well they cope with sell-out days then there's really no concerns! I had a couple of looks at the Alton Towers queue times at various points and yeah, the less said the better! Frozen was naturally often the longest queue, and Peter Pan and Crush were consistently around the hour mark, but there was always something to do.

I couldn't imagine what on earth Adventure World was like when it was Walt Disney Studios, but nowadays it's a full park in of itself, and with further additions on the way the future looks bright for it. We actually found that we preferred chilling in this park than Disneyland, it felt a lot more open, and therefore a lot more relaxed.

If you want a good hotel I couldn't really recommend Santa Fe, but if you just want a base to sleep and gain the perks of staying on-site, it's perfect. It was worth it alone just for the Early Magic Hour, and the Disney Express luggage transfer.

I regret not getting a second ride on Phantom Manor and Big Thunder Mountain, as neither of these left the best impression on me, but there were still more than enough very enjoyable rides and attractions, I agree with others that Disneyland park could do with some new and modern additions though. I'd have to say that my top five were probably:
1 - Tower of Terror, 2 - Pirates of the Caribbean, 3 - Frozen Ever After, 4 - Hyperspace Mountain, 5 - Ratatouille.

The shows and parades are absolutely spectacular, and in Adventure World in particular should not be overlooked. Together and Mickey & The Magician should be staples of everyone's visit, the Celebration in Arendelle was cute, and Minnie's Marching Band an unexpected highlight! There was even other stuff that we didn't see, such as Minnie's Dream Factory and a Magical Moment with Rapunzel & Flynn. You could have an incredible day in the park without even going on a single ride. In the main park, the Lion King show was predictably great, the Disney Stars on Parade a must see (also an opportunity to get lower queue times whilst its on), and a Million Splashes of Colour was so fun even though we never got to see the full version where they leave the floats. If I had to rank a top 5, I'd probably go:
1 - Together, 2 - Mickey & The Magician, 3 - A Million Splashes of Colour, 4 - Disney Stars on Parade, 5 - Minnie's Marching Band

Both evening shows were must watches, I think that the Disneyland Park show feels more special than the Adventure World one, but the Adventure World one is less stressful as there's so much more room around the lake to watch, so they complement each other well.

Food wise we ate at mostly simple quick service restaurants, though tried lots of snacks throughout. The food itself was pretty average but you get what you pay for, and most of the themed snacks were delicious. There didn't feel like there was a particular Disney mark up on food or merchandise to be honest, I was expecting worse.

Cost breakdown - the trip cost me:
3 nights in Santa Fe and 4 day park tickets - £674.28
Disney Express luggage trasfer - £15.94
Travel Insurance - £2.70
Flights - £218.12
Airport Parking - £31.00
Trains to and from airport to DLP - £48.12
Food, drink and souvenirs during trip - £330.71
Total - £1320.87

I already can't wait to go back, and I'd love to bring a family one day. It feels like its a place where there's something there for everyone from young to old, and whilst I'd love to see another modern coaster or two, the future already looks exciting for the park. I think as enthusiasts that follow theme park news quite closely, there can be a lot of disappointment and cynicism around plans and announcements, but just experiencing the park for the first time, being in the atmosphere, seeing everyone having a great time, seeing the shows and parades, I fell in love with the place.

Thanks to those who's read through my rather lengthy trip report, although I've only been back a couple of days it's been fun to relive it!
 
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