Disney World - Some Thoughts
Having traveled to Walt Disney World (WDW) over 25 times
(all since 1987 and no, I never went as a kid...), I have
come to enjoy "getting away from it all" in the parks. Most
often with my family for vacation or on several business
trips to the Orlando area, I have been able to truly relax
and forget about the rest of the world. When it comes down
to it, nobody does it better than Disney.
Just for reference, our trip history looks like this:
| Month/Year
|
Resort
|
Type of Trip
|
| September 1987
|
Off-Site Condo
|
Family Vacation
|
| October 1988
|
Off-Site Condo
|
Family Vacation
|
| May 1990
|
Grand Floridian
|
Family Vacation
|
| December 1991
|
Grand Floridian
|
Family Vacation
|
| January 1992
|
Off-Site Hotel
|
Business Meetings
|
| August 1992
|
Grand Floridian
|
Family Vacation (We left <12 hours
before Hurricane Andrew hit South Florida!)
|
| December 1992
|
Grand Floridian
|
Family Vacation
|
| April 1993
|
Grand Floridian
|
12th Wedding Anniversary Trip
|
| December 1993
|
Grand Floridian
|
Family Vacation
|
| December 1994
|
Grand Floridian
|
Family Vacation
|
| August 1995
|
Wilderness Lodge
|
Family Vacation
|
| January 1996
|
Dolphin
|
Business Meetings
|
| March 1996
|
Off-Site Hotel
|
Business Meetings
|
| August 1996
|
Wilderness Lodge
|
Family Vacation
|
| November 1996
|
Wilderness Lodge
|
Family Vacation/Reunion w/11 of us
|
| August 1997
|
Wilderness Lodge
|
Family Vacation
|
| October 1998
|
Contemporary Resort
|
Business Meetings (My wife joined me)
|
| November 1998
|
Wilderness Lodge
|
Family Vacation
|
| August 1999
|
Boardwalk Villas
|
Family Vacation
|
| April 2001
|
Polynesian Resort
|
Family Vacation
|
| December 2002
|
Grand Floridian
|
Family Vacation
|
| September 2003
|
Swan
|
Extended weekend getaway with my wife
|
| September 2004
|
Contemporary Resort
|
Long weekend trip with my wife
|
| February 2005
|
Dolphin
|
Vacation with my wife (Noticing a
pattern here? Hint: The kids are in college....)
|
| September 2005
|
Dolphin
|
Long weekend trip with my wife
|
| January 2006
|
Dolphin
|
Long weekend trip with my wife and
daughter (son was back to college already.) We met
up with friends running in the Disney Marathons.
Did we run? Not a chance...maybe we'll walk Them
someday. ;-)
|
| April 2008
|
Dolphin
|
27th Anniversary trip with my wife
|
| April 2009
|
Saratoga Springs
|
28th Anniversary trip with my wife. No
theme parks, just R&R. Our first stay as DVC
members.
|
| August 2009
|
Bay Lake Tower
|
Vacation with my wife. First stay at
the new “BLT”, followed by a 3 night cruise on the
Disney Wonder
|
I suspect that for vacations, we'll likely never stay off-site again. Given the wide variety of price ranges now available (from the All Star Resorts to the Grand Floridian), there is almost no economic reason to stay outside WDW and after considering the variety of benefits on-site guests have, any modest economic difference is easily offset. Also, being able to easily go from the theme or water parks back to the hotel during the day, without worrying about going to/finding your car, driving to the hotel, driving back and re-parking eliminates a major hassle.
As you can see above, we have been to WDW at various times of the year, including several Christmas vacations. The parks and resorts are dressed to the hilt for the holidays. There are many exciting special events during that time, including tree lightings, holiday parades and processionals. On one of our early Christmas trips, we got to see James Earl Jones read the Christmas Story from the train station in the Magic Kingdom during the Processional. I still get shivers remembering his booming voice reading the script. Since then it has been moved to the theater in front of the American Adventure pavilion in Epcot and a variety of stars read the story over multiple nights. WDW is a great place to spend time with the family during that special time of the year. As you can probably tell from above, going to WDW has become our family's favorite way to re-energize.
We have made many friends via the internet who share a common "Disney bond". The Usenet newsgroup rec.arts.disney.parks (RADP) has become a forum for sharing this common interest and sharing the experiences and base of knowledge with others, who are perhaps visiting for their first time or are keeping up with the constant change. Of course, if you are looking for a Usenet golf resource, rec.sport.golf is the place to go. Note that I am linking to Google Groups here, as more and more ISPs are terminating their provision of Usenet groups for a variety of reasons. If you still have "NNTP" access through your ISP or purchased access, use your favorite Usenet application.
Also, via internet relay chat (IRC) we continue to stay in touch with friends, literally all over the U.S. and the world. For information on joining #radp-friends on IRC go to Laura Gilbreath's Disney Chat IRC page. Wednesday night is the "official" get together night for the group, but come by any evening. There is bound to be a group on typically by about 9pm Central.
During some of our trips to WDW, we have participated in several "RADP meets", where a group of "radp'ers" get together and share the experience while engaged in visiting the parks, resort hotels, the clubs at Pleasure Island or just sharing a meal. We even traveled to Winnipeg, Canada in August 1998 for a wedding for two folks who met through RADP! We have made many new friends in this way, some of whom we only knew by name through RADP or IRC prior to the meets. It is always interesting putting faces with the names and personalities you interact with over the net. Frequently, when traveling for business and I am in a city where fellow radp'ers reside, if our respective schedules permit, we'll try to catch up for dinner. Now, with the advent of other online social media communities, such as Twitter and Facebook, we have other means to stay in touch with friends, not only for Disney related matters, but with life in general.
As a result of my love for Walt Disney World, when it came time to develop a personal web site, there was only one choice for subject matter. As most web sites go, this one being a labor of love, it will continue to grow and I hope provide, in some form, a resource for others seeking information on WDW and my other passion: GOLF. In some way, I hope this returns some of the joy that I have experienced and received from others whom I have met via the internet.
Golf - A Late Start
Though being a relative
newcomer to the game of golf, I have come to both
appreciate the obsessive/compulsive disorder that is the
game and the incredible patience and camaraderie of fellow
golfers. In February of 1995, I had finally succumbed to
peer pressure from co-workers, some of whom are single
digit handicappers and played competitively in college.
Some of whom, now in retrospect, probably also wish I had
never taken up the game... ;-)
We had just come back from a January 1995 business trip to
Palm Springs, California where several co-workers had taken
the time to play some of the finer local courses before
attending meetings while I worked. (okay, so maybe it was a
little envy too...).
Upon returning home to Minneapolis, Minnesota and spending
much time reading and speaking with quite a few folks about
the game, I convinced my wife to spend the better part of a
Saturday afternoon looking at equipment. After about three
hours at a local pro shop, I walked out fully outfitted and
ready to play, of course, totally ignoring the snow on the
ground and the sub-zero temperatures. In case you are
wondering, King Cobras. O.K., so now what do I do?
Well, my first lessons were shortly after that in late
February of 1995 in a golf dome here in a suburb of
Minneapolis. The dome is a pressurized bubble, enclosing an
indoor driving range, which is typically 70-90 yards deep,
to facilitate hitting during the colder months up here. You
can't tell if your shots take a 90 degree turn to the right
at about 95 yards, but it is good enough to at least
maintain some flexibility and mechanics over the winter. Of
course, you have to be sure you are not grooving a slice or
hook while you are there. There are several of these in the
Twin Cities area, most with two levels of hitting areas.
By the way, prior to this I was an avid tennis player
(U.S.T.A. 4.0). I have not played tennis since!
For most of that first spring, when the weather finally
warmed up, I hit at local ranges and played on some 9 hole
par 3 courses just to get some more experience and work on
swing mechanics. Incredibly, my first "real" round of 18
holes was at the TPC Course in Los Colinas (near Dallas,
Texas) with a colleague during a business trip in June of
1995. We had meetings at the Four Seasons Resort there and
had enough time for one round. This was just after the
Byron Nelson PGA event, so the rough was thick and the
greens were fast. I hit a 118 and still have the scorecard
from that first round. Since then, I have had the
opportunity to play a wide variety of courses, both here in
Minneapolis and "on the road" during business trips with
colleagues and clients. I even played two of the Disney
courses (Magnolia and Osprey Ridge) with colleagues during
a business trip in January of 1996.
Minnesotans are avid golfers, despite the woefully short
season up here, which is typically April to October. There
are more golfers per capita here than any other state in
the country and Minnesota is also the only state in the
U.S. to have hosted all of the U.S.G.A. Championships!
To give you a brief insight into the Minnesota golf
mentality and how creative folks can get when faced with
golf deprivation over the long winters up here, let me tell
you about a year round, open-air driving range that is near
where I live. The facility is set up in a building that
contains hitting areas in a line on a single level. The
hitting areas face the outdoor driving range area that is
200 yards long, with high netting along the outsides and
far end to keep balls from going astray. The hitting areas
are configured like garage stalls with pull down doors that
are closed at night and have radiant heaters to keep things
warm during the colder weather. On cold mornings they turn
on the heaters a couple of hours before the facility opens
to warm things up. Now you have a warm and comfortable
location to go hit your balls, not just 70 or 90 yards, but
out to 200 yards so you can actually watch the ball in
flight and know how you are hitting. Most importantly, you
can do this when it is 0 degrees Fahrenheit outside.
OK, so now your next question is, "How do they retrieve the
balls that have been hit, when the ground is covered with
several feet of snow?" Ah, here is where the genius of man
in his desperation to play golf comes in....they have
placed vertical poles out on the landing area arranged in a
repeating square pattern. The poles are up to 10 feet high,
depending upon the underlying terrain, to keep the tops of
the poles at a consistent height. Attached to the tops of
the poles are square nets, that are arranged to droop down
toward the middle of the square, like an inverted pyramid.
In the middle of each square netting section are vertical
large bore tubes leading down to a ball collection system.
When you hit your balls out on the range, they fall into
the nets, run down into the tubes and get collected in a
main catch area for return to the hitting facility!
Ingenious! Even better, it really works! "Necessity is the
mother of invention!" This place may be the first of its
kind up here, but I dare say, it won't be the last! For
more information see GolfZone.
I have made some progress since that first round back in
1995. I have been as low as a U.S.G.A. 17.3 handicap index,
with my personal best round of an 89 at my former home
course which has a 72.2/137 rating/slope from the black set
of tees I play, which are at 6,610 yards. There are a total
of five sets of tees, with the "tips" at 7030 yards
(74.2/140). I have since replaced my original set of steel
shafted Cobras with a graphite set due to periodic flare
ups of tendonitis in my wrist. The graphite helps to reduce
the vibration in the shaft, which has managed to keep the
tendonitis at bay. I picked up a new Cobra 7.5 degree
Gravity Back driver, which I can hit around 270+ pretty
consistently and that has helped take some strokes off the
game.
I have had many opportunities to play "on the road" during
business trips, which have afforded me the chance to play
some great courses like The Boyne Resort in northern
Michigan, Steele Canyon east of San Diego, The TPC and
Tonto Verde near Scottsdale, Blackwolf Run (River Course)
in Kohler, Wisconsin, Desert Springs Resort in Palm
Springs, Ruby Hill in Pleasonton, California and La Cantera
in San Antonio. It is always interesting to play new
courses and face new challenges, especially the mental
ones, as I travel. One can get too comfortable playing the
same course each time. To face differing course layouts and
design philosophy is one of the great aspects of the game.
As I have grown in my skills and appreciation for the game
and its history, and while at the moment, I am not able to
play, I have come to both understand and identify with a
quote from the great Arnold Palmer:
"Golf is deceptively simple and endlessly
complicated.
It satisfies the soul and frustrates the intellect.
It is at the same time, rewarding and maddening.
It is without a doubt the greatest game mankind has ever
invented."

