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Trip Report- Universal Studios Florida and Islands of Adventure 11-13-15 The people- me and my family- wife Margaret (who was ill most of the weekend), daughter Amber, and son Joseph. We also met up with Brian and Jay, and their son William Weather- very nice. A bit warm and humid Sat turning to rain, and cooler Sunday Crowds- moderate overall- light in some areas, heavy in others Brian Farrel gave me a call about a month back letting me know that he was planning a trip down here with Jay and his son William in mid-November, and wanted to know if we wanted to join him. As it turns out, I finally got a full time job that gave us the finances that allowed us to go and pick up passes to Universal. So we agreed on days, and with some coordination we were off to Universal for 2-3 days. We took off from the school that my entire family works at or attends around 2:50 to start the drive to Orlando before the traffic picked up. We pulled into the parking garage at the parks right around 4:30, so we made good time, even with my traditional wrong turn. To much later and the 70 minute drive would have turned into almost 2 hours. And with the park closing at 6, we wanted every bit of time we could get. To get from the garages/ entry area to the park entrances, you have to go through City Walk, which is their outdoor mall/ restaurant plaza, tourist trap, that you reach after several long walkways and promenades. Thankfully they’ve put in moving sidewalks throughout, or this turns into a very, very long walk, and while it was well done, it also became one thing that I didn’t like- no option or way to skip it or to avoid the walk. While it’s good for getting more tourist dollars, when you’re tired and just want to leave, it’s a royal pain in the neck. To top it off, they were having their “Beer Festival” this weekend, which meant in the afternoons and evenings it was crowded shoulder to shoulder with people everywhere, many of which had a bit much to drink, and the overwhelming odor of their drink. Enough so that it made me and my daughter queasy with the smell, and having to push our way through the people to get to and from the parks was not fun either. It would have been very nice if they had made a drop off point or some form of parking either in the middle of the citywalk, or with someway to bypass it, but unfortunately you’re stuck with it. Nice when you want it, but frustrating when you don’t. We made our way up to the entrance of IOA, admiring the lighthouse as we approached, and paid our first installment on the payment plan for our passes, entered the park and went straight away to the left to get them processed. After getting our pictures taken and being done with that fairly quickly, we had about an hour left until the park closed, and decided to take advantage of it with a couple of rides. First though was Ports of Entry, the front plaza of the park designed as a Meditteranean style village, with accompanying sounds, music, etc, and immediately sets the tone for the park. This is a park like no other except for maybe Disney when it comes to theming. You truly feel that you’re walking into another world, and we absolutely loved it. One of our regrets was that we didn’t have more time to stroll around here and poke into the shops and other areas, but we’ll certainly do that on subsequent visits. After walking through the gorgeous entry, we made a right turn and crossed the bridge into Seuss Landing, the world of Seuss come to life, again just to look around and see what to see for a few minutes. The line for The Cat in the Hat was a short 15 minutes according to the sign outside, so we gravitated there and hopped into our car when it came up. The ride is a dark ride, retelling the classic story, and the props and animations are done very well, though none of the story elements stands out as particularly new technology. But they are all fun and very conducive to the ride. Where it truly stands out is the car you’re riding in, which turns, twists, and at times spins around in full circles along with the ride, making this a ton of fun. It very quickly moved into our list of family favorites, and may vie for my favorite dark ride of all, but I’ll have to think about that one some. After exiting the ride, we took in a little more of the landscaping, then turned back the way we had come, crossed briefly through Ports of Entry and took a look at Hulk as we walked under it and into Marvel Superheros Isle. Our destination at this point was a ride my son was literally begging to ride, the one he was most excited about, and one that I did to, though I was a little concerned- Spiderman. As most of you know, Spidey is a mix of 4d movie and immersive, interactive thrill ride, and has a great queue that first time riders really really should go through as it sets the stage and the story for the ride (as Brian found out later when we took a spin on it) From there it’s into your “high tech reporters’ carriage” and into the ride. I won’t give away storylines here, but I’ll say that it is one incredible ride. And the kids both came off with huge grins and Joseph loudly proclaiming for everyone to hear, “Best ride, EVER!” There wasn’t one of the four of us that didn’t thoroughly enjoy it, and it is definitely one that we’ll be riding over and over again on future visits. At this point the park was about to close and Margaret was worn out, so we headed out, went to our hotel, and after a nice dinner at Denny’s were all asleep by 8:30. Yeah, even me, which is rather frightening. :) The next morning we woke up, had breakfast in our room, then called Brian. He was running a bit behind us, and Margaret was washed out, so it started out with just me and the kids, while Margaret slept in a bit and planned to meet us later. Because of the long walk, especially with CityWalk in mind, and because our hotel’s first shuttle to the park didn’t leave until 20 minutes after the park opened, I drove from the hotel to the park and used my free parking with my pass. We were there almost an hour early, so we looked around City Walk a bit more, took a couple of fun pictures around it, and were at the entrance of IOA around 40 minutes before it opened. While they didn’t open the front plaza early to let people hand around there, which is what I hoped, they did actually open up the whole park about 10 minutes early. So we were off and walking quickly towards Jurassic Park by way of Marvel Superheros and Toon Lagoon. The gorgeous scenery and theming continues throughout the entire park, and it was a great effect to enter Jurassic Park and see the Pteradon Flyers cruising overhead. That was our destination, and we were the first ones in the park to arrive there. Amber and Joseph took one car, and I took another by myself behind them. Pteradon Flyers is a Caripro suspended coaster with the passengers sitting in what looks like a lawn chair hanging from a pteradon, one seat behind the other. Outside of a seat belt, there isn’t much holding you in, but that’s one of the nice things with this- feeling free as you ride. They only run 3 cars because of how long the coaster is, but they did a pretty good job dispatching- enough so that we were all able to get in 2 rides each before anyone else even arrived at the coaster, though it did get longer lines later on due to it’s low capacity. While not a scary coaster by any means, it is, however, quite a lot of fun. On my coaster scale of 1-10, it would score a solid 7. Being as this end of the park was still empty, and we had about 20 minutes until we were supposed to meet Brian and Jay at Spiderman, we decided to take a chance on the River Adventure, and ended up with a boat all to ourselves. This is the ride you may have seen featured on TV, with the dinosaurs next to the boat, etc. Again, without ruining the ride, it has a rather dramatic, tension filled ending. Unfortunately, this one proved to be a bit to much for Amber and Joseph. If you’re local, you may have seen a commercial with a woman squeezing her kids to death on this ride. That was pretty much us at the end, with the kids holding on to me and me holding them to keep them from getting to scared. A great ride, but not one that younger kids should go on due to the story. Funny thing was, they both asked to ride it again later on since they then knew what would happen, but we didn’t’ let them. After this it was over to meet Brian, Jay, and William at Spiderman, and my memory of what exactly we did when gets a bit fuzzy, so might be a bit off here. We took a round on Spiderman, taking advantage of the baby swap for William. Which brings me to something else I wanted to mention. Universal for their baby swaps has waiting rooms at just about every ride that would need it. You can actually take the baby and go sit down in a nice comfortable area as opposed to sitting on an exit ramp getting run over as so many parks do. Kudos to how they do the swapping. We grabbed Universal Express passes for Hulk (think fastpass) and headed around to the other side of the park, stopping for the Caro-Seuss-el in Seuss Landing for a ride there, and eventually made our way over to Dueling Dragons- one of the few rides without a baby swap area. We used the observation area outside as a sort of substitute, with my kids helping to watch William while we took a quick round on Fire. After running into and saying hi to some friends from Westcoaster that happened to be visiting, I was lucky enough to manage to grab a front seat ride on Fire for my first ride by filling an empty seat when I had been lined up for the second row. Fire is a great ride- Almost everything I want in the coaster itself, and great visuals with it’s interactions with Ice. I really enjoyed the layout, the theming, and everything about it. On the scale, it would be an easy 9 out of 10, and maybe higher, depending on my mood. However, it was also here that we ran into one thing that did bother me about the park. They were only running one train on each side, and their dispatch times were horribly slow. But that wasn’t the only thing slowing them down. Apparently they also offer VIP tours which get to cut the line, enter from the exit, and wave at everyone waiting in line. When they let these groups on, though, it slows down their loading of the ride so much, it’s horrendous. Some delay is understandable, but they were very, very slow getting these groups on. And with a couple of large groups, it was a long delay that didn’t have to be anywhere near that long. With the lines growing, and not wanting to leave the kids out to much more, we made our way back towards the front of the park. Our pass time for Hulk was also drawing near, and I was looking forward to experiencing the ride that so many have talked about. We made a short stop at the talking fountain for the kids, which was asleep this time around, admired more of the incredible theming and scenery, then made our way back over to Hulk. We used both our passes and a child swap on Hulk, which meant that all of us were able to a ride in pretty quickly, with me getting a front seat ride when I swapped in. Loading up, the launch into the zero-g was great! The cobra roll and loop went by in a hurry. And then it becomes a blur. That’s because for some reason the Hulk decided to pound me repeatedly to my head. Not just in the corkscrews/ flatspins, but throughout the rest of the ride. So much so that I came off dizzy and a bit sore. As much as any Arrow ever did to me, which was really sad. Brian and Jay didn’t have any problems, but for me it was anything but a smooth ride. So I didn’t come off to happy. I took another chance later on near the back with Margaret, but both of us got knocked around on that one, and I actually had a small headache. Surprisingly, Brian, who usually is the one hurting, didn’t get that. Somehow I guess I’m just the wrong size on this one, but it hurts- enough so that I don’t have to much of a desire to ride it again. I’m sure I’ll give it another chance though. But if I were to grade it right now, it would be around a 3 out of 10. Margaret had by this time rested up and now met up with us at the entrance of the park. With Margaret now joining us, we headed back through Seuss Landing and up to the Lost Continent, which has 3 sub-areas in it- Atlantis/ Poseidon, India, and a Medieval Europe send off. Seeing Poseidon, and after discussing it a bit, we decided to give it a chance. Poseidon is a walk through show with several stopping points for the story elements. Some great special effects, but enough scary parts that it was hard for the kids, and enough of the mythological/ magic elements that Margaret wasn’t to keen on it either. The kids gave it a rousing “sort of liked it.” I might have found it enjoyable but for dealing with the kids being scared and the wife not approving and wanting to leave. :) We also poked into Mythos and admired the beauty as well as the out of reach prices, and then stopped at the Flying Unicorn, a custom Vekoma Roller Skater that they were running 2 trains on and dispatching very quickly. Dragons could take some serious lessons from the people running Unicorn. It was a fun little coaster, and if you like Skaters, you’ll like the Unicorn. 6 out of 10. From here we took an extended stay at Camp Jurassic, which is in the middle of Pteradon Flyers. While Amber and Jay got in line for the coaster, and Margaret took a long sitting breather, the rest of us ran around and played with the water guns, rope bridges, and more in the play area. It’s the first one where they actually seem to have designed it with adults in mind on the rope bridges and walkways, and was a heck of a lot of fun. After playing there and the girls getting their rides in, we took a stop at a small water fountain play area where William had a great time splashing around, shot some free water cannons off of Me Ship, the Olive onto those on the rapids ride, and then decided to head over to Universal Studios as the weather started to threaten rain. After shoving and pushing our way through the City Walk crowds gathered for the beer festival (this at around 3pm) we headed into U.S. While it’s theming isn’t as immersive as IOA is, it is still a very nice park and very well done. And we headed off to find something with a relatively short wait that we could all enjoy. We ended up at Tornado, and did a swap of William with Brian and Jay so we could all take it in. After having experienced a real one, I can tell you that Margaret and I were both going through flashbacks a bit, with it only missing the roaring train sound. Very immersive, and frightening Margaret and Amber a bit. Coveniently, as we got in line for it, it started to rain for real. And from this point on, it didn’t stop the rest of the day. I had left our ponchos in the car, and we put off buying more in the hopes it would stop. So for the next hour or two, the goal was to stay out of the rain. With that, we took a short hop up to Jimmy Neutron, which gave a fun romp through NickToons that all of us enjoyed a lot. William was smiling and laughing through it according to Brian, and we loved it just as much. This is another one I want to do again. Then it was dodging rain for bathrooms. We were going to take in Shrek, but the stroller parking was outside where it was raining. Why they don’t have a covered area for stroller parking at the shows, especially the ones where kids are going to go and in a place where it rains frequently, is beyond me. That seems like a rather obvious thing to do on the park’s part. As it is, they wouldn’t allow the stroller in the line to hold William, so we ended up skipping it after a short dispute with the attendant over the matter. So instead Margaret and Jay took the kids to one of the restaurants to try to wait out the rain in the hopes it would stop while Brian and I headed over to get the Mummy, since everything else would be an extended walk in the rain without ponchos, which we didn’t want to do. The Mummy was interesting. A great queue, reminiscent in many ways of Indiana Jones at Disneyland. The trains are one car long, with 4 rows of 4 passengers, and the loader was efficient, as long as he wasn’t distracted by people loading in from the exit side (again!) The ride itself is more of a dark ride at the beginning, with some great effects before you get to the backwards portion, which turned out to be pretty short, before turning around again and then launching into a short, but fun, coaster section. Without revealing any secrets, the coaster part ends up interrupted and a bit awkward. I would have preferred a couple of changes to the middle of the ride, and some of the effects on the coaster part almost seemed a bit silly. While fun, it was a bit of a disappointment. We took a quick second round, but overall it just didn’t impress me in the ride portion all that much. I would have liked it to either have more coaster, or uninterrupted, or just a dark ride. But the mix of the two came out a bit awkward. As such it gets a 6-7 out of 10. AT this point, not only was the rain not quitting, but it actually seemed to be getting harder. So we bought a couple of ponchos for the wives and kids and headed out through the crowds still drinking in the rain and on the long walk back to the car. Thankfully most of the walk after CityWalk was covered. A nice dinner and we were back in bed and mostly asleep before 9. At least in my room. :) Sunday would be a shorter one due to us having to drive home this afternoon and Margaret still not feeling well. We met up in the morning and I chauffeured all of us to the parking garage and arrived at IOA’s entrance about 20 minutes or so after the park opened. Shooting to head over to Dueling Dragons so that I could catch Ice early, we realized as we passed through Seuss Landing that there were no lines for Cat in the Hat or One Fish Two Fish, so we caught quick rides on each of those. The kids then had some fun with the fountain, which was active this morning. Then while the wives and kids looked around some shops, Brian and I headed to get in my first ride on Ice. This time we lined up for the front row since the lines were short, and once again they were running only one train for each side and the crews seemed to be moving very slow. The one train didn’t bother me at this point, since there weren’t really any lines to speak of, but the slow crews seems to be a consistent problem. And it’s striking in a place where so much stands out as excellent otherwise. Ice, on the other hand, didn’t disappoint. While not as intense as Fire, it still delivered a great ride. Fast, smooth, and with some great fly-byes. I loved the near-hit with the castle wall. And for both sides the head on encounter is just great. Not quite as great as Fire, but still a fantastic ride and earning another solid 9. We made our way back through the Lost Continent and Seuss Landing again, letting the kids get necklaces from one of the costumed workers for making silly faces, and playing in the If I Ran the Zoo playground while William took another ride on the Caro-Seuss-el. From there it was back out through the wonderful Ports of Call and back to Universal Studios to try to catch some of what we had missed the day before. Our first stop after eating at Mel’s Diner was Shrek, and in a word, it was great. The preshow was a lot of fun, and the movie itself carried on from the first one perfectly. Far better, I think, than Shrek 2 does. We all loved it and are looking forward to visiting it again on future visits. We then wandered up Hollywood to Kidzone, where we caught our rides on the normal- sized roller skater, Woody Woodpecker’s Nuthouse Coaster. We then headed up the walk a bit to Men in Black. At this point Margaret’s strength was starting to fade, but we managed to get in a ride together- once where Brian sat out with William, then Brian and Jay getting in a ride. I would have had the high score in our car but for Jay, who is apparently a crack shot. I think her score the second time around was 230,000 or something like that. Wow. Unfortunately, at this point, Margaret was done. Drained and worn out from her illness, she performed well for being sick. But with a drive ahead of us, and not feeling good, it was time to go. So after a bit of souvenier shopping, we said our goodbyes and headed out. The parks overall were absolutely fantastic. The theming was perfectly done and very immersive. Employees with a couple of exceptions, were friendly and efficient, even down to the one coloring with sidewalk chalk in Seuss Landing each day. And the rides were great, with the special effects tying in very well on the rides itself. There was a lot that we didn’t get to do for various reasons, but it gives us a lot to look forward to on future visits and will make our passes well worth the money. At least it better. I was joking with Brian that our budget for park passes this year went from our normal $250-300 a year in the past to about $1200 this year for the parks here. Wowch! And that doesn’t even include Disney, which would easily more than double that figure. But the parks at least do well in making it worth the money. Thanks for reading this huge, long monster, and I hope you enjoyed it. I know that I did typing it up. |
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