The Unofficial Guide Walt Disney World 2010 (Unofficial Guides)

by Bob Sehlinger

Test Your Disney Smarts! Amazon-exclusive quiz from author Bob Sehlinger 1. Which restaurant has the best view at Walt Disney World? A. LakeView Restaurant, B. The California Grill, C. Cindarella’s Royal Table 2. Afternoon milkshakes for two kids will cost you: A. $5.72, B. $8.38, C. $12.59 3. Disney Kids’ Meals are available for children of what ages? A. 3-9, B. 3-11, C. Under 18 4. When is the best time to take the kids on Dumbo the Flying Elephant? A. Before 10 a.m. or after 9 p.m., B. Immediately following lunch, C. At exactly 3:15 p.m. 5. Which Disney theme park is five times the size as the Magic Kingdom? A. Disney’s Hollywood Studios, B. Epcot Center, C. Animal Kingdom 6. The best time to visit Walt Disney World is: A. On your child’s birthday, B. The day of your child’s final exam in math class, C. During the period between Christmas Day and New Year’s Day Answers: 1)B, 2)B, 3)A, 4)A, 5)C, 6)A Five Unofficial Ways to Prepare For Your Trip to Walt Disney World Amazon-exclusive content from author Bob Sehlinger 1. Select the time of year for your visit: Walt Disney World is busiest Christmas Day through New Year’s Day. Thanksgiving weekend, the week of Washington’s birthday, the first full week of November, spring break for colleges, and the two weeks around Easter are also times when visitation can peak at 92,000 visitors in a single day. The park is far less crowded during the off season, but be advised that the parks often open late and close early during that time. You can find detailed charts and info on the best times to visit in The Unofficial Guide to Walt Disney World. 2. Shape up: Visiting Disney World requires levels of industry and stamina more often associated with running marathons. As you plan your time at Disney World, consider your physical limitations. It’s exhausting to rise at dawn and run around a theme park for 8 to 12 hours day after day. Every Disney World vacation itinerary should include days when you don’t go to a theme park and days when you sleep in and take the morning off. Plan these to follow unusually long and arduous days. 3. Formulate your park plan: First-time visitors should see Epcot first; you’ll be able to enjoy it without having been preconditioned to think of Disney entertainment as solely fantasy or adventure. See Animal Kingdom second. Like Epcot, it’s educational, but its live animals provide a change of pace. Next, see Disney’s Hollywood Studios, which helps transition from the educational Epcot and Animal Kingdom to the fanciful Magic Kingdom. Also, because DHS is smaller, you won’t walk as much or stay as long. Save the Magic Kingdom for last; it’s the park that epitomizes Disney World for most visitors. 4. Create your touring plan: Which rides and attractions appeal most to you? What are you willing to forgo? Planning your day in advance can save you up to four hours of waiting time in line. We have developed a hierarchy of categories that will help you evaluate each ride and plan the best way to enjoy them all. For example, SUPER-HEADLINERS are the best attractions the theme park has to offer â€" and they usually have the longest lines. MINOR ATTRACTIONS are midway-type rides, small “dark” rides (cars on a track, zigzagging through the dark) and walk-through attractionsâ€"which can be a lot of fun, without the long wait. Remember that bigger and more elaborate doesn’t always mean better. See examples of touring plans (and create your own) in The Unofficial Guide to Walt Disney World. 5. Getting hungry?: There are three lessons to learn before you dine in the parks. One: Theme-park restaurants rush their customers in order to make room for the next group of diners. If you want to linger over your expensive meal, don’t order your entire dinner at once. Order drinks. Study the menu while you sip, then order appetizers. Tell the waiter you need more time to decide among entrees. Order your main course only after appetizers have been served. Dawdle over dessert. Two: If you’re dining in a theme park and cost is an issue, make lunch your main meal. Entrees are similar to those on the dinner menu, but prices are significantly lower. Three: Disney adds a surcharge of $4 per adult and $2 per child to certain popular restaurants during weeks of peak attendance, including Easter, Thanksgiving, and Christmas, and in 2009 every day from Memorial Day through July 4.

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Average Customer Review

(88 customer reviews)

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

17 of 20 people found the following review helpful:

Don't go to Disney World without it!, January 12, 2010

by LVG

This guide was invaluable... it made the trip so much more hassle free and enjoyable. We visited a different Disney park each day and were able to do all the things we wanted to in the least amount of time(except for Fantasmic at Disney Studio park... because it is only available two nights a week - and one of the nights was when we had to watch the BCS Championship... being loyal Longhorns - choke,sob.) . We were fortunate that it was not peak season, but even so, we would not have been able to do all we did without the guide. The only time we had any problem was on our Epcot day because we ignored a couple of steps in the plan and got off schedule. We then ended up missing several things that day...but was OK b/c we had an extra day of time and on our pass to come back there.

The most useful aspects of this guide were the overview, the on-line guide to best days to visit each park, and the "one-day plans" for each park. We tore out the chapters for each section to bring with us each day... but kept the one-day plans along with the and event/ride and resturant one-page overviews available at all times. (Note, were I doing this again, I would make back-up photocopies of those one-day plans. We would have been sunk without them). I know some people don't want to be so regimented, but if you want your money's worth in terms of experiencing the parks - this is the way to do it. Also, the guide has great info for non-Disney activities as well. (as an aside.. if you have time and are an art lover - don't miss the Morse Museum in Winter Park..which is a neat area of Orlando. The Tiffany work will take your breath away!)

18 of 22 people found the following review helpful:

The unofficial, pay more for our website, guide., February 22, 2010

by M. Green

Overall, I'm ok with this book. It gives great info on the theme parks, with specific tips. What I'm not happy about is that the book will make reference to subjects and then say for more detailed info go to our website [...]. When you go there for more hotel info, park attendance info, touring plan options, etc., you then find out that you need to pay for a subscription. After purchasing their book, they should give you a complimentary subscription for a period of time. It's a little bait and switch.

12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:

THE Definitive guide to WDW, January 11, 2010

by Brian Curran

Purchased the Unofficial Guide for our previous Disney visit way back in 1997, and loved it. So naturally, bought the 2010 version in advance of our just-completed trip - and loved it AGAIN!

Contains all the information you could possibly want about each park and individual attraction/show. Book purchase includes access to their website and customized online touring plans, which we printed and brought to the parks each day. Didn't follow the plans step-by-step, mainly because we could never make it there in time for opening. But the plans gave us an idea of what order to see attractions in, when to use FASTPASS, etc. And it helped to have an idea about which attractions were "musts", and which could be skipped.

Plus I LOVE the way the book is written, with a combination of wry humor and frequently hysterical reader comments. The authors love WDW, so they don't pull punches when they feel let down by poorly conceived attractions or outright money-grabs. I even kept reading after we returned home, because it was such an enjoyable read!

I also purchased The Unofficial Guide to Walt Disney World with Kids (Unofficial Guides), but found that it's a "companion" to the big book (doesn't contain all the info of the big book) - and once I had the big book, I didn't really need 'For Kids'.

The only downside to this book is its size. At over 800 pages, it was simply too hefty to carry to the parks, though others might disagree. Of course, it HAS to be big in order to be so comprehensive, so it's not really a fault.

To sum it up, this is the ONLY book you need for a Walt Disney trip, period.

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:

Better than beer and pizza, May 31, 2010

by Charlotte E. Grant

Buy the book. Subscribe to the website.


I loved so many things about this book:
1. It's detailed enough to make even someone with OCDisney happy.
2. Because it's so long, you get to read it over days or weeks. If you're suffering from Disney withdrawl, this is a good thing.
3. It's entirely comprehensive. You won't need another guidebook.
4. It's unbiased. A lot of guidebooks read like promotional Disney material. This doesn't.
5. It has a sense of humor.
6. Even if you don't use the touring plans (and if you have preschoolers, be forewarned now, you won't), this book provides you with so much background information that you are still much better prepared to navigate the parks.

My 2010 copy is already in tatters. It's such a wonderful, comprehensive guide. The book also entitles you to 50% the fee for [...]. I cannot recommend enough that people use this website. Hundreds of touring plans, plus the holy grail of Disney planning....the Crowd Calendar.

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:

If you think you don't need this book, you're wrong., March 18, 2010

by Michele Mantynen

I was planning a trip to Disneyworld (from California) for my Mother's birthday. We had been to Disneyland dozens of times, and figured this would probably be about the same. How complicated can a trip to an amusement park be?

After reading this book, we got the answer: VERY complicated. Disneyworld is a whole different beast, and the details and plans in the Unoffical Guide are invaluable. If you're spending a bundle on a vacaction, you want to get your dollar's worth- and this book will help you to do just that. Beat the crowds, skip bad weather, ride the best rides without standing in long lines, eat well, and end your trip feeling refreshed and happy, rather than exhausted and broke.

I'm buying another Unofficial Guide now, for a trip to Disneyland. We've been to Ahaheim nearly every year for the past 30 years, but I figure if the Unofficial Guide to Disneyworld was this helpful, the authors probably know more than I do.

Great value for the money!
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The Unofficial Guide Walt Disney World 2010 (Unofficial Guides)