|
Disney calls the Animal Kingdom "A New Species of Theme Park" and indeed it is. It is
unlike any Disney park you have visited before.
While some critics and Disney fans have panned the park saying "there's not enough to
do", we would have to call it a good park only getting better! We enjoyed the relaxed
atmosphere and elaborate theming and lush tropical feel.
The Animal Kingdom was scheduled to open in May 1998, however building work was well
ahead of schedule, and so Disney's newest park eventually opened on the 22nd of April
1998, with various preview days being scheduled for Disney cast members from March. It
features an enormous new theme park with live animals and thrill rides, dominated by
the 14-story tree of life in which a short animated presentation is shown in a subterranean cinema.
Originally WDW was looking at calling it Wild Animal Kingdom, they soon realized that
it was in conflict with Wild Kingdom a TV show that's name is copyrighted. So Disney quickly
dropped the Wild and it is known as Animal Kingdom. Technically its full name is Disney's
Animal Kingdom.
Safari jackets are flattering to all men, but who would have expected Mickey Mouse to
look as irresistible as Harrison Ford or Robert Redford in his bush jacket? But he does,
and that's only one of the surprises in Disney's Animal Kingdom, the most recent addition
to its family of theme parks.
From the moment you step into the park at Disney World Resort in Orlando, Florida, you
and your family will feel like you've traveled thousands of miles away to another world,
where animals are the first citizens. Five hundred acres of Florida pastures and other land
have been transformed into green savannas, where elephants and rhino look for snacks, and
glistening primeval forests with hidden waterfalls and grottoes, where you may find a hyacinth
blue macaw preening or a flirtatious lemur playing peekaboo.
Animals and nature are the stars at this park, and its icon is the 14-story Tree
of Life carved with images of over 300 different animals. Grown-ups tend to stare
at the engineered tree in awe of the work that went into it. Kids automatically try
to scramble up to one of the animals or climb around the thick roots at the tree's base.
There are places for kids to play and learn and for adults to be charmed and educated
throughout the park--from Africa, where a colonial East African town has been re-created
along with an old-fashioned train called Wildlife Express, which looks straight out of
Africa, to DinoLand U.S.A., where you can eat smoked turkey legs at the Dino Diner or
Chicken McNuggets at the Restaurantosaurus, slither and slide around prehistoric "artifacts"
in the Boneyard, or ride 65 million bumpy years back in time on the Time Rover time traveler.
Everything in the Animal Kingdom park has to do with animals: real, extinct or imaginary.
Simba, for instance, is doing eight shows a day at the Broadway-caliber stage show FESTIVAL
OF THE LION KING in Camp Minnie-Mickey. Nearby, Mickey and his other Disney friends (Pluto's
pretty cute in safari garb, too) will sign autographs for their admirers. Rafiki, from THE
LION KING, gives lectures on endangered animals at the Conservation Station.
Mickey, Simba, the dinos and the 1,000 animals (acquired mostly from zoos), as well as
the 4 million trees, plants and shrubs are all telling the same story at Animal Kingdom we
all need each other in order to survive on this planet.
In truth, you may hear the message too often, especially if you've put in a full day and
you begin to feel preached at. But the park has more than a message. Like every Disney theme
park there are thrills and chills, lots of fun, learning activities and the usual amenities,
including great restaurants, clean rest rooms and plenty of shopping.
A thrilling new area Asia has been added to Animal Kingdom. Guests can shoot along the
Kali River Rapids ride, view more exotic animals in the Maharajah Jungle Trek and take the
"Flights of Wonder" show.
Created with a little help from FamilyFun Magazine, six interactive learning stations
are located throughout the 500 acres of the park. Kids can discover and experience nature
up-close and hands-on. Engaging activities include:
- Animals in Your Backyard: Kids discover what kind of animals live in their own backyards, and find them on a scavenger hunt.
- Touch the Forest: Reaching inside a log, kids try to identify by touch what they are feeling, such as antlers, a turtle shell, etc.
- Scent Trail: Kids learn how to follow a scent trail through an Asian forest.
- Bug's-eye View: Kids learn to see the world from a bug's-eye view.
- Puzzling Paleontology: Kids try to match the skulls and jaws of four different dinosaurs.
- Animal Clues: Kids try to stay on the trail of an animal that has visited the previous night by looking for footprints, food scraps, droppings, etc.
Disney Theme Park Links
Click around our Walt Disney World's four Theme Parks - Magic Kingdom, Disney's Animal Kingdom, Epcot, and Disney-MGM Studios.
|