Disney Vintage Vinyl – Christmas Style

General Dis Pics 11.13 088From our very own Disney Collection (well, Joseph’s anyway), I found a seasonal treat!  This Disney Christmas album from 1980.  (I hate calling it vintage – in 1980 I was in highschool.)  Not only is the album cover adorable, the songs are just great!  I mean who wouldn’t adore an album from 1980 that features Molly Ringwald singing The First Noel?!?  

Mickey, Minnie, Donald, Daisy, Chip, Dale, Goofy, and Pluto are joined by Larry Groce and the Disneyland Children’s Sing-Along Chorus.  Even Clarabelle Cow herself also makes a brief vocal cameo appearance!

 

Track Listing:
1. The Chipmunk Song (Christmas Don’t Be Late) – Chip ‘n’ Dale & DonaldGeneral Dis Pics 11.13 089
2. I Wist It Could Be Christmas All Year Long – Willio and Phillio
3. Sliegh Ride – Mickey, Donald, Goofy & Larry Groce
4. Away In A Manger – Larry Groce
5. Here We Come A-Caroling – Larry Groce
6. The First Noel – Molly Ringwald
7. Here Comes Santa Claus – Mickey, Donald, Goofy & Larry Groce
8. Joy To The World – Larry Groce
9. Silver Bells – Larry Groce
10. The Twelve Days Of Christmas – Mickey, Donald, Goofy, Minnie, Chip ‘n’ Dale, Clarabelle Cow and Larry Groce
11. Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas – Larry Groce

If you find yourself in the mood for some Disney Christmas songs of yesteryear, you can still find places online to purchase one of these timeless gems for yourself.  Try etsy, ebay, Svoundtrack.com, or gemm.com – expect to pay $7 to $22 depending on album condition.

The Vacation Initiative – Saving Money For Disney Trips

IMG_3278A Disney vacation is an investment.  It’s an investment of both time and money and, I like to think, an investment in creating family memories that last much longer than things (like the latest video game or the trendiest jeans).  Oh, there are plenty of ways to save money on your Disney vacation (a post on that at a later date), but I want to talk about saving money FOR a Disney vacation.  If you are the kind of Disney fans we are – saving for that all important dose of Disney becomes a way of life.  It doesn’t feel like “doing without” or “making sacrifices” it’s just doing what needs to be done to get where you want to be.  

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Cruising in the Caribbean

I wish I could say I’ve joined the extreme couponing bandwagon and get all our household goods virtually free.  Yeah……no.  Our methods of saving are not of the “extreme” variety but save money they do and here’s a list of a few that come to mind today:

I take my lunch to work everyday – usually leftovers.  No eating out at lunch unless it’s a special occasion.  Raymond works close to home, so he spends his lunch hour at the house – eating leftovers and taking Junior out for a mid-day run around the yard.  If you think about eating lunch on a workday at a modest $5 a lunch for 50 weeks of the year for the two of us, we’re saving about $2,500 a year!!!

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The Mediterranean in the south of France

We rarely eat out in general.  Before launching the Vacation Initiative, we ate at a sit-down restaurant at least once a week (usually every Saturday) – now it’s more like once a month (if that).  I’m not counting our standing Friday night carry-out pizza from the only pizza joint nearby with a drive-through window – it’s Junior’s big night out, going with us to pick up that pie, and I wouldn’t dream of denying him the pleasure.  I enjoy cooking very much and cook enough hearty meals that there are some pretty tasty leftovers to take care of lunches all week long.

We grow our own herbs and vegetables.  I don’t consider myself a “living off the land” kindaIMG_1667 girl (hello…I was raised in the city!), but living in Louisiana, married to a dreamy guy who knows agriculture – planting a kitchen garden is so easy, it’d be silly not to do it.  I grow parsley, sage, rosemary and thyme (are you singing along?) and also basil, mint, and oregano.  Raymond takes care of the spring and summer supply of things like peppers, mixed salad greens, tomatoes, corn, zucchini, eggplant, and butternut squash.  I don’t do canning, but I do freeze veggies and am so appreciative of being able to reach in my freezer and make butternut squash soup during the winter – it’s great!

IMG_1003I learned to groom the dog.  Go ahead – I laugh when I think about it too, but the investment in some electric clippers and dog shampoo sure paid off in spades when Junior grew to 60 lbs and it cost $100 per grooming visit.  Because he’s part standard poodle, our little guy must be clipped regularly or he becomes a huge, shaggy, matted mess!  Just today he got a haircut and he looks pretty cute if I do say so myself.  I’d say I’m saving conservatively $600/year.

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Holidays at Disney World

Finally – as you’ve seen if you’ve visited my little Disney blog before – I make my own Disney Christmas ornaments and decorations.  And, as I’ve mentioned, I do not buy craft supplies at regular price EVER.  I also like to make scrapbooks of our Disney trips…not super fancy ones like those incredible scrapbook artists make, but simple ones that allow Megan and Joseph to look back at those good times and remember.  Remember how we were as a family through the years, remember the incredible things we saw and the adventures we had and hopefully, dream about the day they can share those happy times with their own children.

Share your tips for saving for Disney vacations!

Favorite Disney Birthday Gifts

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Perry demonstrates how I like to celebrate!

 

I still like birthdays.  Mine, I mean – even though I’ve had quite a few and many people my age (49 – yes, I admit it!) don’t want to celebrate them much anymore.  I still get excited for my big day!  I think it’s because at our house, birthdays are always treated as holidays.  You’re made to feel special, gifts are always carefully guarded secrets until the big reveal, and you get to choose how you want to celebrate the day. 

When I think back about the Disney gifts (and there have been many) that I’ve received on my birthday, two stand out as particularly special.  Maybe because they were from Raymond or maybe because I see/use them everyday (or both) – they’re great because they help keep the Disney magic alive and well in our home between vacations.

IMG_2084The Mickey plate stand.  I saw this in one of the Contemporary Resort’s gift shops and just fell in love with it.  It’s not too big, can be used to serve small treats or just as a decoration and is classic Disney.  There was really no way at the time I saw Mickey that I could justify buying him for myself.  So, typical of Raymond’s gift buying ways, when we got home from vacation he made it a quest to procure Mickey in time for my birthday.  It wasn’t easy.  He looked online at The Disney Store and – no luck.  So, he called the Contemporary and managed to find a helpful Cast Member in one gift shop that was willing to go to all the resort’s gift shops for Raymond, find Mickey and ship him to our house. 

More recently (last year) I received my other most favorite Disney gift.  Mickey dinnerware.IMG_2093  I admired these plates while we were at Disney World…several times, in fact, because we saw them in several different stores.  I liked the simplicity of them and how well they would go with our red kitchen.  Also, matching other dishes to them would be pretty easy.  This time, it was a little easier for Raymond since these were available online.  These plates are of excellent quality and are holding up very well after many cycles in the dishwasher and nukes in the microwave.  If you can think of any place I might find some red, red and white, or black bowls that would go with my Mickey plates, please let me know – I’m having trouble finding just the right ones.

What was YOUR favorite Disney birthday gift?

The Creatures of Disney World

Joe's Animals 2

Squirrel at Home, Moth in Key West, Raccoon at Home.

Little Back Story:

Before I delve right on into today’s post topic.  I need to give you some background info on the youngest member of The Fam, Joseph. He was, like many a boy-child born here in the Sportsman’s Paradise, a big fan of catching and studying all manner of creepy-crawly things.  Almost from birth.  We implemented a catch-and-release rule at our house by the time he was five.  We did allow a few pets and over the years Joseph cared for dogs, cats, pet rats, a gecko, a hairless guinea pig named Rufus (oh, just imagine how cute! No.), and some mail-order larvae that, thankfully, did turn into butterflies.  The rest of Joseph’s animals just came for a visit and then moved on.  That list included many snakes, skinks, and lizards, one baby possum, a baby rabbit, a baby raccoon, a flying squirrel, and an enormous garden spider named Mildred that lived outside our dining room window (Joseph tossed bugs into her web and she lived there for five months).  Joseph!  If you are reading this, call your parents!  (Sorry, empty nesting is HARD!)  Back to my post.

Here’s the Disney part: 

Animals at WDW

Bunny: Epcot, Ducks: Magic Kingdom, Lizard: Studios

What Joe’s awesome animal finding skills mean for us when we’re on vacation at Disney World is that, if there’s a creature or critter around, Joseph’s going to spot it.  Duck and baby ducklings at Magic Kingdom?  Joseph will point them out.  Lizard on a tombstone at The Haunted Mansion?  Joseph will see it.  Bunny in Epcot?  You bet Joe will show it to you.  All that is, and was, just fine.  Until one day at the China pavilion in Epcot.  Our darling boy, with no advance warning whatsoever, reached into the carefully manicured landscaping and pulled out a snake.

SNAKE!

SNAKE! Epcot China Pavilion

Genuinely concerned about the snake’s well-being, Joseph began looking around for an Epcot Cast Member he could give the snake to-hoping it could be safely moved from such a high-traffic area.  I was freaking out – not about the snake itself, I was used to that (at least it wasn’t poisonous this time)- I just knew there was pretty much no chance at all that any Cast Member would be willing to take that snake off Joseph’s hands.  So I began quietly trying to talk him into putting the snake back where he found it.  I took a few pictures (and noticed a few random strangers doing the same), and continued to coax Joseph – I argued that the snake looked like it would be just fine if only Joseph would PUT IT BACK!  Took me a few minutes, but finally Joseph decided that it did indeed look healthy enough and he gently sent it on its way up the same tree below which the snake had been found.  Whew.  We resumed our vacation with no further reptile encounters. 

What’s your most unusual animal encounter at Disney World?