Here we are in the dog days of summer (what kind of expression is that, anyway?). I don’t know about where you are, but in these parts it is HOT! Like seven-inches-from-the sun-hot. We don’t have a pool at our house and I have to confess, I’ve never been to a Disney World water park before. This post from Disney Musings got my attention though! Imagine how much fun those Disney World vacationers are having at Blizzard Beach and Typhoon Lagoon!!! What a great way to beat the August heat? Enjoy a cool, refreshing episode of Saturdays With Nick, everyone and have a great weekend!
Walt Disney World Water Park Memorabilia
by Nick
I haven’t been to the Disney water parks in years, since the mid 90′s, in fact, which is when these buttons and brochures are from.
The first button is from my favorite of the 2 parks, Typhoon Lagoon.
Opened in 1989, it is the home of the World’s largest outdoor wave pool, which is just awesome. The lazy river is also wonderful.
Another thing I love about Typhoon Lagoon is the back story. I feel that the stories that Imagineering came up with for it’s attractions in the late 80′s and early 90′s were very strong. This, of course, may just be nostalgia, as it coincides with my earliest visits.
As the story goes, the park was created by a typhoon that wreaked havoc upon a formerly pristine tropical paradise. Ships, fishing gear and surfboards are strewn about where the storm flung them. The centerpiece of the park is “Miss Tilly,” a shrimp boat impaled upon a mountain named “Mount Mayday” that erupts a 50 foot geyser of water every half hour.
I’ve actually been lucky enough to be directly under this when it went off, a thrilling experience.
I only went to Blizzard Beach once. It wasn’t a bad park, but it was more of a water slide park. So given the choice between the 2, Typhoon wins hands down.
Opened in 1995, Blizzard Beach also has a fun, although, in my opinion, a bit forced, back story.
It seems a freak snowstorm hit the area, leading to the construction of Florida’s first ski resort. Naturally, the snow didn’t last long, leaving behind a collection of waterlogged but snow-less ski jumps and chair lifts. The failed resort was in the process of closing for good when an alligator was seen sliding down a flume and splashing into a pool of water, screaming “Yahoo!” Thus the “ski resort” was reborn as a water park, with the alligator, named Ice Gator (maybe they could have come up with something a little more original than that?) as the mascot.
Doing this post has really made me want to get back to Typhoon Lagoon, and I will hopefully get there on one of my future trips!
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