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Saturday, January 21, 2017

A Day at the Disneyland: Our Top Ten Tips


My wife, kids, and I have been fortunate to enjoy a once a year "day at Disneyland" - including this past June. We had a chance to spend the day at both Disneyland and the adjacent Disney California Adventure (pictured above). 

Of the hundreds of posts on this blog, I think I've only written about Disneyland once beforeAs we're "experiencing Los Angeles" - I've tried to focus on either day-to-day experiences or special things that are either free or inexpensive. 



Disneyland is fun. But it's not free or inexpensive. 


Throwback photo: this was from our last year living in Los Angeles at the entrance to Disneyland.

Our situation has been unique, as we've been fortunate to have a friend who who signs us in for free once a year. He works as an imagineer - that is, someone who actually designs the rides and attractions. How cool is that?


If you're one of the one million "annual passholders" - you might want to skip this post - or leave a comment on something we missed. If you're looking for jaw dropping photos, you might want to try here

But, if you're an occasional visitor looking for some tips on how to maximize a day (or two) there, and are OK with our average family photos, here are our: 

Top Ten Tips for Doing Disneyland

Tip one: Go early. What does that mean? Well, buy your tickets on-line ahead of time, eat a big breakfast before you go, and plan to be arrive before the parks open. You get the idea. 

Tip two: Disneyland offers something called "Magic Mornings" -- allowing guests staying at one of their three hotels to get into one of the two parks an hour early. 

Unless you're staying in one of the Disney hotels, find out what park is NOT doing the "Magic Morning". Why? The park not doing "Magic Mornings" will be empty when you show up. You'll want to start there first. 


On the Saturday we went, Disneyland offered the "Magic Morning" -- so we started next door at Disney California Adventure. 

Tip three: plan on being at which ever park you're starting at 30 minutes before it opens. For us, that meant being there at 7:30am. If we get two teenagers out of bed early, you can too. 


Tip four: start with some of the most popular attractions. The ones that get very busy later. By the middle of the day, Radiator Springs Racers can have a 90-120 minute wait. But when the Disney California Adventure opened at 8am, it was a walk on. 


We also enjoyed Toy Story Midway Mania, plus a few other favorites in California Adventure, before walking over to Disneyland. 

As an aside, I've lived in both California and Florida. The Disneyland Resort has two theme parks: 

Disneyland and 
Disney California Adventure. 

In contrast, Walt Disney World is a massive 43 square mile resort with four theme parks: 

The Magic Kingdom (most similar to the original Disneyland park)
EPCOT
Disney Studios
Disney Animal Kingdom. 

Interesting fact: despite being so much larger, Walt Disney World actually has fewer rides than the Disneyland Resort. Not shows, movies, displays, but rides. The four parks at Walt Disney World have a combined total of 50 "rides" - while the much smaller Disneyland Resort with just two parks has a combine total of 57. 

If you're looking for rides - you know, what most people go to a Disney Park for, in my opinion the Disneyland Resort really offers more show for the dough. 

Of course, if you're on the East Coast, a visit to Walt Disney World makes a lot more sense. But if you you have a choice between the two, remember that in addition to having more rides, the Disneyland Resort has better weather, especially in the summer. And the fact that it's much smaller - more compact - makes getting around easier. The entrances to Disneyland and California Adventure are about 100 yards apart. 


Obligatory family photo in front of the Sleeping Beauty Castle. The "bling" on the castle last summer was for the 18 month long 60th anniversary celebration. 


Eleven years earlier this was back when our kids were just 5 and 2 1/2. And the year we moved to Los Angeles. 


Tip five: start collecting and using Fast Passes early! Believe it or not, we ended up with more than we could actually use. Which is not a bad thing. 

Here's a link to a short article from one site on all you need to know on using Fast Passes. 

Hate waiting in line? Use Fast Pass. Want to go on more rides? Use Fast Pass. Want your kids to have a more enjoyable experience? Use Fast Pass. Want to get more bang for your buck? Use Fast Pass. 

Yes, of course, we still had to wait in some lines. But thanks to Fast Pass, were were able to see and do much more. On the one day our family went, a fairly crowded Saturday in late June, thanks for getting there early and using Fast Pass, we were able to enjoy over 20 different rides and attractions. 


My teenagers on Buzz Lightyear Astro Blasters, located in Tomorrowland. These next two tips are about saving a bit of money: 

Tip Six: bring some snacks to munch on late morning, and then plan for a big lunch around 2:00pm. The restaurants are certainly less crowded in the afternoon. And Disneyland has some great food options. Skip the corndog, spend a bit more $$ and you'll get a real meal. We've enjoyed the French Market in New Orleans Square, but are especially fond of the Plaza Inn, at the end of Main Street. Our lunch was huge - we weren't even hungry at dinner, were happy with a late snack. 


Tip Seven: Unlike other amusement parks, Disneyland is OK with you snapping a photo of their attraction photos. This was Splash Mountain. You could splurge and pay $39 for Disney PhotoPass. Or, you could save that cash for something else ... just sayin'.

By the way, the wait time for Splash Mountain was over a hour. With our Fast Pass, we waited less than five minutes. Even on a very busy day. 


During one of the parades, they were sending boats through "It's a Small World" with few, or even zero, people. Our family got our own boat. So, tip "seven and a half" might be going on "It's a Small World" during the parade.

Speaking of saving money, what about purchasing an Annual Pass? We lived in Los Angeles for five years and never considered annual passes. Having a friend who could get us in once a year for free was part of the reason. An annual pass always seemed like an "all you can eat dessert bar" - too much of a good thing. If you spend hundreds of dollars on annual pass, you want to get your money's worth, right?

It was (and is) fun to go once a year - and make it a special time. As parents, we wanted to limit the "Disney influence" on our kids. Kind of like trick or treating: fine once a year. More than that, maybe not so good. "If you find honey, eat just enough -- too much of it, and you will vomit." wrote King Solomon (Prov 25:16). 

Obviously, people - including some close friends - have different views on this. I would say, if you live in Los Angeles there's a lot of other ways to spend your money and your time - much of which is free, or very inexpensive. 

Tip Eight: Get and use the Disneyland App on your phone. The App includes maps of both Disneyland and Disney California Adventure, with ride wait times and Fast Pass return times.

"It's a Small World" and "Pirates of the Caribbean" are both high capacity rides. On busy days, their long lines can move fast. Meanwhile, Peter Pan, the popular 60 year old dark ride, has very low capacity - with notorious long waits. Use the App to find out what lines are shortest. And, of course, use Fast Pass. 


Tip Nine: Expect, but try to avoid, crowds. 

Disneyland is in a metro area of 16 million people. 1/8th of the US population lives in California. And Disneyland has ONE MILLION annual pass holders. There are days when literally 50% of the people at Disneyland are annual passholders. 

Here's a link to some suggestions of times to go when it's not as crowded. Of course, if your traveling from out of town, you might not have a choice of when you can visit.

That said - DO NOT go during Christmas. The two weeks around Christmas can be so crowded that Disneyland literally closes it's gates and will not allow anyone else in. Trust me, during Christmas it is wall to wall people, with long lines for everything, including the bathrooms. Avoid going the two weeks around Christmas at all costs.


Yes, the Saturday in June when we went it was crowded to watch the fireworks. Some folks were waiting for 2 or 3 hours in front of the castle for prime viewing. Wow. Really? No thanks. 


Main Street is still crowded, but we were able to show up 15 minutes before the fireworks and still see the fireworks AND the cool projections on the buildings. If you're planning on putting your kids on your shoulders, please try not to block someone else's view. 


After the fireworks, we found a spot across from the Matterhorn (near Alice in Wonderland) to view the "Paint the Night" parade. 

We ended up staying until midnight when Disneyland closed. As an adult, my favorite time is between 11pm - midnight. Of course, that didn't work when our kid were little. Now they're up for it. 

As an aside, during the summer Disneyland use to stay open until 1pm. THAT was fun. 

Poking around the internet, I found this link to some additional tips on maximizing your time there. Enjoy. 


Tip Ten: It's about the people you're with. 

In this vintage 1963 interview with Fletcher Markle of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Walt Disney shares his initial dream of creating a place "where the parents and the children could have fun together.”



While I hope these "maximize your time there" tips are helpful - at the end of the day, it's not about the rides, the shows, or the fireworks. It's about the people you're with. And that's something that can be enjoyed at a park, a museum, the beach, or your backyard. 


© 2017 www.experiencingla.com





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Saturday, January 7, 2017

Miracle Mile: La Brea Tar Pits, Urban Light, Levitated Mass


Last June, my wife, kids and I were back in Los Angeles. We took a little extra time to see the sights, including what our kids remember from our time living in L.A. 

Above, is the world famous La Brea Tar Pits, located in the Miracle Mile district of midtown Los Angeles. 


The La Brea Tar Pits contains the largest collection of ice age fossils in the world. Incredibly, it's in the heart of a huge city - literally along Wilshire Blvd. Los Angeles voters just approved funding to cover the cost of extending the Purple Line Subway along Wilshire all the way to UCLA, meaning the subway coming within feet of these massive tar pits. Wow. 


What looks like a pond is really an inch or less of water trapped on the surface of the tar pit. Prehistoric animals - including Mammoths, similar to these large fiberglass models - would come get trapped in search of water, sinking into the tar. 



Our kids remembering going here when we lived in L.A. - and seeing it on a short family vacation during Spring Break 2013


Methane bubbles continue to surface as you look out across the tar pit. It's really incredible and worth stopping and seeing. 

The Page Museum is located on the grounds, featuring displays and and hundreds of ice age animal skeletons. The Page offers a free day the first Tuesday of every month (except July and August). Plus it's free every Tuesday during the month of September. Here's a link to their website. 


Right next door is Chris Burden's Urban Light, the outdoor sculpture outside of the LACMA (Los Angeles County Museum of Art). 

LACMA offers a free day the second Tuesday of every month, but you can walk around this impressive display of historic street lights any time free of charge. They also offer a free day the last Saturday of January (here's a link to when my son and I took advantage of this last January). 


Urban Light is great during the day ...


photo credit collectingseminar.wordpress.com

.... but incredible at night! I highly recommend trying to see it if you're in Los Angeles. 

Here's a link from a much earlier post, back in 2009, with some photos and thoughts on Urban Light. Interestingly, this has ended up being the most popular post here on ExperiencingLA.com. 


Across the street is the Petersen Automotive Museum, with it's new decorative exterior. We've been in the past, here's a link to a previous visit of what's inside. 


My kids really wanted revisit Levitated Mass, the "floating" 340 ton boulder located on the LACMA grounds. 

It cost $10 million dollars - all from private donations. While it's no Statue of Liberty (New York) or Cloudgate (Chicago) - it's slowly grown on me.  To paraphrase another blogger: "Some folks pay millions of dollars for a diamond the size of a marble! I say L.A. got more show for the dough!"


Located to the left of where my daughter is standing is the future home of the privately funded Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, scheduled to open in 2018. THAT will certainly be a game changer to an already dynamic part of the city. 


Like Urban Light, Levitated Mass is public art that's free to walk around an enjoy. In addition, across the street from the La Brea Tar Pits on Wilshire Blvd, is The Wall on Wilshire, the largest section of the Berlin Wall outside of Germany. 


A final - and different - view of Levitated Mass. Here's a link to a previous family visit at this same spot. 


As we headed to our car, I noticed a large crowd out for a free summer event on the grass. In addition, the Original Farmer's Market and The Grove are just three blocks away. Lots of stuff going on in this part of Los Angeles. 

Lots of other cool stuff to experience in Los Angeles - but our family had plans to spend the next day south of L.A. at Disneyland. More on that next time

© 2017 www.experiencingla.com













Saturday, December 31, 2016

La La Land



My wife, teenage kids, and I had a chance to see "La La Land" earlier this week. 

Set in modern day Los Angeles, it's a musical with a retro 1940's vibe and feel. 

Fun, especially, for my kids to see places they remember from our time living in L.A.

Very enjoyable film - we'd certainly recommend it. 

Happy New Year. 

© 2016 www.experiencingla.com



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Saturday, December 24, 2016

Merry Christmas from Los Angeles: Journey of Faith Church "Flashmob" at South Bay Galleria



Seemed appropriate to repost the Journey of Faith "Flash Mob" at the South Bay Galleria in Redondo Beach, located in metro Los Angeles. This originally took place six years, and six million views, ago. 

The words and message were true then --- and true today.

Merry Christmas from Experiencing LA.

© 2016 www.experiencingla.com






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Saturday, December 10, 2016

UCLA: University of California, Los Angeles


Last June my wife, kids and I were back in Southern California for a few of days. We took some time to drive around Los Angeles, seeing a few places my wife, kids and I remember from the five years we lived there. 

A bit random, but we stopped off in Pacific Palisades a couple of weeks before the big Caruso Project began transforming the community business district. I grew up in this neighborhood in L.A. - I appreciated seeing it, walking up and down Swarthmore Avenue, and taking some photos. Here's the link from a post from last month. 


Afterwards, we drove over to UCLA. I graduated from UCLA way back in 1984 - and my wife and I both worked at different times. Above, a view of Wilshire Blvd (looking through my windshield) a few blocks from campus. 



Obligatory stop at Diddy Riese, located next to UCLA in Westwood Village. Diddy Riese is famous for their outstanding  - and very affordable - ice cream sandwiches. On Friday and Saturday nights the line out the door can snake out the entire block. 


Above, the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. This was built in the 1960's and was the original UCLA hospital. Love the architecture, palm trees and even the flowers.


Across the street is the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center. Where's the landscaping? This is the best UCLA could come up with? In contrast to to the original orange brick medical center, this looks, well, awful. More like a factory than a hospital. Sorry. 


My son and I in front of the UCLA student union building (Ackerman Union) and "The Bruin" mascot statute. The statue has been on campus since 1984 - the year I graduated. 

According to our friends at Wikipedia, the UCLA the Bruins "have won 126 national championships, including 113 NCAA team championships, more than any other university. UCLA student-athletes, coaches and staff have won 251 Olympic medals: 126 gold, 65 silver and 60 bronze. UCLA student-athletes have competed in every Olympics since 1920 with one exception (1924), and have won a gold medal in every Olympics that the United States has participated in since 1932.


We took about 40 minutes to walk around the campus. Above is Kerckhoff Hall, the original student union. If Kerckhoff Hall looks familiar, perhaps it's because UCLA have been featured in dozens of movies, TV shows and commercials, including:
• Gotcha! (1985) 

• Higher Learning (1995)
• Legally Blonde (2001)
• Old School (2003)
• The Nutty Professor (1995)
• Erin Brockovich (2000)
• How High (2001)
• National Lampoon's Van Wilder (2002)
• American Pie 2 (2001)
• Bring It On Again (2004)

I'm not recommending any of these films. The only one I've actually seen is Legally Blond.  


Above is UCLA's signature building, Royce Hall. Royce Hall was one of the four original buildings when the campus opened in 1929 and is modeled after the Basilica di Sant'Ambrogio in Milan, Italy. 


In front of the Humanities Building, another one of the four original buildings (the others are Powell Library and Haines Hall). The inscription above the door is from the Hebrew Scriptures, Psalm 119  - verse 18: "Open Thou mine eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of Thy law." 


Walking a bit farther is the inverted fountain, which opened in 1968. 


Just off the Court of the Sciences in the south end of campus is the California NanoSystems Institute. Yes, it really was purposely designed this way. It's affectionally known as the Harry Potter Building, for obvious reasons. 


Why try to visit Hogwarts at Universal - when you can can enjoy UCLA's California NanoSystems Institute? OK, Hogwarts is great. But the NanoSystems building is free. 


While the building itself is closed to the public, you're free to walk around and enjoy the architecture. In my opinion, this is the least appreciated building in Los Angeles. 


This being Los Angeles, the area underneath is a .... the top level of a multi-level parking garage. Really? A parking lot? They couldn't have build some sort of garden, or patio, or food court? Missed opportunity, in my opinion. 


If you're anywhere near UCLA, this building is worth seeing.

Next stop, Levitated Mass and the La Brea Tar Pits. I'll post a few photos next month. 


© 2016 www.experiencingla.com



Saturday, November 26, 2016

Saying Good-Bye to Swarthmore Avenue, Pacific Palisades

Swarthmore Avenue, Pacific Palisades. Last June my wife and kids and I were in the area and took a few minutes to walk up and down Swarthmore.

This entire block of mid-century era stores had been bought up by Caruso Affiliated - and was slated for a major redevelopment. I wanted to see this all before it was gone. 

When my parents moved to Pacific Palisades in 1968, the community felt very middle class. Back in 1972, I remember my grandmother (born in Poland) looking at modest homes just a few blocks from here for $26,000. Today, those same homes would sell for $1.8 million. Yeah, crazy. 

Here's a walkway between Swarthmore and the parking lot out back. To the left was the entrance to the old Baskin Robbins - that many of my friends worked at. To the right, a women's clothing store that my other grandmother worked at for several years. 

The nondescript parking lot out back. Redevelopment plans call for this being turned into additional retail and small park. Remember the lyrics to the old Joni Mitchell song: "take paradise and put in a parking lot"? This might be one of the few cases where the opposite happens. While not paradise, I'll take a park over a parking lot any day. 

So, this being Los Angeles, where do the cars go? Plans call for a three story underground parking structure.

The women's clothing store my grandmother worked at back in the mid-1970's. It was called La Femme, today it's called Boca. 

I LOVE this photo, taken from the edge of the parking lot, looking back towards Swarthmore Avenue. Boca on the left, what was Baskin Robbins on the right. Yes, the woodwork up top needs paint - but I really like the planter on the right, the mid-century architecture, the simple walkway, and most of all the MEMORIES of growing up here, and walking through here hundreds of times. 

Back out on Swarthmore, outdoor dining along the street. Pacific Palisades is located along the coast in between Malibu and Santa Monica, and up against the Santa Monica Mountains. 

The vast majority of people I went to High School here do not live in this area. Even back 35 years ago, the community had become too expensive to consider moving back after college. There's a small handful of people from my High School graduating class who figured out a way to live in the community. Most everyone else is living in another part of California - or out of state.  

The Caruso Affiliated redevelopment plans call for a re-imagined "Bay Theater" across the street - on the footprint of what was at one time a popular local restaurant, Mort's Delicatessen.

The original Bay Theater (1948-1978) was located a few blocks away on Sunset Blvd, and still holds a special place for anyone who lived in the community during that era. The new Bay Theater will be much smaller, and a multiplex. With theaters closing left and right around the country, here's hoping this new Bay will be able to pencil out financially. 


These one story buildings will be replaced with a mixture of one and two story Cape Cod style buildings. While most residents are excited about the new project, some are concerned that the street will look less like a real place and more like an outdoor mall - or Hollywood movie set. Caruso Affiliates other projects include The Grove in the Fairfax District and Americana at Brand in Glendale. 

This is looking down Swarthmore towards Sunset Blvd. This section of Swarthmore will also be narrowed slightly, with wider sidewalks and one way traffic. 

The pink building on the corner of Swarthmore and Sunset is the original "business block" - the 1924 Spanish Colonial Revival. In the distance is the bell tower of Palisades Elementary School. 

For me, lots of nostalgia and lots of memories on this street. I'm so very glad we took time and snapped up these photos. Just two weeks after we were here, the entire area was fenced off and - yes - the buildings were bulldozed. All that exists now are photographs and memories. 

My wife and kids walking towards Sunset Blvd. 

Final view the alley running adjacent to Sunset Blvd. The building on the left is a bank - I worked as a bank teller there for a summer - before moving out of the area. 

Like most alleys, this is fairly unattractive - although, the palm trees are nice. 


Here's an aerial view of Swarthmore that I pulled from the "Palisades Village" Facebook group. Gone, but not forgotten. 

The Mobil Gas Station on the corner of Sunset Blvd and Swarthmore Avenue. This is part of the re-development plans and is slated to be replaced with a two story retail building. Even people who weren't enthusiastic about the overall project seemed to be OK with that. 

In addition to most (but not all) of the buildings on Swarthmore, Caruso Affiliates also bought several of the adjacent buildings along Sunset Blvd. Part of the gray building was a toy store  - "The Toy Shack" - when I was a kid, with a speciality in magic tricks. 

So, what will this section of Swarthmore and Sunset Blvd. this be replaced with? Here's one of several images released by Caruso Affiliates - featuring the highly anticipated re-imagined Bay Theater - and a link to the project on their website. 

The project is called Palisades Village, scheduled to open Summer 2018. 

© 2016 www.experiencingla.com


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