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Disney is in the Air

March 9, 2016 by jlmdiscovery

Disney is in the Air

It’s been said that smell is the strongest of our senses tied to memory.  Sometimes all it takes is a single whiff of vanilla to conjure fond memories of baking in our parents’ kitchen or a hint of the perfume that our aunt used to wear to remind us of annual visits from long ago.  It is a sense that is often overlooked amidst the other four.  So why not use it to our advantage to experience the nostalgia of the happiest place on Earth?  If you’ve visited Disneyland (or Magic Kingdom) in the past, here is a list of scents you can use to relive the pleasant atmospheres of your favorite Disney lands.

Note: I’ve based this list off of Yankee Candle scents, but of course you can substitute anything similar.

Main Street, U.S.A.
Main Street is the first land you experience when you enter the parks, and it is also the one that most consciously aims those pleasant scents in your direction.  The most iconic scents are those of freshly baked treats from the Jolly Holiday Bakery and the homemade candies around Christmastime.

  • Bakery Air
  • Christmas Cookie
  • French Vanilla
  • Gingerbread Maple
  • Gingerbread
  • Peppermint Bark
  • Vanilla Cupcake

Adventureland
Adventureland explores the areas from Polynesian gardens to Asian temples to the African jungle, and contains one of everyone’s favorite treats: Dole Whip.  Tropical fruits and blooms best represent this spirit of adventure.

  • Black Coconut
  • Coconut & Vanilla Bean
  • Eucalyptus
  • Exotic Bloom
  • Luau Party
  • Mango Peach Salsa
  • Midnight Jasmine
  • Orange Dreamsicle
  • Pineapple Cilantro

Frontierland/Critter Country
Frontierland makes me think of southern favorites and earthy scents, with plenty of fresh fragrances of the outdoors.  I’ve lumped Critter Country in here because there’s a lot of overlap, although the presence of Winnie the Pooh reminds me instantly of the Honey Blossom.

  • Apple Cider
  • Apple Spice
  • Autumn Leaves
  • Caramel Pecan Pie
  • Cinnamon Stick
  • Cranberry Pear
  • Farmer’s Market
  • Green Grass
  • Harvest
  • Honey Blossom
  • Lush Berries
  • Macintosh
  • Mountain Lodge
  • Peach Cobbler

New Orleans Square
New Orleans Square is one of my favorite places to walk around in the afternoons, particularly with a bag of fresh Mickey-shaped beignets.  Enjoy the French and Jazz influences with these scents reminiscent of pastries and spirits.

  • Brandy Pear Tart
  • Vanilla Bourbon

Fantasyland
Fantasyland is full of princes, princesses, and fun so the first thoughts that come to mind are of gardens and magical forests.  Choose some of your favorite flower scents or go the route of Snow White with a fresh, red apple.

  • Cotton Candy
  • Fresh Cut Roses
  • Lavender Vanilla
  • Lilac Blossoms
  • Macintosh
  • Magical Frosted Forest
  • Meadow Showers
  • Pink Peony
  • True Rose
  • Tulips
  • White Gardenia

Tomorrowland
Tomorrowland is the hardest of the lands to pinpoint in terms of scents, mostly because it’s comprised of a lot of minimalistic metal and space-age materials.  The best I could think of was a series of clean, fresh scents (at least until Yankee Candle adds Plastic and Steel to their repertoire).

  • April Showers
  • Clean Cotton
  • Crisp Morning Air
  • Fluffy Towels
  • Line-Dried Cotton

What are some of your favorite scents from Disneyland?  Which bring back the strongest memories?  Share below!

Filed Under: Disney, Featured Tagged With: Disney, Disneyland, memories, nostalgia, scents, smells, Yankee Candle

10 Free Ways to Boost Your Disney Vacation

May 21, 2015 by jlmdiscovery

Disney Celebration ButtonsIn honor of Disneyland’s Diamond Celebration and its 24-hour kickoff (which starts tomorrow at 0600), here are 10 free ways to boost your Disney vacation:

  1. Scavenger Hunt – enhance your transit/queue time with a fun scavenger adventure (like this one for the Disneyland’s 60th anniversary!)
  2. Hidden Mickeys – Mickey ears are hidden all throughout the parks and resorts, so compete to see who can find the most
  3. Celebration Buttons – go to City Hall (or equivalent) to pick up free buttons for birthdays, anniversaries, weddings, graduation, or just to celebrate
  4. Imagineering Field Guides – while you can buy park field guides at bookstores/Amazon, you can also browse Wikipedia while waiting in lines to learn fun facts about the development of the rides (could be a fun trivia game)
  5. Photo Ops – if you ask, the professional photographers will take photos of you and your family using your personal phone/camera for no cost
  6. Ride Times App – search for a simple app that will keep you updated on estimated queue lengths (so you’ll know if it’s worth it to trek across the park)
  7. Autograph Book – decorate a notebook with your child to bring when they meet all the characters in the park
  8. Ride Souvenirs – supposedly if you ask a skipper on the Jungle Cruise they will give you a free map, but otherwise you can always make your own ride tokens to give to your kids if they brave some of the larger rides (like a printable death certificate for surviving the Haunted Mansion)
  9. “Broadway” Shows – At several parks you can see a 45 min Broadway quality show (included with admission): Aladdin at California Adventures and Beauty and the Beast at Hollywood Studios
  10. “DisneyBound” – Create an outfit based on your favorite Disney themes/characters using suggestions from DisneyBound (great for kids’ outfits that are more functional than princess dresses)

For an automatic enhancement, visit Disney during one of the holiday seasons, particularly around Halloween (Sep – Nov) or Christmas (Nov – Jan).  These times include special edible treats, holiday overlays of several rides, and added shows.

Filed Under: Disney, Featured, Fun Tagged With: anniversary, birthday, Diamond Celebration, Disney, Disney World, Disneyland, free

10 Ways to Boost Your Disney Vacation

May 21, 2015 by jlmdiscovery

Going on a Disney vacation is a treat in itself, but, if you’re looking to enhance your trip, here are 10 ways to make it truly special:

  1. Pin Trading ($10+) – buy pins at the parks or purchase a bulk package on Amazon to trade with cast members
  2. Personalized Ear Hats ($15+) – purchase a set of classic Mickey ears and have names embroidered on the back
  3. Birthday Cakes ($35+) – celebration cakes can be purchased through Disney to be delivered to table service restaurants or hotel rooms
  4. Character Dining ($15-60+pp) – from the simple fun of Plaza Inn to a formal feast at Cinderella’s Royal Table, spend time with your favorite icons
  5. Tours ($25-100+pp) – follow professional guides as they show you the highlights and secrets of the Disney parks
  6. Show/Dinner Packages ($40-65+pp) – get a package deal for Fantasmic! or World of Color, including some of the park’s best restaurants
  7. Costumes/Princess Makeovers ($60-200) – buy your own costumes or get a complete makeover at the Bippity Boppity Boutique
  8. Photo Pass CD ($70-200) – this CD lets you take unlimited photos at the parks and keep the digital copies
  9. High-End Dining ($60-150+pp) – for a memorable evening, make a reservation at the Napa Rose or Victoria & Albert’s
  10. Disney Hotels/Resorts ($100-500/night) – Disney offers a wide selection of hotels that provide early access to the parks and free transportation
World of Color - Disney California Adventure
A view of the setting for the World of Color from the Carthay Circle Dinner Package section.

Filed Under: Disney, Featured Tagged With: Disney, Disney World, Disneyland, theme parks

Quick 10: The Top 10 Educational Disney Attractions

March 26, 2015 by jlmdiscovery

“I would rather entertain and hope that people learned something than educate people and hope they were entertained.” – Walt Disney

Top 10 Educational Disney Attractions
Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln at Disneyland

Who says you can’t learn something on vacation?  And, better yet, who says that learning can’t be just as fun?  Here is my list of the top Disney attractions that will both educate and entertain your entire family.

  1. Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln & The Hall of Presidents (Disneyland & Magic Kingdom) – Listen to Abraham Lincoln recite some of his most famous speeches amidst a history of the Civil War and celebrate the United States with 43 animatronic presidents detailing the entire history of how America came to be what it is today
  2. World Showcase (EPCOT) – Tour themed areas of 11 countries, including food, architecture, music, and exhibits
  3. Kilimanjaro Safaris & Maharajah Jungle Trek (Animal Kingdom) – Explore the lands of Africa and Asia filled with real-life animals for you to encounter
  4. Mission: Space & Advanced Training Lab (EPCOT) – Train as an astronaut for a mission to Mars and compete in your own space race
  5. Test Track (EPCOT) – Learn about vehicle design and testing as you strap in for a ride around a high-speed track.
  6. Ellen’s Energy Adventure (EPCOT) – Join Ellen DeGeneres and Bill Nye the Science guy as they explore the Big Bang and the history of energy in this 45-minute show
  7. SeaBase (EPCOT) – An aquatic wonderland filled with aquariums, dive experiences, marine exhibits, and Nemo.
  8. Spaceship Earth (EPCOT) – Ride through history as you explore the origins of communication, and don’t forget to get a peek at your future at the end.
  9. Rafiki’s Planet Watch: Conservation Station & Habitat Habit! (Animal Kingdom) – An area of activities focused on the preservation and care of animals
  10. Walt Disney’s Carousel of Progress (Magic Kingdom) – One of the infamous rides Walt Disney presented at the 1964 World’s Fair, this animatronics show presents the progression of technology throughout the years.

Honorable Mentions:

  • It’s Tough to be a Bug! (Disney’s California Adventure & Animal Kingdom) – Learn about the world from a bug’s point of view and get some new perspective on our tiniest neighbors
  • Circle of Life: An Environmental Fable (EPCOT) – A 20-minute film about environmental conservation starring the cast of Lion King
  • Living with the Land (EPCOT) – Get a tour of Mickey’s greenhouses and learn where your food comes from.

Do you have a favorite that’s not on this list?  Add it in the comments below!

Filed Under: Disney, Featured, Learning, Quick 10 Tagged With: Animal Kingdom, Disney, education, EPCOT, rides

7 Lessons You Can Learn from Disney’s Imagineers

March 23, 2015 by jlmdiscovery

7 Lessons You Can Learn from Disney's Imagineers

I have always been fascinated by Imagineers.  They are Disney’s main designers and creators, bringing to life worlds and fantasies that before only lived in our imaginations.  They tell us stories through their detailed engineering.  When I visit the Disney parks, I see a lot more than rides and commercialized Mickey ears; I am transported into a mindset where I can dream up any future and build it around me.

Imagineer = engineer + imagination.  Maybe not all of us are engineers, in the traditional sense, but we all have the ability to engineer and design our own lives.  And even as adults, everyone has a powerful imagination.  It’s the choice to use it that we often forget we have.  So here are some life lessons that I have learned from studying Disney’s Imagineers.

  1. Tell a story

Rides at Disney are more than rides; they put you directly into the stories.  In Mission: Space you are assigned to the crew of the first manned mission to Mars and sent for training.  In Muppet*Vision 3D you are guests in the audience of the muppets’ first 3D show and help to find Bean Bunny.  In the Tower of Terror you visit the scene of the 1939 Twilight Zone mystery where five people disappeared in an elevator.  This is what sets their parks apart from standard amusement parks.  They don’t just develop a ride; they develop an experience and consider how the park guests will interact with it from start to finish.

This is the same way we should approach anything we create.  We need to look beyond completing a project and consider how the user will experience the end results, even if that user is only ourselves.  What kind of story do we want to write?  How do we want the story to end?  How do we want to feel?  Asking these questions guides us to the full lifecycle of a solution.  If you want to get healthier, picture yourself as a healthy person and imagine what that would feel like.  Then write your “story” of what it would take to get you to that happy ending so you can go forth and live it.

  1. Never say “no”

We all hate hearing the word “no”.  Some of us even hate telling someone the word “no”.  It’s like an instant dark cloud that sends down a lightning bolt to kill an idea.  But one of the first lessons introduced by the Imagineers in their book, The Imagineering Workout, is to replace every “no” with “yes, if”.  Can we fly human to Mars?  Yes, if we create a spacecraft that can travel there safely.  Can we build that spacecraft?  Yes, if we engineer more efficient propulsion systems.  The “yes, if” continues until we reach a problem that we can focus on in the present.

Sometimes when we face a challenge, what we think is a “no” is actually a “not yet”.  Can we lose 50 pounds?  Yes, if we change our nutritional lifestyle and we exercise routinely.  Can we exercise routinely?  Yes, if we find exercises that we enjoy and fit our schedule.  The thought process continues on and can be combined with mind-mapping tools to generate a plan.  This is also an excellent method for those who suffer from anxiety prior to presentations or exams.  Instead of telling ourselves we can’t do it in those moments of panic, we should be telling ourselves that yes, we will succeed if we prepare and focus.  Those difficult problems introduce their own solutions and steps if we simply tell ourselves “yes”.

  1. It’s all in the details

One of my favorite things about Disney is how much attention they pay to the details.  Watch Finding Nemo and you’ll see the Pizza Planet truck from Toy Story drive by.  Climb to the top of Tarzan’s treehouse in Disneyland and find the tribute to the original Swiss Family Robinson tree.  Walk through “A Bug’s Land” in California Adventure at night and hear the murmur of crickets.  While you may not notice every detail individually, they combine to immerse you in the environment.  The more details we can address, the more developed our solutions become.

Now, it is all too easy to get overwhelmed by trying to consider all the details at once.  But we can successively narrow down our focus to the finer points.  Choose your objective(s) and theme, make the big decisions, and then progressively elaborate until you are satisfied with the details.  We did this when planning our wedding, starting with the theme and the venue and working our way down to the handmade escort cards and the song for the final dance.  Continuously question your assumptions and think of ways to enrich your choices.  Putting extra effort in the details will pay off in the end.

  1. Use all five senses

When you first walk onto Main Street, U.S.A you see a small town right out of turn-of-the-century Missouri (Marceline, MI to be exact, Walt Disney’s hometown).  You hear ragtime melodies and live barbershop quartets.  You can pick up ceramic figurines, view old-fashioned photography equipment, and pet the carriage horses.  You sample country-style fried chicken and hand-cranked ice cream.  You even smell vanilla as you stroll down the road.  You are completely transported into this environment of good memories and simple pleasures.  By engaging with all five senses, you can have a real experience with what is really a well-designed façade.

This same concept applies to solving problems where we need actual, tangible solutions.  Let’s say you want (or need) to improve your sleep.  Keep your bedroom organized and decorate it for a calm environment.  Choose sheets and pillows that are comforting and relaxing.  Create a soothing nighttime playlist or find ways to block out excess noise.  Use lavender scented detergent or diffusers.  Start a ritual of chamomile tea or a glass of warm milk just before bed.  By addressing all your senses you develop complete, well-rounded solutions.  And by combining this strategy with mindfulness techniques you can enhance your overall experience.

  1. Combine traditions, history, perspectives, innovation, and creativity

When I consider the five original sections of Disneyland, I like to think of the essential themes behind them:

  •                 Main Street, U.S.A. – traditions & values
  •                 Frontierland – history & spirit
  •                 Adventureland – experiences & perspectives
  •                 Tomorrowland – future & innovation
  •                 Fantasyland – imagination & creativity

These are the same elements that designers in almost all disciplines consider, at least in part, when creating their products.  When we balance these elements we take advantage of all the world has to offer.  It is important to use both “sides” of our brain to approach challenges or improve our well-being.

If you’re trying to start a business, you’d start by defining your core values.  Then you’d research what has been successful in the past and who your predecessors are.  Then you’d likely explore the resources that exist around the world and how other people have approached challenges.  Then you’d study what technologies are up and coming.  And all the while you’d be brainstorming and creating unique solutions and processes that make your business truly special.  So what may seem at first like novelty themes are actually the same ones we implement throughout our lives.

  1. Entertain to educate

Walt Disney once said, “I would rather entertain and hope that people learned something than educate people and hope they were entertained.”  Disney movies, books, and parks are full of opportunities where children and adults alike can open their minds and gain knowledge of the world.  Take a tour of the World Showcase in EPCOT or listen to Lincoln’s speech on Main Street, U.S.A.  Just because you’re having fun doesn’t mean you’re not learning valuable lessons along the way.  The trick is to find the right balance and make education entertaining.  There is no reason it needs to dry or serious all the time.

When I went through school it was all too easy for classes to become boring.  But I was fortunate to have teachers who engaged with us and provided games, alternative media (movies), and projects that kept us interested in learning.  Why can’t you enjoy school?  Isn’t that why you go to school in the first place, to learn skills to become productive adults so you can live a full, happy life?  The same can be said for us as adults.  Focus on the fun or positive aspects of your job and the rest won’t seem as difficult.  A little bit of happy goes a long way.

  1. TomorrowlandTranslating the ideal to experiences

Every time I enter Tomorrowland the gears in my head start turning, popping out new ideas for all of the technology I wish we had at our disposal in the present.  And while we may not be sending humans to Mars just yet or interacting with anthropomorphic droids, we can at least get a taste of what it would be like from what the Imagineers have created.  Tomorrowland has been present at Disney since the inception of the parks in 1955, and Walt Disney truly recognized the importance of dreaming up advanced futures.  The Imagineers paint immersive pictures of what an ideal future could be like, and they translate it into a 3D, albeit artificial, environment that can be just as inspiring.

I believe the true talent of an Imagineer is in putting us in those ideal visions of the world or the future.  They allow us to experience them in the present, and thus be motivated to replicate them for real.  We need to hold onto these elements that inspire us, no matter where they come from, and use them to build our futures.  Next time you watch a movie or walk through the parks, take notes on the things that stir your mind and see how you can use the ideas in your everyday life.

Here are some books I suggest for further reading:

  • The Imagineering Way: Ideas to Ignite Your Creativity by The Imagineers
  • The Imagineering Workout: Exercises to Shape Your Creative Muscles by The Disney Imagineers
  • Walt Disney Imagineering: A Behind the Dreams Look at Making the Magic Real by The Imagineers

If you’re looking to experience more next time you visit the Disney parks, please check out my Disneyland Diamond Celebration Scavenger Hunt!

Filed Under: Disney, Featured, Life Tagged With: Disney, Imagineer, Imagineering, life lessons, Walt Disney

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