|
Guests enter Animal Kingdom into the Oasis, and follow the path
through to Discovery Island, where they'll get their first glimpse
of the magnificent Tree of Life.
The Oasis
This gateway to the adventures of Disney's Animal Kingdom is a
cool, natural place of flowering glades and tumbling waterfalls.
Guests explore several lush paths that lead to natural animal habitats
of miniature deer, brilliant macaws, an anteater, iguanas and tree
kangaroos.
The park is laid out in a classic hub-and-spoke Disney style. Here's
a tour:
Discovery Island
Towering 145 feet above this island village of brightly colored
shops and restaurants is the giant Tree of Life, the park's centerpiece
and principal icon. 325 images of mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians
and insects are intricately carved into its trunk and branches.
Several species of animals including Galapagos tortoises and red
kangaroos live in pools and meadows around its base.
Deep inside the trees is a 430-seat 3-D film/special effects theater
featuring "It's Tough to be a Bug!", the hilarious 3-D spectacular
crawling with special effects. Flik and Hopper from Disney/Pixar's
A Bug's Life are joined by an all-new cast of creepin', leapin'
characters that'll have you screaming with laughter.
Bridges lead across Discovery River to other lands and attractions.
DinoLand U.S.A.
Begins in an open-air, paleontological dig where scientists have
reassembled gigantic dinosaur skeletons in The Boneyard, a playground
for families and an introduction to one of the park's most thrilling
adventures, DINOSAUR, where huge dinosaurs move and breathe with
life-like realism. Adventurers take a fantastic, careening, high-speed
journey back 65 million years through a primeval forest in a desperate
race to save the "last dinosaur" from threatened extinction in the
fiery crash of a giant asteroid.
Nearby, is "The Boneyard", a hands-on dino dig site.
Come dig up a life-size woolly mammoth skeleton. Then climb, slide
and slither around the prehistoric playground.
An outdoor amphitheater, Theater in the Wild, features "Tarzan
Rocks!" a live musical stage show based on the Disney animated feature
film, "Tarzan."
Dinosaur Jubilee celebrates the discovery of dinosaur artifacts,
complete with genuine casts of one-of-a-kind dinosaur skeletons.
DinoLand U.S.A. is presented by McDonald's.
Africa
Expeditions into the wilds of Africa begin at the edge of a typical
wildlife reserve in the coastal village of Harambe, with its bustling
marketplace, white-washed walls and reed-thatched roofs typical
of present-day Swahili architecture. A huge, gnarled baobab tree,
traditional icon of the African savannah, serves as the starting
point for Kilimanjaro Safaris. Traveling in large, open-sided safari
lorries, guests follow bumpy trails exploring 110 acres of forests,
rivers, hills and grasslands filled with free-roaming antelope,
rhinos, hippopotamus, zebra, crocodiles, baboons and other creatures.
The high adventure culminates in a race to save an elephant herd
from a gang of dangerous ivory poachers.
The journey ends at Pangani Forest Exploration Trail where guests
can disembark and walk through a bamboo jungle inhabited by two
troops of lowland gorillas, see hippos from an underwater viewing
area and explore a forest of exotic birds. And they can board the
well-worn steam trains of Wildlife Express to Rafiki's Planet Watch
for a backstage look at the veterinary headquarters and center for
Disney's Animal Kingdom conservation programs. Visitors can enjoy
interactive experiences and meet wildlife experts to discover how
they can help endangered animals around the world. In The Affection
Section, guests meet and touch fascinating animals.
Camp Minnie-Mickey
In this character greeting and show area, animal characters made
famous in "The Lion King" and other Disney classic animated motion
pictures come to life to greet visitors and perform in special stage
shows including "Festival of the Lion King," presented on huge moving
stages in an outdoor pavilion. "Festival of the Lion King"
is a Broadway-style spectacular, and is among the most talked about
Walt Disney World productions ever. Simba, Pumbaa, Timon and a cast
of singers, dancers and acrobats surround you with a lion's share
of fun.
Live animals from American forests perform with Pocahontas in "Pocahontas
and Her Forest Friends" at Grandmother Willow's Grove.
Resembling an Adirondack summer camp, the area features themed
shelters where guests meet individually with their favorites like
Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse, Winnie the Pooh and "The Jungle Book"
characters.
Asia
Guests explore an ancient palace and exotic rainforest where jungle
animals inhabit mysterious ruins along Maharajah Jungle Trek. Tigers,
gibbons, giant fruit bats and other animals roam freely and fly
without apparent barriers from guests or one another.
Most thrilling of the new Asia adventures is Kali River Rapids,
a white-water raft adventure along a raging river through a rainforest
threatened by lumber operations. You will get wet!
Caravan Stage features "Flights of Wonder," an exciting free-flying
demonstration of the many skills of falcons, owls and other exotic
birds in performances several times each day. The open-air theater
seats 1,000.
Live bands, "Streetmosphere" characters and other moving entertainment
add to the non-stop fun at Disney's Animal Kingdom.
The park also includes a 100-acre parking area for 6,000 vehicles,
plus many shops and restaurants and snack facilities including the
exciting Rainforest Cafe at the main entrance, Flame Tree Barbecue,
Pizzafari, Restaurantosaurus and Tusker House Restaurant.
Detailed information on Animal Kingdom...
|