Posts Tagged ‘disneyland’

I Survived a 20-hour MouseAdventure (and finished with a smile on my face)

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

My one and only photo from MouseAdventure (no cameras allowed)

Competing way out of our league in the Advanced Division, Team Bibbidy Bobbidy Bleep! probably finished at the bottom of the team rankings (we won’t know for two weeks), but that doesn’t matter at all. We’re not in it to win it. We’re in it for a good time, and we achieved that goal. This was a killer MouseAdventure, too! Usually a game includes 10-12 “quests” to be completed in 6-7 hours. This one involved almost four dozen quests doled out in three chunks over the course of two days/twenty hours. It was like doing three regular MouseAdventures in a row. We were surprised to finish feeling as strong as we did! (In fact, we were surprised to finish.)

Since there is another MA in two weeks (see below), there’s a gag order preventing me from describing any of the specific quests or puzzles from last weekend’s game. But it’s not giving away anything to say that MouseAdventure is a puzzle-based scavenger hunt-type competition that takes place in Disneyland. Teams of two to four people are given puzzles, riddles, math story problems, etc to solve after locating certain data that is hiding in plain sight all over the park. These “quests” are constructed so cleverly, I am always in awe of the folks who put the game together.

Players spend most of the day with their eyes glued to the architecture, the signs, the restaurant menus, the stuff painted on the Main Street windows, etc hoping to crack the codes and solve the puzzles. The game gives you a whole new appreciation of the tiny, luscious details that make Disneyland so magical.

During a typical MouseAdventure, you won’t go on many rides. Maybe one or two. You don’t have time to stop for lunch. You’ll need every available minute of game time for information gathering and puzzle solving. You will lose at least four or five pens and pencils, and maybe leave your puzzle-laden clipboard in the rest room on the other side of the park. And you will definitely think of the answer to at least one quest shortly after you turn in your answer sheet. D’oh!!

And I can’t get enough. :)

Click here if you’d like to know more about MouseAdventure, and especially if you’d like to participate in a sort of “intro-to-MouseAdventure” event at Disneyland on Sunday, June 6. The June 6 event is designed for families with children as well as teams of adults seeking to try MA in a relaxed, non-competitive environment. There’s also a competitive event scheduled for October in Orlando FL. I hope you’ll check them out! Not everyone who attempts a MouseAdventure falls in love with it, but lots of us do.

 

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Things That Make Me Happy (#3)

Friday, May 21st, 2010

Can you spot the Hidden Mickey in the pavement?

I love spending time at Disneyland, and this weekend I get to spend a LOT of time at Disneyland because a couple brave friends and I will be there participating in the 20th Anniversary MouseAdventure competition.

We’re doing the extra-special, devilishly grueling two-day Advanced Division event, even though we’re really not competitive with the top teams. We just (a) are gluttons for punishment and (b) want to suck down every last drop of MouseAdventure goodness.

So for 15+ hours on Saturday and another 8 hours on Sunday, we’ll be pounding miles of pavement in the hot sun, standing in long lines attempting math and anagrams and sudokus and what-have-you, while simultaneously trying to answer a million questions about tiny details of the attractions, architecture and foliage, AND remain more or less hydrated.

Please send a good thought our way!

 

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Give a Day, Get a lot more…

Saturday, March 20th, 2010

Thanks for your very kind feedback about the craft projects my mom and I do together. Here’s the latest one.

I wanted to participate in Disney’s “Give a Day, Get a Day” program, which allowed 1,000,000 people to volunteer for a day in exchange for a one-day ticket to a Disney park. (The program recently closed its registration because the one million tickets have been spoken for. Sorry!) I love Disneyland and can’t believe that I haven’t blogged incessantly about it yet. Warning: The day will come.

I am a Disneyland Annual Passholder so I don’t really need a free ticket to the park, but I wanted to participate because, well, it just seemed like the right thing to do. But my schedule is kind of weird with all the back and forth to see Mom in Phoenix, so I combed through the opportunities to find one I could complete at my own pace. As a bonus, I actually found one that Mom and I could do together.

We made these “binkies” for The Binky Patrol, a non-profit organization that distributes homemade blankets to children ages 0 to 18, who are ill, homeless, or otherwise down on their luck.  

Binkies are so simple to make: Just buy a couple yards of polarfleece, fringe the edges and tie a knot at the top of each fringe strip. In colder climes you can knot together two layers of polarfleece, but in SoCal a single layer provides plenty of warmth.

The top two binkies are about 40″ square, for little tykes. The bottom three are much larger, suitable for a teenager. For those, we chose prints that would work for teenage boys because I read that organizations like Binky Patrol tend to get lots more donations for little girls and practically nothing for teenage boys. Considering the range of polarfleece prints I witnessed at Joann, I’m not surprised. But I think the prints we chose won’t be too awfully debilitating to anyone’s incipient manhood. :)

I cut the fringe and Mom tied the knots. We finished them in one weekend, easy peasy.

In a few weeks Disney will email us the vouchers for our free tickets. Since Mom can’t actually go to Disneyland, she’ll donate her ticket to the Boys and Girls Club so a kid can go to Disneyland in her place — yet another way that this little project proved to be extremely rewarding for Mom. And the next time one of Mom’s caregivers becomes pregnant, I have a feeling she’ll send me to the store for a yard of polarfleece so she can make a thoughtful gift with her own two hands.

The Binky Patrol appears to have a local chapter just about everywhere (hint, hint). Perhaps you and your family could make and donate a few cozy handmade blankets sometime.

PS I stitched together the two small offcuts left over from the green owl and blue monkey baby binkies, did the fringe thing and gave it to my veterinarian, because his patients can use a little extra coziness too.

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