You Are Now Entering a Storybook World
Follow this path and it will lead you well.
Those words give me goosebumps. I confess, I had trouble sleeping Thursday night knowing that we were going to Storyland the next day. The girls were excited, but I think it can be safely assumed that of the seven guests trekking from Belmont to Glen on Friday morning, Sister and I were probably the goosebumpiest.
Aunt Elaine and Ma used to take us every year...or if memory fails me and it wasn't every year, it was damn near every summer until were were really too old for the place. Mind you, we're too old for the place now, but there's a big chunk of childhood memories living there in time for us. From the time we passed through the crooked house (There was a crooked man/who walked a crooked mile...) into a Storybook World where Humpty Dumpty greeted us just like he did for so many years, it was in many ways like stepping back in time.
Of course now the place has grown up quite a bit. There are probably twice as many attractions as there were when were kids and my kids tended to blow past the more traditional sights like the Three Bears Cottage and Miss Muffett's Tuffett
in favor of the newer, faster rides....well, except for Dave. Dave popped his head into Mistress Mary's little cottage by her garden and Papa had to go in to extricate him.
He felt the same way about Peter's Pumpkin--it's just my size!
Emma thought the ball pit (dubbed by Tanta as the Giant Germ Pit from Hell) was good fun,
and Dave thought the smaller, even germier, toddler-friendly version was pretty freaking cool too.
Mary was too big for the "little kid" stuff and truth be told feels that she is at this point a little too old for Storyland, and she's probably right.
But she wasn't a bit contrary...not my Mary! She'll humor Mama and get her picture taken stooped down behind the Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary cutout thing. Even if they put in some super-fast and scary Six Flags-type rides, she's getting to be too big to get lost in a land of fairy tales and make-believe. (Just don't tell that to Tanta. She'll keelhaul ye, she will!)
Emma, however, is the PERFECT age. Every ride, every photo op, everything within the gates was cause for merriment.
Sister and I felt much the same way. Though I think we now appreciate how Aunt Elaine and Ma must have felt every year after dragging after us through the park and listening to us whine when it was time to leave. There's tired, and then there's Amusement Park Tired. But for awhile we actually reveled in our memories of visiting as kids.
We lamented things that were lost to time. The tigers are still there in Mother Goose Land going round and round, but the story of Little Black Sambo isn't the same, exactly.
For one thing, Sambo apparently has been seeing Michael Jackson's dermatologist and wants to be called only"Little Sambo", though one hopes that his nose is in better shape. And the tigers don't turn into a pool of butter anymore, which is why they ran in circles in the first place. But not to worry.
We brought our own brown beast to the park with us.
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Sister and I felt much the same way. Though I think we now appreciate how Aunt Elaine and Ma must have felt every year after dragging after us through the park and listening to us whine when it was time to leave. There's tired, and then there's Amusement Park Tired. But for awhile we actually reveled in our memories of visiting as kids.
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We made sure not to miss a photo opportunity.
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Anyway, after we passed through the archway to Other Lands, Papa got in line for the Swan Boats with the girls while Tanta and Baboo and I decided to walk up to Cinderella's castle. Normally we would have all waited in line to take the pumpkin coach, but they replaced the real horses with a motor, and let's face it: we've all been in a car. It's not all that exotic anymore.
The castle, like most of the place, was a lot smaller than I remembered. As was the Glass Slipper. I nudged my Sister and asked her which stepsister she wanted to be: the one who cut off her toe or the one that cut off part of her heel? We giggled and then started quoting the Ugly Sisters Step. "We're not really sisters, but we are reeeeeeally ugly," and giggling madly and inappropriately. So I took this picture of Sister "trying on" the slipper and I love it so much I may have it framed for display in my living room.
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We skipped South of the Border entirely. It wasn't a statement about immigration or anything, we just wanted to get to Freaky Deaky Dutchland. And the kids (and by kids I mean Baboo and the girls) wanted desperately to ride the Polar Coaster.
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Hey, while I'm thinking about it, what happened to the camel and Arab cutout that used to be outside Crazy Hakeem's Sandwich Shack? Hmmm?
We also skipped over the Slipshod Safari. Seriously. Would you ride a ride that's very name was an allusion to being half-assed at best? Come on, now.
We eschewed the delights of the Safari for lunch. The only blight on a perfectly lovely day. Now we understand why Aunt Elaine insisted on packing the big red and white Igloo Playmate cooler that always smelled of overripe plums with sandwiches, Little Debbie snack cakes, a thermos of Kool-Aid and of course plums.
In preparing for the trip I joked about Sister packing the plum-cooler for trip and she said, "NO! We're going to have lunch inside the park!" Never again, folks, and here' s why. Larry had a hamburger combo. That's a hamburger with nothing on it, precooked and wrapped in foil with a fistful of soggy fries. No drink. For over eight dollars.
Know what? As we were leaving North Conway we saw a billboard for Friendly's that advertised a loaded burger with a ton of fries, a beverage with unlimited refills and a friggin' dessert sundae for $9.99. Let's just say I don't mind paying Friendly's prices if I'm going to get a Friendly's meal. I did not get a Friendly's meal. I didn't even get a Subway meal.
In case you think I jest, or I'm exaggerating for comic effect as I have been known to do, here's the turkey and cheese wrap I ordered as photographic evidence. One slice of turkey, one slice of cheese that cost FIFTY CENTS, and a heaping handful of shredded lettuce.
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After lunch we hit the aquatic section of the park, none of which existed when we were kids. There's a splash park for kiddies that we passed on, but we went up to the top and rode the Tractor Ride. I now have photographic evidence that Bug is ready to drive Fr. Albert's tractor. See?
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Anyway, when we were getting off the ride and heading down the hill, a savage tiger nearly attacked and ate us!
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Back down the hill in Freaky Deaky Dutchland ("I'm from Holland! Isn't that weird?") we walked carefully and slowly to the windmill. Larry posed in the cutout of the little boy who saved Holland from a flood.
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Sister, to commemorate the occasion, offered to lie on the ground and let me milk it into her mouth, but there were just too many people around. Alas. I was pleased to see that the toenail-destroying cobblestones are gone and there's naught but blacktop around.
From the cow one can see the Bamboo Shoots log flume ride and all was lost at that point, the log ride being a fan favorite in our group. Larry took Bug on that, but Em balked at the last minute at getting splashed, so Baboo took her on the Flying Dutch Shoes while Tanta and Dave and I found a cool spot in the shade to sit and have some more precious, rationed water.
From Holland it's a steep hike up the hill to Bavarialand and Heidi's Grandfather's Cabin. First you stop at the Glockenspiel and take a spinning ride that will make you toss your Little Debbie's and overripe plums, and then you say hi to the goats as you pass their pen on the way to the little cabin.
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As you come down Heidi's mountain, there's a wee little wayside chapel that is modeled after the ones you find in the Bavarian alps. This sign is outside and it reads:
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"There are smiles; and where there are smiles, there is joy; and where there is joy there is love; and where there is love, there is the hand of God. Richard Chaput"
Well put, Richard.
The day for us always ended with the antique cars, which was Robin's favorite ride ever in the history of rides, and a train ride around the park on the Huff Puff and Whistle Railroad. When you're ten, driving your own car is just the best.
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4 Comments:
You appeared to have some sandal/foot related problems with this attraction as a kid--how'd your feet fare this time? ;-)
I love this post. Someday we'll take the boys back to the Homeland and show them the same stuff we used to do as kids too.
Sigh..thanks for the memories!! I have a picture of me somewhere with Humpty. A few other places looked a wee bit familiar from pics too. What a day you had :)
Loved this post! It brought back sweet memories of childhood (I grew up in Maine). I had just been thinking about Storyland and Santa's Village (is that place still around?) the other day. Hope to someday be able to take my kids there. Kind of a long drive from Ohio.
You took time putting that together with your old photos. It was fun to see the whole essay. Fairytale Town has been kept up very well too. We had one in Sacramento we always went to, I remember being too old to go too. Reading your adventure brought back memories for me. So glad you live there still! and you are a good writer.
Seven
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