As of January 1, 2019, we have closed our forums. This is a decision we did not come to lightly, but it is necessary. The software our forums run on is just too out-of-date and it poses a significant security risk. The server software itself must be updated, and it cannot be without removing the forums.
So it is with a heavy heart that we say goodbye to our long-running forums. They came online in 2000 and brought together so many wonderful Disney fans. We had friendships form, careers launch, couples marry, children born ... all because of this amazing community.
Thank you to each of you who were a part of this community. You made it possible.
And a very special thank you to our Guides (moderators), past and present, who kept our forums a happy place to be. You are the glue that held everything together, and we are forever grateful to you. Thank you aliceinwdw, Caldercup, MrsM, WillCAD, Fortissimo, GingerJ, HiddenMickey, CRCrazy, Eeyoresmom, disneyknut, disneydani, Cam22, chezp, WDWfan, Luvsun, KMB733, rescuesk, OhToodles!, Colexis Mom, lfredsbo, HiddenMickey, DrDolphin, DopeyGirl, duck addict, Disneybine, PixieMichele, Sandra Bostwick, Eeyore Tattoo, DyanKJ130, Suzy Q'Disney, LilMarcieMouse, AllisonG, Belle*, Chrissi, Brant, DawnDenise, Crystalloubear, Disneymom9092, FanOfMickey, Goofy4Goofy, GoofyMom, Home4us123, iamgrumpy, ilovedisney247, Jennifer2003, Jenny Pooh, KrisLuvsDisney, Ladyt, Laughaholic88, LauraBelle Hime, Lilianna, LizardCop, Loobyoxlip, lukeandbrooksmom, marisag, michnash, MickeyMAC, OffKilter_Lynn, PamelaK, Poor_Eeyore, ripkensnana, RobDVC, SHEANA1226, Shell of the South, snoozin, Statelady01, Tara O'Hara, tigger22, Tink and Co., Tinkerbelz, WDWJAMBA, wdwlovers, Wendyismyname, whoSEZ, WildforWD, and WvuGrrrl. You made the magic.
We want to personally thank Sara Varney, who coordinated our community for many years (among so many other things she did for us), and Cheryl Pendry, our Message Board Manager who helped train our Guides, and Ginger Jabour, who helped us with the PassPorter-specific forums and Live! Guides. Thank you for your time, energy, and enthusiasm. You made it all happen.
There are other changes as well.
Why? Well, the world has changed. And change with it, we must. The lyrics to "We Go On" for IllumiNations say it best:
We go on to the joy and through the tears
We go on to discover new frontiers
Moving on with the current of the years.
We go on
Moving forward now as one
Moving on with a spirit born to run
Ever on with each rising sun.
To a new day, we go on.
It's time to move on and move forward.
PassPorter is a small business, and for many years it supported our family. But the world changed, print books took a backseat to the Internet, and for a long time now it has been unable to make ends meet. We've had to find new ways to support our family, which means new careers and less and less time available to devote to our first baby, PassPorter.
But eventually, we must move on and move forward. It is the right thing to do.
So we are retiring this newsletter, as we simply cannot keep up with it. Many thanks to Mouse Fan Travel who supported it all these years, to All Ears and MousePlanet who helped us with news, to our many article contributors, and -- most importantly -- to Sara Varney who edited our newsletter so wonderfully for years and years.
And we are no longer charging for the Live Guides. If you have a subscription, it's yours to keep for the lifetime of the Live Guides at no additional cost. The Live Guides will stay online, barring server issues and technical problems, for all of 2019.
That said, PassPorter is not going away. Most of the resources will remain online for as long as we can support them, and after that we will find ways to make whatever we can available. PassPorter means a great deal to us, and to many of you, and we will do our best to keep it alive in whatever way we can. Our server costs are high, and they'll need to come out of our pockets, so in the future you can expect some changes so we can bring those costs down.
Thank you, thank you, thank you for your amazing support over the years. Without you, there's no way us little guys could have made something like this happen and given the "big guys" a run for their money. PassPorter was consistently the #3 guidebook after the Unofficial and Official guides, which was really unheard of for such a small company to do. We ROCKED it thanks to you and your support and love!
If you miss us, you can still find some of us online. Sara started a new blog at DisneyParkPrincess.com -- I strongly urge you to visit and get on her mailing list. She IS the Disney park princess and knows Disney backward and forward. And I am blogging as well at JenniferMaker.com, which is a little craft blog I started a couple of years ago to make ends meet. You can see and hear me in my craft show at https://www.youtube.com/c/jennifermaker . Many PassPorter readers and fans are on Facebook, in groups they formed like the PassPorter Trip Reports and PassPorter Crafting Challenge (if you join, just let them know you read about it in the newsletter). And some of our most devoted community members started a forum of their own at Pixie Dust Lane and all are invited over.
So we encourage you to stay in touch with us and your fellow community members wherever works best for you!
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Dates: Saturday 19 – Sunday 20 March Adventurers: Me, Cheryl (38) and DH Mark (45) Destinations: Vienna, Austria Meets: None planned Celebration: enjoying a weekend away, thanks to a free night’s stay!
I love loyalty programmes. Someone wants to give me something for being loyal, then I’ll be loyal. As a result, it won’t surprise you to know that I’m a member of a number of loyalty programmes. Perhaps the best is still the Tesco Clubcard programme, which gives you points for everything you spend at Tesco. They’re now the UK’s biggest company, taking something like every £1 in £9 spent in the UK and for everything you buy with them, you get points that you can convert into prizes, things like vacations for example!
A couple of years ago, I decided that perhaps it was time to apply the same principle to the vacations we took. I figured out that if we chose an airline and a hotel chain to be loyal to, then we’d be rewarded for that loyalty and so it proved to be. We’re now loyalty members with both the Hilton group and the Holiday Inn group of hotels. Although we’re yet to get anything back from our Hilton membership, which we’ve held for less than a year, we’ve had some great benefits from being members of the Holiday Inn’s Priority Club.
One of their great offers that they run from time to time is the “stay two nights, get one free” deal. We put it to great use on our December 2009 trip, when we had two free nights to use that we spent in the Z Suites in Miami. Well, the offer came back again in late 2010. I knew that we’d have one free night to use up, with the stays we had planned and we knew what we were going to do with that – spend a weekend at Chessington World of Adventures to the west of London with our friends.
I didn’t expect to get a second free night, especially I wasn’t able to use the third booking I held for work. I had been due to cover an evening meeting, but that was right in the middle of the snow that we had at the start of December. I worked at home for four days and the meeting was cancelled, but I couldn’t cancel the hotel. Even if I did, it was completely non-refundable on the deal I’d got. I left it and was pleasantly surprised a few days later to get an e-mail, thanking me for my stay. Ok, so we’d stayed three nights then. One more night and we got a night free.
We had plans for a fourth night, just after Christmas, on the way back from visiting my parents, when we went to the Imperial War Museum Duxford. That stay duly completed, we had two free nights that both had to be used by the end of May 2011. That presented us with an interesting dilemma. We couldn’t use them for our planned fall trip to the States and Canada, so we’d have to find some other way to use them. Now there’s an interesting dilemma! Just to make it even more interesting, with a three week vacation planned for August/September 2011, a two and a half week vacation in April 2011 and a week in Egypt in January 2011, we were actually running out of vacation time to take, despite the fact that we have so much of it! So the challenge now was to find somewhere that we could visit in just a weekend with one night away....
Of course, it would’ve been far too easy to have found somewhere in the UK that we could’ve driven to. Now where’s the fun in that? We could do that anytime we liked. Instead, I started to do some research into where we could reasonably fly to in a weekend. Just like the States, where you have the likes of Southwest and JetBlue, we also have budget airlines and one of those is Easyjet. It’s the one we prefer to fly with, as the charges are more upfront than some of the others, shall we say.
I started looking into where they flew to from Gatwick, which is just half an hour’s drive away from us. I knew that they were the biggest operator at Gatwick by now, but I had no idea just how many places they flew to! I started to go through all the options, first reducing our choices to flights of three hours or less, as we didn’t want anymore than that for such a short trip.
Then I looked at the flight times, as obviously we wanted to get to wherever we were going on the Saturday morning and then fly back on the Sunday night, to give us maximum time in our chosen destination. That immediately saw a fair few places ruled out. The next part of the research was to check if there was a Holiday Inn hotel in those cities. In most cases, there was one, in which case the next thing was to have a look at their ratings on Trip Advisor. Some were then knocked on, especially if their ratings weren’t particularly great.
By the time I’d finished that fairly torturous process, I had a shortlist of:
Hamburg, Germany
Milan, Italy
Nice, France
Toulouse, France
Vienna, Austria
We quickly ruled out both the French destinations, as we’d need a rental car to get around. For Nice, the only hotel was in Cannes, meaning a car would be essential, while for Toulouse, having visited the city last September, we’d be more interested in seeing the area outside of the city, which would mean a car.
Those deleted as options, we looked up information on the remaining three. Although Hamburg had the cheapest flights, somehow everything we read about the city just didn’t do much for us. Don’t get me wrong, I’m sure it’s an amazing destination, but it wasn’t grabbing us, so that went as well. With the choices down to two, I did what any self respecting person would do and did a Google search “Milan vs. Vienna” and found someone else who’d asked the very same question. The answers gave me the answer I needed to know. Everyone who answered, almost without question, recommended Vienna of the two cities. Fine, that was the decision made for us!
I went ahead and booked our flights for Vienna, with the outgoing flight departing at 7.00am from Gatwick, arriving in Vienna just after 10.00am (don’t forget that continental Europe is an hour ahead of the UK, so you have to take that into account), with the return flight leaving at around 9.00pm and getting back in at about 10.00pm. It would allow us the best part of two days out there.
At almost the same time as I was booking our flights, I was also on the Holiday Inn site, sorting out our booking for our free night. I booked ourselves into the InterContinental Vienna, which seemed to be fairly near the main train station, which linked to the airport. Had we paid for this room, the website told me that we’d have paid €319 ($427). To me, that was great value, as the two rooms that we’d paid for to earn this free night had cost a total of £110 ($170). Not a bad return rate!
Once that was all booked, there wasn’t much I could do until the guidebook I’d ordered about Vienna arrived. unbelievably I booked a place that I didn’t have a guidebook for! When it finally made it, almost a week after I made the bookings I soon realised that in two days, we were only going to be able to scratch the surface of the city, there was just so much to see. That didn’t surprise me, as that’s really the case with any major city in the world. You’re never going to do it justice in two short days. : Think of Paris, London, New York or Washington DC and you’ll realise what I mean.
Instead, the logical approach seemed to be to draw up a shortlist of places that really shouldn’t be missed for a first timer’s visit to the city, so that’s what I did. It wasn’t actually a difficult task, as there were some obvious stand-outs:
1) The Spanish Riding School. Most people, I think, have heard of this place, which was originally established in 1572. The specially bred Lipizzaner stallions still perform regularly, although trust me, the performances are not cheap! : The top price of tickets is €130 ($174), so I quickly decided that we’d pass on that. I liked the idea of the morning exercises, even though you wouldn’t get to see all the steps that the horses do, but there weren’t any the weekend we went, so that wasn’t an option. A guided tour seemed like the best way to see the place instead, so that was that sorted.... although actually it wasn’t! Mark suggested that we really should go to see a performance, as it’s a once in a lifetime opportunity and he was right. I did a bit more research and discovered that the guided tour wasn’t very well rated at all, while the performances were. Ok, so maybe we’d do that after all then... We ended up going for the cheaper seats at €45 each. They’re on the first row up, looking down on the action and hopefully they’ll still be good seats...
2) Stephensdom. This is the city’s main cathedral, which has stood on this site for more than 800 years. It’s right in the centre of Vienna and looks like a stunning building. It’s free to enter and there’s plenty to see inside it. I’m really looking forward to seeing this, particularly as it was restored after the cathedral caught fire during bombing in the Second World War. It was meticulously restored, including its tiled roof – and from the photos in my guidebook, that can’t have been a quick job. :
3) Schonbrunn Palace and Gardens. This lies to the southwest of the city and was formerly a summer residence of the imperial family. It was finally completed in the 18th century and its grounds look huge on the maps I’ve seen, including a maze, fountains, a zoo and a palm house.
4) Hofburg Palace. This is really a complex and the Spanish Riding School is part of it, as are the state apartments and treasuries. They were used from the 16th and 17th centuries onwards, until the fall of the monarchy in 1916. Shortly after this, the Hasburgs, the Royal family, were exiled and Austria was declared a republic. Bearing that in mind, I guess it’s surprising that Vienna’s still filled with so many Royal palaces, but thank goodness it is, for the visiting public!
Once those decisions were made, there wasn’t much more to do, although before our departure, I did book our transport into the city from the airport, using the train. The station was a short walk from our hotel, which was pretty useful. I figured that we’d buy subway tickets when we got there and saw what the weather was like.
On that subject, I started checking what the weather would be like on Accuweather from as far out as I could, and at times, I got a nasty shock! There was one day when the weather looked very nice on the Saturday, but then on the Saturday night and throughout the Sunday, snow was being forecast with temperatures in the 20s! Fortunately, as time went on, the temperatures improved and the snow disappeared, although it was replaced by rain. Oh well, I guess you can’t have everything! And heck, who knows what the weather will be like until you actually get there, right?
We’re also now booked for valet parking at Gatwick Airport. I did contemplate booking an airport hotel the night before our flight, but I quickly dismissed this, as we would barely have time to enjoy either the stay or breakfast the next morning. The problem was that to stay at the Hilton, you’d have to pay for the parking for two days and that could’ve easily hit £40 (about $55). At least if we’re at home, we should be able to set enough alarms to make sure we’re up and at ‘em early enough for our flight!
So those are our plans. We’ll be up and at ‘em bright and early on Saturday morning and home late on Sunday night. Hopefully I’ll have the startings of a trip report from next week sometime.
Sounds like a great plan Cheryl! I really enjoyed my time in Vienna! We went to the Hapsburgs' Palace and took the Sound of Music tour! I have great pictures of jumping up and down the Do Re Me Stairs!
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What a great weekend this sounds like! I miss the days of jetting off for the weekend. Sigh. Only 7 more years or so until our youngest is in college, so hopefully one day we can start doing fun weekends again!
ENJOY! Looking forward to hearing all about it. (and now I have the Sound of Music soundtrack playing through my brain!)
Wow, sounds like you two are quite the little jetsetters! Wish I had your choices when it came to a quick out of town trip. Although, I can be in Disney in about 3 hours.
Sounds like a great plan Cheryl! I really enjoyed my time in Vienna! We went to the Hapsburgs' Palace and took the Sound of Music tour! I have great pictures of jumping up and down the Do Re Me Stairs!
Well, you'll have to share those now you've mentioned them...
Wow, sounds like you two are quite the little jetsetters! Wish I had your choices when it came to a quick out of town trip. Although, I can be in Disney in about 3 hours.
That's the beauty of living in such a small country - we can be in another in a very short period of time! And being able to get to Disney in three hours sounds much better than our nine and a half hour flight...
Have a wonderful trip! I have been to Vienna twice and loved it both times. The food is so good!! I have been to all the places you are going except for the Spanish Riding School, they are always on tour in the summer, when I have been there. I am glad you are going to the show as I will love to read about it. Have a fun, safe trip, Karyn