Animal Kingdom
/The trick when going to America is to use jetlag to your advantage. The time difference has you waking up at five in the morning raring to go. So why not get up and go? The parks are are their quietest for the first forty five minutes of the day, so why not get there when they open? Also, said the photographer, you get the best light early in the day. There’s probably some good light to be had towards the end of the day too, but since using that would involve staying up beyond 7:00pm it is unlikely I’ll be seeing it for a while. Another thing that the photographer said was “Don’t get a new camera a day before you go away and then spend your quality holiday time trying to figure out how to use it.”. But I seem to have ignored that one, as we shall see later.
Today sees us at the Animal Kingdom theme park, where Disney takes cultural appropriation to another level by co-opting mother nature in the production. It’s done really, really well. They even manage to conjure up a Tibetan village in the foothills of Everest.
The mountain is much closer than you think and contains a roller coaster
I think you could buy the umbrellas
While I was looking around the souvenir shop (of course there’s a souvenir shop) I noticed a big display of cameras, none of which were for sale. I got chatting with the sales assistant (everyone in America is wonderfully chatty) and she told me that they were cameras which had been left on Everest by various climbers and tourists. I’m assuming that they took the film out of the camera and then discarded the heavy camera bodies to ease the journey back. I’m trying not to entertain a more grisly explanation. Anyhoo, it was very impressive to see them all in amongst the keyrings and fridge magnets.
Blurry giraffe
They do a really good “jungle expedition” ride which puts you in an “jeep” and then takes you round a huge safari park. It’s great. I got a seat right at the back which I thought would be perfect for photos, what with the extra view right out of the back. What I hadn’t reckoned with was the way that the ride also emulates an extremely lumpy track through the savannah. What with me being a long way from the back axle, I was flung all over the place, making considered long distance photography a bit tricky.
By the end I’d kind of got the hang of things and was using the old “spray and pray” technique where you just set the camera to take pictures as quickly as possible and then hold down the shutter button. Using this I managed to get twenty slightly different pictures of an ostrich. All of which were slightly blurred because I had the shutter speed set too low. Oh well.
The tree is made of concrete and has an auditorium below it
I really hope that there are boats like this in the real world
We had a wonderful day. And got back to the hotel at exactly 5:00pm again. Go us.