Some horror and island hopping…

About a month ago, the fam and I were finishing up our most recent vacation — a trip to Universal Orlando for Halloween Horror Nights and Epic Universe and a cruise on Disney Cruise Line’s newest ship, the Disney Treasure. We were away for about a week and a half and it was absolutely splendid to be able to spend that time together. Here’s the recap!

We flew in on a Thursday afternoon and checked in at Universal’s Terra Luna resort. This is one of the three new hotels built right near the Epic Universe theme park that opened earlier this year. We’ve stayed at Stella Nova and Helios Grande, so Terra Luna was the last of the three that we needed to try out. It is basically a carbon copy of Stella Nova, but a little farther away from Epic and a flip-flopped lobby layout. We enjoyed our time there but likely will choose Stella Nova when staying in that area again just because it is a little closer to Epic. Otherwise, great experience.

While at Universal, we spent Thursday evening at Universal Studios enjoying Halloween Horror Nights. I went to this event last year for the first time but my husband has been going for years. This time, we brought the Daughter and, of course, went with the RIP Tour option again. This tour is the hands-down best way to enjoy HHN and provides a small group of people (we had 11 in total, I think) a personal guide who takes you straight to the entrance of all of the HHN houses with no wait, provides the backstory info on those houses and the scarezones, gets you up-close seating at the nightly show (“Nightmare Fuel: Circus of Decay” was this year’s show), makes sure you go through all of the scarezones, allows for rest breaks including one in a private lounge overlooking the park near the Jimmy Fallon show, and the tour offers a buffet prior to the tour to kick off the fun! On that buffet, you can find a lot of the special snack items that are available for purchase out in the park during the event but you get them for free (and however many you want!) You can also load up on sodas and waters so you stay hydrated during the evening. Oh! You also get Express Pass to use at the attractions after your tour is over, but we never end up riding anything. Truly, once you take an RIP Tour, you’ll never go back. The only way to do it ‘better’ would be to do a private VIP tour versus a non-private one but the cost difference is significant on that and I think non-private works great for us!

A 'deviled' egg from Halloween Horror Nights

From the buffet, I present to you a ‘deviled’ egg. In fact, I hate deviled eggs (I don’t eat eggs and I don’t like mayonnaise) but this one is special. It’s actually a dessert! These are called’ Yum Yum Deviled eggs’ and are from the Fallout food stand. Coconut panna cotta filled with Chamoy pineapple bits and topped with mango topping and Tajin make up this dish and it was so good! 10 out of 10!

The show, “Nightmare Fuel: Circus of Decay”, was a sequel to last year’s show (Nightmare Fuel: Nocturnal Circus”) and it did not disappoint. You can expect the show to be something like a cross between Cirque du Soleil and a burlesque show. Definitely not for the prudes or little kids but there really shouldn’t be any little kids at this event as a whole. Very much for older teenagers, at minimum, or adults. Acrobatics, fire, contortion, dancing, and full of high energy, this show is incredible. Not to be missed. There was a lagoon show this year too but we missed that because of timing (boo!) but there’s only so much you can do in one night!

There were four scarezones: The Cat Lady of Crooked Lane, Masquerade: Dance with Death, Mutations: Toxic Twenties, and The Origins of Horror. If I were to rank them, Masquerade would definitely be first because it was so well done. I would share pictures but… don’t want to scare any unsuspecting readers! Cat Lady would be my next favorite, then Toxic Twenties a close second, and Origins fourth. All were really fun to see and go through, a few times in fact. There were some other enhancements like the zombies at Mel’s Dine-In, chainsaw clowns in Springfield USA, and Club Horror in San Francisco. I’m a sucker for some zombies and quite enjoyed that area.

For the houses this year, ten as usual, with five that were based on licensed properties: Fallout, Terrifier, Jason Universe, Five Nights at Freddy’s and WWE Presents: The Horrors of Wyatt Sicks. Then we had five original concepts: El Artista: A Spanish Haunting, Grave of Flesh, Hatchet and Chains: Demon Bounty Hunters, Dolls Play Dead, and Galkn: Monsters of the North. Everybody had their faves but I’m a big Fallout Fan so that won me over just for the concept. All five IP houses were really well done. We did Jason last and, I swear, I’ve never seen so many Jasons jumping out at you at one time! Terrifier didn’t do much for me but neither did the movies. The originals were all great, as usual, and I loved the Dolls Play Dead house (reminded me of what my sister did to my Barbies when I went on a sleepover) and El Artista the most. Grave of Flesh was right up there though. All-in-all, this was a great year for the houses and the scarezones and I can’t wait until 2026!

After a very long night at HHN, we dragged ourselves out of bed the next morning to go to Epic Universe. And no, there was no way we were making it at Early Park Admission or even near the regular park opening time! Since we’ve been to Epic a few times now, our focus was mainly on the Isle of Berk and Dark Universe. We had lunch at The Atlantic again (so good!) and snacked around the park for dinner. Luckily we caught one of the How to Train Your Dragon Night Lights, Pouncer, while they were visiting with guests. I’d love to see them all at once, super cute and fun to watch!

Pouncer Night Light

The next morning, we were up early and ready to head back to the airport, where we were meeting the Disney Cruise Line transfers to Port Canaveral for our cruise. Normally, we either drive ourselves to the Port or take the Disney transfers from our Disney resort. However, since we were staying at Universal, that wouldn’t work. Using the airport transfers was crazy easy and something I’ll consider doing again for sure. We got there early, they took our luggage so we didn’t have to fool with it again until it showed up in the stateroom, and got us checked in. That meant — nothing else to do when we got to the Port! Whoop whoop! And since we were sailing Concierge level, we got to the Port, went through security, to the Concierge waiting area for like two minutes, and onto the ship! Couldn’t have been any easier!

Being able to board early is so nice and extra sweet since Concierge staterooms are ready for guests to enter earlier too! We hopped on the ship, took some photos in the Grand Hall, and then had a quick lunch at 1923 (Concierge guests only) before heading to our stateroom. We were on deck 13, forward, port side and it was a lovely location for us. Not far from the elevators, short walk to the Concierge pool deck and down a short flight of steps into the Concierge lounge, two decks up from the quick service food (Festival of Foods) and ice cream, and a short ride down to the laundry room (well used by all during this sailing!)

Sailing with Disney is one of my most favorite things to do for a vacation and we definitely had the best time on the Treasure. It is just under a year old and very similar to the Disney Wish (2022) and the newly added Disney Destiny (which just arrived in Port Canaveral today actually!) Our itinerary was a 7-night Eastern Caribbean sailing which had three sea days, a day at Castaway Cay in the Bahamas (Disney’s private island), a day on Tortola in the British Virgin Islands, and a day on St. Thomas in the US Virgin Islands. This was our first time on the Eastern itinerary and I would absolutely love to do it again. St Thomas was stunning as was Tortola and having three sea days gave us time to relax and enjoy the ship. We chose to upgrade to a Concierge stateroom since we were sailing to celebrate the Daughter’s 21st birthday. Nothing like celebrating #21 with free alcohol in the evenings at the Concierge lounge! Seriously though, Concierge is such an upgrade, to which nothing compares. You get so many upgrades like:

  • book excursions and activities first (which means that’s about the only way you can book a cabana on Disney’s private islands)
  • getting to board first
  • Welcome lunch after boarding
  • upgraded in-room toiletries
  • upgraded bedding including a king bed
  • stocked in-room mini-fridge with sodas and waters
  • access to the keyed Concierge lounge for sodas, juices, waters, coffee drinks, tea, snacks, desserts, appetizers, alcohol (free during happy hour!), and so much more
  • access to the keyed Concierge sun deck which has upgraded furniture, upgraded towels, sodas/waters, smoothies, cool washcloths, sunscreen products, hot tubs, and a super fun splash type pool
  • early entry to the nightly shows in the Walt Disney Theatre (best seating!)
  • complimentary popcorn for the shows (movies and theatre shows or just whenever)
  • upgraded table locations in the three main dining rooms, putting you closer to the shows
  • Concierge team members to help with anything you might need during your sailing
  • Private character meets in the lounge
  • Etc!

And talk about spoiled… when you get off the ship, going back to reality definitely stinks! But being onboard with Disney and having that access is truly worth every penny. We spent so much time out on the Concierge sun deck and I can’t tell you how much popcorn and waters we went through. The ships are very large and being able to come back to that little slice of paradise (which was never even remotely crowded, sometimes we were all alone!) was heavenly. The Concierge folks always know your name too and that extra touch is just magical.

We did actually pull ourselves off of decks 12 and 13 every once in a while for breakfast and lunches in Marceline Market (the buffet), a lovely brunch at the adult only restaurant called Palo, watching the shows at night, doing some shopping, enjoying the Haunted Mansion Parlor (no words to describe how perfect this place is!), and so.much.trivia! Oh yeah, and the laundry. So.much.laundry, lol. We love playing trivia on Disney cruises and there was some stiff competition this time around. Every trivia we played was packed and you usually had to know all the answers to even have a chance. Craziness! We played everything from 80s music trivia to general trivia to Disney movie trivia and came so close to winning but alas, never took home a medal. We did win a new game called ‘Go Fetch’ though and got medals for that (woo-hoo!). This game was kind of like Let’s Make a Deal (for those of you old enough to know what that is) where Monty would go out into the audience and ask for anyone who had a particular item. This game gave you points for everything you brought/did to the host, like being the first one to bring him three shoes, or a wedding ring, or to sing him a song, etc. I have never hustled so fast in my life! And next time I’ll know, bring a pocketbook with more random stuff in it!

The main dining rooms on this ship are 1923, Worlds of Marvel, and Coco. This is where you go each evening for dinner and some are open for a sit-down breakfast and/or lunch as well. We had each location twice plus a third night at Worlds of Marvel that was Pirate Night. My favorite theme was the Coco restaurant (visually stunning) but I probably like the food in the Marvel restaurant the best. Each night had a different menu with all types of food to choose from. I will say, do not ever order Linguini Nero if that is an option. Guess what that is? Squid ink pasta. And yes, it is disgusting. I took one for the team, by accident, and can confidently say it needs to be removed from the options. The picture below is the ofrenda at the Coco restaurant.

Coco ofrenda

The nightly shows were Moana, Beauty and the Beast, and Disney Seas the Adventure. Of course, all were superb. It was extremely rocky on the Moana show night so they had to switch the ending a bit (and I’ve heard the other ending was better) but our show was phenomenal. Zero complaints. The actors in these productions are amazing and do incredible work despite the rest of us feeling like we’re rolling out of our seats! There was also a magician onboard, Jessica Jane, and she was quite fun to watch as well. We saw her twice, once in the main theatre and a second time at an adults-only show.

We were on a Halloween on the High Seas sailing which means Halloween activities happen during the cruise, most of which we didn’t participate in (darn lounge, lol). We did, however, do the trick-or-treating on the pool deck and got so much candy! It was like Mickey’s Not-So-Scary Halloween Party in Magic Kingdom but at sea… a great time. The characters were out in their Halloween costumes for pictures and such as well, looked like a lot of fun for everyone.

For our Castaway Cay day, we did have one of the coveted cabanas so the day was spent there. Ours was at Serenity Bay, the adult beach, so we spent a good deal of time floating out in the water with the included raft/tube rentals and then the rest of the time lounging in the cabana with the included drinks and snacks. Breaking for lunch was nice too and we were golf-carted over to the restaurant to enjoy that when hunger hit. One of the things I also really like about the cabanas is the freshwater shower at the cabana itself. I hate being sticky with ocean water so having that right at my fingertips is very welcome. Endless towels, cool washcloths, drinks, and comfy furniture with shad doesn’t hurt either! We also saw the new cabanas that Disney is building on Castaway Cay between the existing family beach ones and the adult beach. These look super cute and should definitely help availability since it is near impossible to get one now!

Our two port days were Tortola and St Thomas. We had never been to either so we were quite excited to be able to see those islands. Tortola was beautiful and we had an excursion to Jost Van Dyke for a beach day on that island. We went there via a catamaran ride of about 30 minutes, then an open-air truck for maybe 10 more minutes. The road to get from the marina to the beach was no joke! Straight up and down the mountainside. When we got to the beach spot on White Bay Beach, we were dropped off near the famed Soggy Dollar Bar (currently closed for renovations). The beach was really pretty and so was the water, except for the seaweed. This has been a rough year for seaweed in Mexico and the Caribbean and we unfortunately got that on this beach day too. The folks there did a great job trying to keep it cleaned up though compared to a lot that I’ve seen, so kudos to them for that. It didn’t put too big of a damper on the day. We took the catamaran back to the ship, avoiding the rum punch and therefore major seasickness, and grabbed a few souvenirs at the port before re-boarding.

At St. Thomas, we had a three-part excursion booked. The first stop was Drake’s Seat, high atop the island with excellent views of Magens Bay, where we were headed for stop number two. When we got to Magens Bay, we were blown away by how pretty the entire area was and how clear the water was. We stayed in the water for our entire time there, only hopping out for a quick rinse to throw our regular clothes back on. While out in the water, the Daughter and I even saw sea turtles swimming (in the wild!) right near us. That couldn’t be beat. The last stop was back down near the ship with a ride up the mountain again in the Skyride. This was a little nerve-wracking (let’s just say the Skyride is an old system) but we made it up, experienced some incredible views, and then headed back down to the ship.

After a week on the Treasure, it was time to debark and head home. JetBlue had a little bit of a flight issue (lost a knob, go figure) so we returned home about four hours later than planned. Not a huge problem though as we got some flight credits that I used to book our next flights down to Orlando in December!

Next stop, Hilton Head then back to Disney in December! Stay tuned! I’ll leave you with my favorite towel animal from the cruise!

xoxo, Amber

The tale of two trips…

Since my last post, I have been back to Disney twice but have neglected to recap my adventures for my loyal readers! Alas, it is time to get the stories told!

The first trip was in late August. This one consisted of just the hubs and I and we took to the road to begin the adventure. When we arrived in Orlando, we spent two nights at one of my favorite places, the Cabins at Fort Wilderness. You’ll remember those from my last post. It was first time that the hubs enjoyed one of the new cabins and he liked it as much as the daughter and I did back in July. Those things are the best! 10 out of 10. After those two nights, we moved over to Hard Rock Hotel at Universal Orlando to spend two more nights. On our last night, we drove up to Jekyll Island in Georgia for a little beach fun before heading home the next day. We were on the move for the whole trip but had a blast!

OK. So Disney first. We did all of the usual Disney things (and saw the renovated Country Bears Jamboree Show) but were also able to enjoy a special after hours event for Disney Vacation Club Members called Moonlight Magic. This one took place at Hollywood Studios from 9:30pm to 12:30am. All of the attractions were open, we got free snacks, there were special dance parties and characters, and even our own special showing of Fantasmic! So cool. These events are super hard to get signed up for nowadays but I’m so glad I secured a spot for us for this one.

Grizzly Hall show theater for Country Bears Jamboree in Magic Kingdom
Moonlight Magic guide
Mickey and Minnie's Runaway Railway scene

Universal was a blast! Once we hopped over there, we really had a great time in the parks and at Hard Rock. We spent a decent amount of time in the pool there mid-afternoon each day until the rain kicked us out. Our room was as far away from the lobby as it could possibly be, literally at a stairwell, but that was PERFECT! We could go right down that stairwell and pop out at the pool entrance and at a sidewalk that connected directly to the walking path to the parks. Woot! I love it when we get those types of rooms.

We enjoyed a lot of time in the parks, riding the attractions, checking out the new Dreamworks Land, and giving me time to capture some great shots for future marketing. I had a training event at Universal while there so I was able to pick up some new knowledge and talk one-on-one with some of our sales staff in person which is always so valuable! We were also able to get amped up for Halloween Horror Nights by seeing some of the props that were out and ready for the event to officially start — right after we left, of course.

Owl Post
Gringotts ride queue
Wolverine artwork
Po's Training Camp sign in Dreamworks Land

Up at Jekyll Island, we drove in just for the night to see what we could enjoy on our brief stopover. This island is super unique with Driftwood Beach at the north end and has been home to many TV shows and film productions. No shark teeth for me (darn it!) but this was an interesting place to visit and a new type of beach environment for me with the funky water color and driftwood.

Driftwood Beach
Driftwood Beach
Driftwood Beach, tree roots

The second trip was in mid-September. The hubs, the daughter, and I flew down to Orlando to visit Disney and Universal again for her annual birthday trip. We stayed at Animal Kingdom Lodge at Disney and Sapphire Falls resort at Universal for this trip. The Front Desk at Animal Kingdom Lodge was able to snag us a partial savanna view for our ‘resort view’ room, which was super and unexpected. Nice birthday bonus!

Partial savanna view at Animal Kingdom Lodge
Partial savanna view at Animal Kingdom Lodge at sunset

We enjoyed some time at all four parks during our two nights there plus hit Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party at Magic Kingdom on our last night. It was fantastic, as always! Maybe even better than our last one because we scored a super spot for the Boo to You parade on Main Street right across from Casey’s Corner. We had to grab it EARLY but it was worth it. That is our most favorite parade of all of them in the parks. I love seeing the Headless Horseman go by and the Haunted Mansion ghosts!

When we went over to Universal, our room took a while to be ready (because it was a huge Sapphire Suite!) so we spent the afternoon at the pool there. I really liked this pool as it had a neat raised up area across the middle of the pool to act like a bridge/path to get from one side of the pool to the other. The water across is very shallow so you can walk across the pool to find more seating, the restaurant, get to the water slide entrance, etc. Since our room wasn’t ready, we used the Fitness Center showers and changing areas which were very convenient for this purpose.

Once the room was ready, we got settled in. The daughter, being in college, had some school work to do so she got a big room service order for dinner and got to work. The hubs and I packed up and headed to Universal Studios for Halloween Horror Nights. Truth be told, work or no, the daughter didn’t want anything to do with Halloween Horror Nights anyway. This was my first time at HHN so I wasn’t really sure what to expect. I decided to splurge and get a RIP Tour for us so we could skip all the lines for the houses and get up close seating for the Nightmare Fuel Nocturnal Circus show. This was EXCELLENT! I will be going to HHN next year and we will be doing a RIP Tour again for sure. There are two types, private and non-private. Non-private was what we did, with like 8-10 other people. Our guide was Jason from NJ and he was the best! We finished five of the ten houses in the first hour! We started at 6pm and were totally done by 9pm with all houses and Scare Zones done plus two decent breaks. Then Jason led us over to the show location and put us right in the second and third rows, super close to the stage. After the show was over, we were on our own to continue exploring and had the use of Express Pass for the attractions. Normally, the hubs goes alone and gets the Express Pass for the houses, gets started around 6pm, but doesn’t get finished until like 1am and doesn’t get to see the show (you need to line up early to get a spot). We were done and on the way back to the hotel by like 10:30pm. Amazing!

Let’s dip into the details on HHN. So ten houses and five Scare Zones. Food stands featuring event-themed items for purchase. Merchandise throughout the parks including the famous Tribute Store inside of Universal Studios. Most attractions remain open for the event. The Scare Zones are located in different places in the parks. They had a big one when you first entered the park where some Scare Actors ‘greeted’ the guests with chainsaws and some chasing. There was another themed like a medieval torture faire and one with characters from the Blumhouse films like M3GAN, Black Phone, The Purge, etc. I also enjoyed the zombies in the Swamp of the Undead and probably should’ve gone through it a second time. (Huge Walking Dead fan here.) The Scare Actors have the best costumes and makeup, really movie quality. I don’t know how they pull it off in the Orlando heat. The houses are either based on recent horror movies like A Quiet Place, Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire, Insidious: The Further, etc. or original content like Triplets of Terror, Slaughterhouse Cinema 2, and Goblin’s Fest. The houses are like big mazes with Scare Actors that come out at you when you going through, props, excellent sets, fog, sounds (or no sound, in the case of A Quiet Place), etc. You get very immersed in each house as you go through it. Movie quality for sure! Then we have Nightmare Fuel Nocturnal Circus. This is best described as Cirque du Soleil meets a burlesque show. There is fire, acrobatics, aerials, stunts, dancing, and more. Definitely a must see for any HHN guest. By the way, guests are recommended to be 14 and up for this event by Universal. I did see smaller kids there, including the poor little boy crying his eyes out after going into the first Scare Zone, so keep that in mind. I also know of some younger teenagers who love scary movies that didn’t do so when the scary movie on the screen was now in person and in your face holding a chainsaw. The Scare Actors aren’t allowed to touch you, and you are forbidden from touching them, but they do get close.

Phew! That was a lot of recap! Two trips in the span of a couple of weeks might leave you thinking, how do you have enough to do each time? In reality though, we did completely different things on each trip and still left with a few things we didn’t get around to (here’s looking at you, Dead Coconut Club).

We’ll be back in Florida in January (that seems like forever!) but have some fun planned between now and then. Stay tuned!

xoxo,

Amber