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SorcererMickey
March 26th, 2006, 15:17
Disney park's yeti ride may be its scariest

By Travis Reed
The Associated Press
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 03.26.2006

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — "Respect tradition — beware," warn yellowed posters and weathered totem poles surrounding a 200-foot peak.

Inside lives the biggest, fiercest creature Walt Disney designers have ever created — the yeti — and a mile-long runaway train ride through the Himalayas that brings visitors face-to-face with this mythological legend.

In Nepalese lore, the mysterious yeti is thought to protect the pristine east Asian mountains and forests. At Walt Disney World's new Expedition Everest attraction, it's a howling animatronic beast — and the center of the theme park giant's first big-ticket attraction here in 2 1/2 years.

Everest, set to open April 7 in Disney's Animal Kingdom, features a train navigating an 80-foot drop, rumbling over bridges and through valleys backward and forward to escape the monster, who has seemingly twisted and broken the tracks.

With no upside-down turns, Everest isn't as white-knuckling as some new coasters. But it could help Disney draw visitors to the Animal Kingdom, which has long lagged in popularity behind sister parks Epcot, the Magic Kingdom and Disney-MGM Studios.

The Everest attraction, billed as a family thrill ride for those at least 44 inches tall, could scarcely be more different than Disney's last big-ticket item, the rocket-simulating Mission: Space. Equipped with vomit bags, Mission: Space uses a centrifuge and recreates two times the force of gravity while taking riders on a simulated trip to Mars.

Still, Everest was adventurous enough for 5-year-old Pauline Cordova, whose Monroe, N.J., family got a chance to check out Everest early as Disney continues testing the ride before the grand opening. Pauline's brothers Chris, 11, and Mike, 8, had already ridden it three times, but once was enough for her.

"I thought it was scary," Pauline said, clutching her mother's hand.
Several research trips to western China and Nepal helped Disney designers create the 6.2-acre attraction, including their rendition of a Himalayan village called "Serka Zong" that leads visitors up to the ride.

"The ride experience changes from this sort of scenic tour to this sort of fast-paced drop backwards," said Mike Lentz, vice president of new business initiatives for Walt Disney Imagineering.

The ride includes turns through a light mist meant to simulate weather in the low-lying mountains and scream-inducing rushes through the dark inside a fake snowcapped mountain.

At least 8,000 props purchased from Nepal adorn the village, along with prayer flags and ancient-looking carvings of goats and yaks. Disney is nurturing 900 bamboo plants, 10 species of trees and 110 species of shrubs to re- create the local vegetation around the attraction.

Park researchers were accompanied by Conservation International and film crews from Discovery Networks, whose Travel Channel will premiere a chronicle of the trip called "Expedition Everest: Journey to Sacred Lands" the week of April 9.

Source: http://www.azstarnet.com/allheadlines/121555http://www.azstarnet.com/allheadlines/121555

BevW
March 27th, 2006, 05:08
I saw a little preview of this on the Disney Channel and it looks totally awesome!!!

foreverducky
March 27th, 2006, 05:14
Oh I can't wait for this ride. I have it planned for day 2 of our trip in May. We usually head straight to Bugs Life, but I think we might have to changed that idea around a little. :D

SorcererMickey
March 27th, 2006, 05:26
...I think we might have to changed that idea around a little. :D

Definitely :yes: . I'm going to wait to ride it again, have been on it so many times that it feels like Big Thunder Mountain :D .

JuniorMickey
March 27th, 2006, 05:36
I cannot wait to ride again. It is an amazing ride!!!

d_dreamer
March 27th, 2006, 05:54
I know this may sound like me being a grump, but does anyone else think this rather a remake of the Matterhorn? Reveiws that can disqualify my arguement are very welcome

JuniorMickey
March 27th, 2006, 06:10
EE is nothing I've ever experienced before. I can't even find something to compare it to

SorcererMickey
March 27th, 2006, 06:15
There is no secret about that.

Joe Rhode, SVP of WDI Creative and designer of AK and Everest said that this is what Imagineers would have done had they had the technology back when Matterhorn was built. The same article mentioned that he said that WDW "finally had it's Matterhorn".

Matterhorn was when it opened a technological marvel. It was the first steel rollercoaster ever built :yes: .

d_dreamer
March 27th, 2006, 06:15
So I was kind of right about it?

Could you give a short description of it?

JuniorMickey
March 27th, 2006, 06:20
Chris/Lisa did a very good review somewhere around here

d_dreamer
March 27th, 2006, 06:22
Any idea of where I can look for it?

SorcererMickey
March 27th, 2006, 06:23
Here is a portion from an article from about.com (http://themeparks.about.com/cs/disneyparks/a/ExEverest.htm):

"This isn't the first time Disney has created a coaster with an icy mountain theme. Disneyland's Matterhorn Bobsleds (the world's first steel-tubing roller coaster) even includes an abominable snowman lurking in its caverns. But Expedition Everest will be a much more ambitious attraction. The ride's official opening date is early 2006. There may be a preview opening sometime in late 2005."

d_dreamer
March 27th, 2006, 06:27
Thank you SM! Makes me excited

JuniorMickey
March 27th, 2006, 07:03
here (http://www.wdisneyw.com/forums/showthread.php?t=46591) you go

Leolioness4200
March 27th, 2006, 09:53
Can't wait to ride this one :woohoo: when we go to AK this is going to be the first one I ride!

sgt
March 27th, 2006, 20:53
great ride

d_dreamer
March 28th, 2006, 03:54
:thanks: JM, C/L did a fantastic job on that review :thumbs: Now I'm really pumped.