From the Disney Parks Blog and written by: Ryan March
There’s no place like “home” for the holidays, and Disney Vacation Club “Home” Resorts have decked their halls in festively fitting fashion, trimming trees with ornaments uniquely themed to each resort. See if you can guess the resort based on the photos and the following clues…
An eagle and a raven watch over this owl.
The resort’s lobby includes a nod to the Grand
Canyon.
This resort features one check-in lobby but two Disney
Vacation Club Resorts.
One of the resorts that shares this lobby changed its
name in 2017.
A grizzly symbol of love is among the details of this
resort’s waterfront accommodations.
Ready for the answer?
You’ll find this owl ornament among the many inspired by woodland creatures in the lobby of Disney’s Wilderness Lodge. (Among the lobby’s most striking features are towering totem poles topped by an eagle and raven. Stonework in the lobby’s fireplace represent layers of the Grand Canyon. The lobby serves both Boulder Ridge Villas and Copper Creek Villas & Cabins at Disney’s Wilderness Lodge. Prior to 2017, Boulder Ridge Villas was known simply as The Villas at Disney’s Wilderness Lodge. Framed replicas of the bear-shaped love totem given to Kenai in the animated film “Brother Bear” are among the details in the décor of Cascade Cabins, part of Copper Creek Villas & Cabins at Disney’s Wilderness Lodge.)
This merry merman hangs on a Christmas tree that sits
beside a train.
This resort changed its name in 1996.
This resort’s bar is named with a nod to smuggling.
Dinner at this resort begins with a look at the family
album.
This resort is home to a coastal castle.
Ready for the answer?
You’ll find this Santa Claus merman ornament among the many mermaids and mermen on the Christmas tree in the lobby of Disney’s Old Key West Resort. (The Christmas tree sits beside a scale model of cars from the Florida East Coast Railway. Prior to 1996, Disney’s Old Key West Resort was known simply as Disney Vacation Club Resort, as this was the first Disney Vacation Club property. The Gurgling Suitcase bar references Cuban rum illegally brought to Key West in tourists’ suitcases. The entrance to Olivia’s Café features a gallery of framed Member photos known as the Disney Vacation Club Family Album. The resort’s pool features a waterslide through an oversized sand castle.)
You’ll find this ornament of musical merriment in a
resort with two lobbies.
This resort is divided between a pair of buildings with
non-English names, one that means “welcome” and one that means “necklace.”
Among this resort’s popular restaurants is one named with
a word meaning “art.”
Guest rooms at this resort are adorned with uniquely
carved shields.
While all Members who call Disney Vacation Club Resorts
“home” know how to have a good time, this resort’s residents are particularly
wild.
Ready for the answer?
You’ll find this ornament among the many inspired by African musical instruments on the towering tree in the Jambo House lobby at Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge. (The resort is divided between Jambo House, named with the Swahili word for “welcome,” and Kidani Village, named with the Swahili word for “necklace.” Sanaa, the name of the savanna-side restaurant in Kidani Village, is Swahili for “art.” Uniquely carved African shields adorn guest room doors. And as for those “wild” residents? The resort’s savannas are, of course, teeming with African wildlife.)
Where can you find this jolly jockey?
One of the world’s favorite salty snacks was invented in
the town that inspired this resort.
Some of this resort’s accommodations have a second story
but not a first.
While all Disney Vacation Club Resorts are classy, this
resort includes buildings that formerly housed actual classrooms.
More than 30 restaurants are located within walking
distance of this resort.
This is the largest of all Disney Vacation Club Resorts.
Ready for the answer?
You’ll find this ornament among the many inspired by horse racing on the trees in the lobby of Disney’s Saratoga Springs Resort & Spa. (Potato chips were invented in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. The resort’s Treehouse Villas feature single-level accommodations perched a story above the forest floor. Some of the resort’s buildings were part of the former Disney Institute campus. The resort features a walking bridge to Disney Springs and its many dining destinations.)
For a deeper dive into Disney holiday traditions, look
for Disney Editions’ new coffee table book “Holiday Magic at the Disney Parks:
Celebrations Around the World from Fall to Winter” wherever books are sold.
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