Wild Africa Trek #7

Today we revisited Disney Animal Kingdom for our first Wild Africa Trek since 2019; sadly it might be the last time since they’ve made changes that make it worse than it used to be … but first, the positives …

As always, we begin close to where the Kilimanjaro Safaris queue is, but we skip the queues and go our own way past hippos, over high walkways, and eventually to lunch with views of elephants:

After the Wild Africa Trek we walked the Gorilla Falls trail and I took a few photos of a single Meerkat, and some Gorillas:

I also took video at various times, and put it together to this sequence:

The downsides of this expensive trip, compared with previous times, were mainly that too much time is spent on the aerial walkways, which limits time at the lunch location – the lunch location is the best place to see animals including elephants, giraffes and more, but we had very little time there compared with previous visits. And the aerial walkway is largely a waste of time now; it used to be that you walked over a multitude of crocodiles, but now there is EXACTLY ONE, which is hardly an exciting event and moreover, the full group (12 people?) meant that Margaret and I could not even see the one crocodile when we stopped at the view point.

Disney needs to redesign this event, shortening the aerial walkway and omitting the pointless crocodile view, so there’s more time at the lunch spot. On previous trips the lunch stop also allowed a walk out to see the lion / rhino area, but that was not allowed on this visit “not enough time” – well who’s fault is that?!

Also: there’s supposed to be photos provided (especially important with the number of times we were not allowed to take our own photos, during the drive part) but it’s been a full day since we finished the visit when I type this, and there are no photos. Maybe they will show up, but a full day feels like it should be sufficiently long enough to get them out to us.

Disney, you did badly here. You took a lot of money and did not provide sufficient experience value.

Leave a comment