Disney World, Universal Orlando and SeaWorld will all close ahead of
Milton
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[October 09, 2024] By
MIKE SCHNEIDER
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Orlando’s tourism machine began grinding to a halt
Tuesday with at least three major theme parks and the main airport
announcing closures ahead of Hurricane Milton ’s expected hit as a major
storm in Florida.
Walt Disney World, Universal Orlando and SeaWorld will close their theme
parks and respective entertainment facilities on Wednesday, with the
latter two also closed on Thursday and Disney likely to remain closed.
Universal also canceled Halloween Horror Nights scheduled for both days.
The theme parks join Orlando International Airport, which said it would
cease operations Wednesday morning. The airport is the nation’s seventh
busiest and Florida’s most trafficked.
Disney World had said earlier in the day that it was open and planned
only to close its campgrounds and rental cabins ahead of the storm.
The only indication at Disney Springs that a hurricane was coming had
been the closure of a hot air balloon ride. “Closed due to hurricane,”
an electronic sign read. “Stay safe.”
All the other stores and restaurants in the outdoor shopping, dining and
entertainment complex inside the resort were open and doing brisk
business.
Milton, which is expected to come ashore Wednesday, threatened to ruin
the vacations of tens of thousands of tourists at Disney World.
Nicole and Zeb Downs arrived on Monday after a 21-hour drive from
Arkansas, expecting a 12-day Florida vacation with their three young
sons. By Tuesday afternoon, they were contemplating packing up their car
and heading back.
“We are disappointed but it’s kind of out of our hands at this point,”
said Zeb Downs as he strolled with his family along a still-bustling
Disney Springs shopping and restaurant district at the park resort.
Neither of them had experienced a hurricane before and weren’t sure they
wanted to try it.
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Calm weather greets tourists strolling past the various shops at the
Disney Springs entertainment complex as Hurricane Milton threatens
Florida, Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2024, in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. (AP
Photo/John Raoux)
The Orlando area is the most visited
destination in the United States due to Disney World, Universal
Orlando Resort and other theme parks, attracting 74 million tourists
last year alone.
October is also among the busier times for theme parks because of
Halloween-related celebrations, which have become major money
generators over the past couple decades. Universal Orlando hosts
“Halloween Horror Nights,” with ghoulish haunted houses based on
slasher films and other pop culture horror, and Disney has its tamer
“Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween Party.”
While Disney rarely shuts its doors — save for dangerous hurricanes
in recent years, the COVID-19 pandemic and the Sept. 11, 2001,
attacks — its hotels are often havens for coastal residents fleeing
impending storms. A check of Disney World’s online reservation
system on Tuesday morning showed no vacancies.
Those lucky enough to get a hotel reservation have gotten unexpected
treats during past storms. During Hurricane Irma in 2017, guests at
a hotel on Disney property found themselves stranded with actor
Kristen Bell, who voiced the role of Anna in the beloved Disney film
“Frozen.” While in Orlando, the actor found time to sing songs for
evacuees at a nearby hurricane shelter.
Once a hurricane passes, the theme parks try to return operations to
normal as quickly as possible. After Hurricane Charley charted a
devastating path through Orlando in 2004, Disney World had utility
vehicles picking up downed tree limbs and clearing roads on its
property within an hour in the pitch-dark night.
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