Pooh's Hunny Hunt

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Pooh's Hunny Hunt
Coordinates
35°37′54″N 139°52′53″E / 35.6318°N 139.8814°E / 35.6318; 139.8814
StatusOperating
Opening dateSeptember 4, 2000
ReplacedSkyway
Ride statistics
Attraction typeTrackless
Disney's Fastpass
available

Pooh's Hunny Hunt is a unique trackless

.

History

After the rise in popularity of Walt Disney's film adaptation of

Walt Disney World. Planners used an existing structure, that of the Fantasyland attraction Mr. Toad's Wild Ride
.

The next version of the attraction, considerably different in configuration, was Pooh's Hunny Hunt, which opened in Tokyo Disneyland. Due to a closure of all of the Skyways at Disney Parks across the world, including Tokyo, a space was left where the Fantasyland Skyway station once stood. With a budget of over $130 million, and featuring a never-before-used 'trackless' ride technology, Pooh's Hunny Hunt opened in late 2000 to large crowds and praise by many Disney internet fansites. To date, the attraction continues to have some of the longest wait times of any attraction at the Tokyo Disneyland Resort.[1]

Ride-through

The queue for the ride zig-zags in front of the entrance, which is shaped like a giant story book. Once inside, the rest of the line is made up of the pages of the story book which tell various parts of the story. Guests then board big, five-seater honey pots. These honey pots travel through the ride in groups of three.

Upon leaving the station, and making a left into the ride, the Honey pots stop in a line in front of a short video which has Christopher Robin giving Pooh a balloon. The vehicles then enter a very large room themed to the blustery day. There are many sights in this room, and the vehicles take turns visiting the various scenes. Pooh is seen flying around on his balloon. Kanga and Roo, Eeyore, Owl, Rabbit, and Piglet are getting blown about the wind. As the vehicles unite to leave the room, Tigger bounces from the bushes.

The honey pots then enter a dark room with three screens surrounded by trees. A swarm of bees flies through all three before Tigger comes in and starts singing and bouncing. The entire room, the trees, and the honey pots then begin to bounce with Tigger as he bounces from screen to screen. He then jumps up into one of the trees and the swarm of bees reemerges. The honey pots then go backward down a hallway filled with branches with Tigger seen clinging to one with a beehive stuck to his head.

The honey pots enter Pooh's house, where he is seen asleep with the balloon next to him. As he mumbles, the balloon grows the ears and eyes of a heffalump and the entire room vanishes into a starfield. Pooh then floats up into the air.

The vehicles then enter Pooh's dream sequence filled with the Heffalumps and Woozles that Pooh dreams about. This room is by far the most vibrant as the honey pots dance in circles with each other to a jazzy Heffalump band as colored lights and disco balls spin throughout the room. In a mirror found in the room, a balloon-like Heffalump can be seen sucking up honey from a honey pot before deflating. A Woozle can also be seen lighting a cannon shaped like a honey pot. Pooh is also seen hanging onto a living hot air balloon with a honey pot-like basket trying to reach for a beehive. There are many vehicles (one of them has a Heffalump and Woozle family riding in it) in this room and whenever three enter, three leave. The leaving vehicles exit through the trunk of a giant Heffalump which contains a tunnel. The vehicles go down the tunnel backward as Pooh spins above with projections of Heffalumps and Woozles.

The last room the vehicles pass through is the Honey Tree, where Pooh is eating his fill while singing how much he loves honey amidst its scent. The vehicles then pass a big, closed storybook of the adventure and then return to the unloading area as the narrator concludes the story.

Ride system

Pooh's Hunny Hunt uses a trackless ride system developed by

local positioning system (LPS; not to be confused with GPS) is used to manage these sensors. The patented control system[2] works by directional data being relayed from a master control computer directly to the vehicles which are fashioned to resemble honey pots. This data is then used to move an individual honey pot car through a complicated matrix embedded within the actual floor tiles. Every few seconds, the master computer generates a random path and ‘steers’ the honey pot in real-time, so as the cars roll through the ride the vehicles are, in fact, being told where to go. Because this system is in real-time, they can maneuver accordingly in just fractions of a second. This also allows for spontaneous yet synchronized ‘honey pot choreography’ with groups of honey pots (as many as 8 in a single show scene) appearing to ‘dance’ with the others, often timed with ‘beats’ in the music.[5] Due to limitless variations possible, each journey through the attraction is unique. Overall, Pooh's Hunny Hunt is reported to have had a budget of $130 million.[6]

Similar rides

Tokyo DisneySea, an amusement park adjacent to Tokyo Disneyland, features Aquatopia. The ride uses the same trackless technology as Pooh's Hunny Hunt; however, it runs in a shallow pool.[6]

Disneyland, Magic Kingdom, Shanghai Disneyland and Hong Kong Disneyland all feature dark rides based on Pooh. These rides operate as The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh and feature a more traditional track-based dark ride system.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Luigi's Rollickin' Roadsters and Disney's History of Trackless Ride Vehicles". Oh My Disney. March 31, 2016.
  2. ^
    Disney Enterprises, Inc.
     
  3. ^ Koppens, Ruud (15 November 2011). "ETF Ride Systems". The Coaster Crew (Interview). Orlando, Florida. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 12 May 2013.
  4. ^ "Mystic Mover". ETF Ride Systems. Archived from the original on 23 May 2013. Retrieved 9 May 2013.
  5. ^ Niles, Robert (21 April 2013). "Pooh's Hunny Hunt reviews". Theme Park Insider. Retrieved 16 May 2013.
  6. ^ a b Sim, Nick (3 September 2012). "Pooh's Hunny Hunt at Tokyo Disneyland". Theme Park Tourist. Retrieved 16 May 2013.

External links