advertisement
On The Insider: Sarah Jessica Parker's Mole Removed
Find Articles in:
all
Business
Reference
Technology
News
Sports
Health
Autos
Arts
Home & Garden
advertisement

Content provided in partnership with
Thomson / Gale

Disney's Yacht & Beach Club: from this pearl of a place, the whole Epcot Resorts area is your oyster

Travel America,  May-June, 2002  by Randy Mink

Sporting a nattily nautical motif, your rambling clapboard "cottage" is an impressive jewel in the necklace of deluxe hostelries strung around the shoreline, a movie-set harbor complete with a lighthouse that welcomes you home after frolics in Walt Disney World's fantasy parks. Heady throwbacks to New England resort villages of yesteryear, the shingled, oyster-gray Yacht Club--and its sister, the blue-and-white Beach Club--recall the grand seaside homes of Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard. Even though you're on a freshwater lake in the middle of Florida, you can almost smell salt in the air.

Most Popular Articles in Arts
Art since 1900: Modernism, Antimodernism, Postmodernism
Free-standing cardboard sculpture
What makes a successful business person? Business people who are tops in ...
Take advantage of local advertising: TV, newspaper or magazines? If your ...
Tino Sehgal at the ICA
More »
advertisement

Crescent Lake is the centerpiece of the Epcot Resorts Area, a magical kingdom all its own, a royal realm we discovered on our latest trip to Disney World. Just steps from the hotel, you can rent a mini-speedboat at Bayside Marina, go on a fishing charter, lounge on the beach, or hop a water shuttle to Disney-MGM Studios or Epcot Center. Stroll 10 minutes around the lake and you're at Disney's Boardwalk Inn, whose old-fashioned shoreside amusement strip features street performers, music clubs, and restaurants, including ESPN Club, a must for sports fans. Also nearby is Fantasia Gardens miniature golf, across from the monumental Disney Swan and Disney Dolphin resorts and their wide range of inviting eateries.

The Epcot Resorts Area, in short, is a pedestrian's paradise. It's nice to know there are so many options right outside your door. And you can even walk--yes, walk--to Epcot Center, where the high-tech wizardry of Future World mingles with international cultures at World Showcase's 11 pavilions. From the Yacht & Beach Club's "oceanside" front yard you can see Epcot's trademark silver geosphere beyond the trees.

We stayed at the stately, 621-room Yacht Club, where guests are greeted by desk clerks in navy blue blazers and bellmen wearing knickers, blue-striped shirts, and snapbrim caps. In the lobby, accented with oak floors, brass fixtures, and rich millwork, oriental vases brim with plants, and a huge globe harks back to the days of early navigators.

Yacht Club guest rooms, all with French doors that open onto porches or balconies, are done in crisp blues and whites that echo the New England maritime theme. Our first-floor nest, with two queen-size beds and a daybed, had a framed map of Nantucket, a picture of old-time sailing ships, and red-and-blue curtains with a Mickey Mouse pattern. Furniture in all rooms is white.

The 572-room Beach Club, just down the wide boardwalk, has a more whimsical feel. Architect Robert A. M. Stern, who designed the Yacht & Beach Club (and Disney's Boardwalk, too), says the Beach Club is done in "stick style," the prevalent architecture for seaside wooden cottages in the 1860s and '70s. "It's a little bit of this, a little bit of that," he said. "Like grandmother's fabulous beach house--ceiling fans, chintz, gingham." A seashell motif, white wicker furniture, and French limestone floors adorn the lobby.

In between the hotels is Stormalong Bay, a water playground with meandering lagoons and a 150-foot waterslide that begins high atop the mast of a shipwreck. The three-acre pool, really a mini-water park, is the dual resorts' centerpiece and our kids' preferred spot to hang out. Surprises include whirling currents, a bubbling bay, waterfalls, and a sand-bottom area. In tucked-away alcoves far removed from Stormalong Bay, each hotel features an unguarded "quiet pool" and whirlpool.

Crescent Lake has a sand beach with striped cabanas and chairs, but swimming is not allowed. The marina offers canopy and pedal boats as well as motorized watercraft. You might land catfish or bigmouth bass during a two-hour guided fishing excursion on the 25-acre lake and adjoining waterways.

Next door to Stormalong Bay are the video games and pinball machines of Lafferty Place Arcade, plus a bright `n' bouncy soda shop called Beaches & Cream, our favorite restaurant at the Yacht & Beach Club. Juicy Fenway Park Burgers come in four sizes--the single, double, triple, and grand slam. To jukebox tunes of the '50s and '60s, families seated in booths or at the counter also feast on hot dogs, chili or cheese fries, chocolate phosphates, and frosty malts. Sundaes range from banana splits to the decadent Milky Way cake, a bundt cake laced with Milky Way bars and topped with ice cream, hot fudge, and butterscotch. For the whole gang, there's the Kitchen Sink, a metal container with eight scoops of ice cream covered in all the toppings. As the stainless steel sink dish is delivered to your table, the lights are dimmed and an announcement is made for all to hear.

You might set aside one evening for the New England-style clambake buffet at the Beach Club's Cape May Cafe, named after the venerable Jersey Shore resort town. Featured are steamed oysters, mussels, clams, redskin potatoes, corn-on-the-cob, assorted baked fish, pasta, barbecue pork ribs, and sirloin beef tips.

Goofy and friends join guests for a character breakfast buffet every morning at Cape May Cafe. The cartoon favorites come around and pose for pictures while you fill up on biscuits and gravy, eggs, sausage, and all kinds of pastries, cereals, and fruits, not to mention pancakes, french toast, and Mickey Mouse mini-waffles. Cost is $15.99 for adults, $8.99 for kids.