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Hidden Mickey by Nancy Temple Rodrigue
Hidden Mickey by Nancy Temple Rodrigue











Hidden Mickey by Nancy Temple Rodrigue

Located in the same building as the Emporium, it was stuffed to the brim with candles of all shapes and sizes. Many of you remember the Candle Shop on Main Street. The only marking on this fan is a small sticker that says Made in Spain. It was a wonderful shop that had a little of everything from around the world. This lovely little fan was bought at the One Of a Kind Shop that used to be in the entrance to New Orleans Square. This lei recalled other items I had gotten through the years at Disneyland, but didn’t have any markings on them that said they, too, were from the Park. There is only my memory of when we got it and the fact it has been in my collection for decades. He had asked that the base of the tree be cut in half so a few feet could be added to the structure, and he wanted to make sure the work was done.Īs I remembered the wonderful times we had at the Tahitian Terrace, I realized that there are no markings or stamps or anything on this lei that would indicate it was from Disneyland’s past. Walt decided that the branches were so low that they would obstruct the view of the nearby Jungle Cruise boats as they returned to the dock. The centerpiece of the restaurant was a huge African coral tree. On this day, Walt especially wanted to see the Tahitian Terrace that was under construction. In Chapter 7, Walt and his team of Imagineers are going through the Park on their customary walk before the Park opened for the day, seeing how everything looked. The Tahitian Terrace had been mentioned in one of my novels, Hidden Mickey Adventures 4: Revenge of the Wolf. Going through my Disneyland mementos, I came across some badly crumpled plastic leis that I had saved from the Tahitian Terrace when our family had dinner there in the late 1960’s.













Hidden Mickey by Nancy Temple Rodrigue