longest attraction queue ever witnessed?
#22

Joined: Jan 2003
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Not on a trip, but in 1978, my husband waited in line for 10-1/2 hours to buy tickets for a Neil Diamond concert! I had to work the day they went on sale and he offered to go get them. This was before the internet, and they also were not selling them over the phone. The ONLY way to get a ticket was to go and stand in line.
#25

Joined: Mar 2004
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Here's another vote for the Vatican.
We were there in late April, and arrived there to see this line snaking around the corner.
So we walk along the line, trying to find the end. We turn the corner and see the line going all the way down the block and around another corner. We turn that corner and see the line going all the way down that block and around ANOTHER corner (that's 3 so far, if you're counting
).
As we turn the third corner, I can see the end of the line about halfway down this block, but for each step I take closer, another 3 people join the line. Afraid that I would be chasing the end of the line around the 4th corner, I speed up and finally jump in.
All things being said, though - that line moved relatively quickly - we were inside the Vatican in about an hour.
We were there in late April, and arrived there to see this line snaking around the corner.
So we walk along the line, trying to find the end. We turn the corner and see the line going all the way down the block and around another corner. We turn that corner and see the line going all the way down that block and around ANOTHER corner (that's 3 so far, if you're counting
).As we turn the third corner, I can see the end of the line about halfway down this block, but for each step I take closer, another 3 people join the line. Afraid that I would be chasing the end of the line around the 4th corner, I speed up and finally jump in.
All things being said, though - that line moved relatively quickly - we were inside the Vatican in about an hour.
#29
Joined: Jan 2003
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The strange thing is that the lines at a lot of tourist attractions can vary so much. We stayed a week in Florence and noted that one one day the line at the Uffizi was endless, yet on other days it would be very short. The Accademia was the same way; the first time we went I walked right by the entrance, not recognizing it as I was looking for a line, and there was absolutely none. We saw the same thing at St. Mark's in Venice.
#30
Joined: Apr 2003
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Definitely, the Vatican Museum. We were with a tour and the guide decided that we needed a very indepth description of Castel san Michel. By the time we got into the line for the Vatican, it was taking up to 2 hours. We took turns going for gelatto, buying souveniers etc. When we finally got into the museums, she hurried us along so we wouldn't miss the Sistine Chapel which was closing at 2:30pm that day.
#31
Joined: Feb 2003
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The one that stands out in my mind was waiting for about 2 hours to see the "Treasures of Tutankhamen" exhition at the British Museum in December 1972 not long before it closed. I've done a few other marathon waits since, but this one has a special place in my memory because I was outside in the London winter and because it was one of the first real blockbuster museum exhibitions, so this kind of wait was a novelty to me.
#32
Joined: Feb 2003
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KT, we may have been "line mates!" At any rate, we also were in a long line at the British Museum for the Tut exhibit in the Nov/Dec '72 time frame. Well worth it. I several years later went to the Tut exhibit at the Art Institute in Chicago, and they had different items on view.
#34
Joined: Jan 2003
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I'm with you cigalec., I was sitting here trying to imagine waiting in the lines some of you describe and I can't.
I suppose the longest I have waiting in a line is at Disneyland on the opening night of a stupid ride, I was so mad at myself for waiting but at every turn in the dark building we thought it would end.
Notice how we describe waiting in different parts of the world?
In NY it is waiting ON line.
In LA it is waiting IN line.
Other parts of the world have queues and are queing when they wait.
I suppose the longest I have waiting in a line is at Disneyland on the opening night of a stupid ride, I was so mad at myself for waiting but at every turn in the dark building we thought it would end.
Notice how we describe waiting in different parts of the world?
In NY it is waiting ON line.
In LA it is waiting IN line.
Other parts of the world have queues and are queing when they wait.
#35
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 1,647
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In NC we wait IN line since we are part of the collective, not staning on a line painted on the floor.
Duke University students camp out for weeks to buy men's basketball tickets.
I think I waited about an hour or so to enter Biltmore House at Christmas one year. Also stood in a l-o-n-g line at the Charlotte Art Museum (I guess the Mint Museum) when they had a special traveling exhibit of Egyptian art -- Not King Tut but of the same area. Mom and Dad had been able to walk right in when they saw it in Denver and wanted the kids to see it. I think this was in 1988 or 89.
Duke University students camp out for weeks to buy men's basketball tickets.
I think I waited about an hour or so to enter Biltmore House at Christmas one year. Also stood in a l-o-n-g line at the Charlotte Art Museum (I guess the Mint Museum) when they had a special traveling exhibit of Egyptian art -- Not King Tut but of the same area. Mom and Dad had been able to walk right in when they saw it in Denver and wanted the kids to see it. I think this was in 1988 or 89.
#38

Joined: Mar 2003
Posts: 10,642
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In 1999, there was a Pompei exhibition at Los Angeles County Museum of Art. We even had specific time tickets. After waiting for almost two hours (and moving about 20 feet), we left. We felt it was easier to go visit the real Pompei, which we did in 2001 (although the wait there, too, was bad...we hit it at exactly tour bus time).
So basically, if anything has the name Pompei in it, count me out.
So basically, if anything has the name Pompei in it, count me out.
#39
Joined: May 2004
Posts: 318
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LOL, this is a great topic. I'd have to say for me Disney during spring break (not my idea!) - not only were the lines impossibly long but there were so many people in the park that we couln't even choose the direction we wanted to go, we were just sort of swept along by the crowds. A close second is the line at LAX for the Southwest terminal, especially on a Friday night when everyone is heading for Vegas, it goes on for miles and once you get inside the flights are all overbooked!
#40

Joined: Mar 2003
Posts: 10,642
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"A close second is the line at LAX for the Southwest terminal'
audreyleigh... I flew to Detroit on Northwest about a couple of months ago in the morning. I could not believe the Southwest line. It stretched past terminal after terminal. That's why I take Southwest out of Burbank. No hassle there.
audreyleigh... I flew to Detroit on Northwest about a couple of months ago in the morning. I could not believe the Southwest line. It stretched past terminal after terminal. That's why I take Southwest out of Burbank. No hassle there.


