INDIANA JONES™ DISCOVERS JEWEL OF POWER! / junglec.html
You are at disneywizard.angelfire.com/junglec.html.
JOURNAL|NOVEL|MUSIC|3D|PHOTO|VIDEO|MagicBand.fun|DISNEYLAND|KNOTT'S|HOME|WinR|WIZARD|CONTACT
The Jungle Cruise Dock Jungle Cruise Entrance, Adventureland, Disneyland®, Anaheim, California, 2007.01.30 15:58
Jungle Cruise Journal Entries
Sean Perkins writes:

I did my jungle overview last night and I can tell you that the new Jungle is something to get VERY excited over. While walking through the boathouse yesterday I found something VERY interesting tucked away in a high corner of the infirmary. It is an old journal which describes many details about the history of the Jungle Cruise within its crumbling dusty pages. I'd like to share a little bit of that history. The journal was written by Caleb Keneth Turner, famed for being the only skipper to have returned from the Temple of the Forbidden Eye a long time ago, and it is with great pride I share it with you now.



Rope Bridge line



Fresh Tourists aboard the Ganges Gal, Cruise Boat, Lost Delta Camp, Indiana Jones™ Adventure - The Temple of the Forbidden Eye, Adventureland, Disneyland®, Anaheim, California, 2009.02.23 13:14 1911
Riverfront Outpost Built

A Victorian house is built in a remote section of the jungle as a colonial outpost. As the last outpost of civilization, it provides a welcome relief from the harsh and hostile jungle, offering weary travelers a hot cup of tea and a place to rest. It is here that missionaries, scientists, and European travelers have one last opportunity to post and receive messages and supplies.

1928
The Last Station Master Leaves

Taken seriously ill with malaria, the Colonial Station Master leaves. There are no volunteers to replace him, and the foreign office finds no need to maintain the outpost. The house is offered for sale, but there are no quick takers...Who would want a place this deep in the jungle?

1930
The Jungle Cruise Trading Company Begins

A loose-knit group of enterprising expatriates buy the Victorian house, intending to make a quick buck. They decide it will serve as home base for their new jungle transport and trading company. After a few jungle launches are purchased, they begin business. None have had any experience in their new enterprise, but they manage to scrape by through hard work and sweat.


Hippopotamus by Muzina Shanghai 1931
House Additions

As the volume of business increases, the house receives additions. A skipper's lounge is built, along with more storage spaces for cargo and supplies. The second level of the house provides a storage area as well as a high vantage point over the river; not only can they see up and down the river, but the roof is high enough that visitors on the river can see it clearly. An advertisement is painted on the roof to entice passerby.

Because of the number of vessels arriving and departing, an observation patio is added to the dock. The owners obtain a short wave radio, which links the company to the outside world. Business picks up, and trading is good.

1932
Depression hits the Jungle Cruise

The depression affecting the whole world finally reaches the trading company deep in the jungle. Business dries up; shipping executives who once paid well for cargo transport can no longer afford to do business.

The skippers of the Jungle Cruise Trading Co. keep busy delivering freight, medicines and mail, but there's no money in it because no one pays.


dsc00028, 2009:02:23 13:14:35, Disneyland®, Adventureland, Indiana Jones? Adventure, The Temple of the Forbidden Eye, Camp, Cruise Boat, Fresh Tourists aboard the Ganges Gal 1932
Fire and Accidents

A crewmember accidentally ignites a stove fire on the shipping dock. Fortunately, the blaze is extinguished with water from the river. Unable to afford proper repairs, the skippers leave the fire-scarred roof as a constant reminder of the Accident.

Though it is just over 20 years old, the Victorian mansion is quickly deteriorating in the damp jungle air. Makeshift solutions with existing supplies are sought/ railings from one section are removed and added to sections that need them more. The formerly grand house takes on a rag-tag look as repairs are hastily and poorly done. Later one night, after way too much trading and too little navigating, a young skipper crashes his launch directly into the dock by the residential annex. The annex, already weakened by slipshod construction, begins to collapse, leaning precariously towards the river. The Trading Company staff removes the launch but cannot find an easy way to fix the dock. Instead they just leave it as it is.

1933
The first tour

Traffic on the river continues to decline, and the outlook is bleak for the Jungle Cruise Trading Company. Just as the skippers consider giving up, an American film director shows up and asks anyone familiar with the rivers can take him to see the jungle wildlife. As a wad of bill flashes before their eyes, the owners of the Trading Company are inspired to a new line of business—tourism.

After a face-lift and a fancy ad campaign, they are in business again. Success comes quickly and word spreads throughout the civilized world about the tours through the jungle. In fact, many new skippers travel to the jungle at their own expense, lured by the mystery and danger of the jungle. Soon novelists, movie stars, politicians, and blue bloods follow.


Hippopotamus by Muzina Shanghai 1935
The popular Solution: Cut Rate Tours, Low Cost Guides

The Jungle Cruise has become a jungle staple, offering low-cost, one-of-a-kind tours. Tour guides provide and maintain their own boats; many of the skippers even live on their launches, taking on cargo or paying tourists whenever the opportunity arises. Although the tour company gets the better part of the ticket price, skippers make handsome tips (hint, hint) (I'm joking of course) and are allowed to keep anything left on board.

Local entrepreneurs are also drawn to the scene, setting up make-shift booths where they sell everything from live snakes and bugs to mosquito netting. The colorful awnings that shade the vendors are painted with bold advertisements extolling the virtues of their wares.

Fortunately, the tours are getting a fashionable notoriety among the well-heeled, and more and more tourists are showing up every day.

3D, Jungle Cruise, Adventureland, Disneyland®, Anaheim, California, night, color slow shutter, 2009.04.11 00:26
3D, Jungle Cruise, Adventureland, Disneyland®, Anaheim, California, night, color slow shutter, 2009.04.11 00:27
Jungle Cruise, Disneyland, 6-28-09

As I look at the journal, I see this was the last day. I hope you've enjoyed the jungle history.

Well that was the last entry, I hope all of you stop by soon and see what the excitement is all about. I'm positive you won't be let down.

Jungle Cruise Journal content © 1994 Sean Perkins.
Reveal the picture, guess ''Where in Disneyland?''
Related documents and source: Leave to Sean's Disneyland Page
advlead0


Updated on 2012.12.12.
JOURNAL|NOVEL|MUSIC|3D|PHOTO|VIDEO|MagicBand.fun|DISNEYLAND|KNOTT'S|HOME|WinR|WIZARD|CONTACT

Rope Bridge line

Write a message to Rev. Dr. Wizard d'IsneyThe Wizard of Indiana Jones
— ©Copyright DisneyWizard 1995-2024 — ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.


Journal: Secrets of the Temple of the Forbidden Eye
 ^— Add this banner to your web page —^Journal: Secrets of the Temple of the Forbidden Eye
 ^— Add this banner to your web page —^Journal: Secrets of the Temple of the Forbidden Eye
 ^— Add this banner to your web page —^
Disneyland®s Indiana Jones™ Adventure
IMMERSING THRILLING ADVENTURE since March 4, 1995

^ Link this site on yours ^ with this banner! ^ Click for quick details ^



A Hand Up! Not a Handout.

$
A Hand Up! Not a Handout.



=============
Angelfire provides, and is solely responsible for ALL advertisers, even the bogus error/virus warnings:
=============
Updated on Tuesday, 30-Jul-2019 14:14:34 EDT.
=============
RansomWare_Disk_Cleanup_for_(C)_36881294_Animated WARNING: Beware RansomWare Advertisements from Angelfire
pop-ups which falsely resemble MS-Windows Virus Alerts or bogus SpeedCleaners.
The entire image, including the clear areas beyond the borders, is a hyperlink to deceptively convincing "free help," so
Don't click ANYWHERE near them, especially the phony red close button!
Instead use ALT-F4 to kill that window or CTRL-W to close that tab! More…

This has always been a FEE-FREE Fee Free

No Charge Website no charge website, my gift to the public. However
Angelfire provides, and is solely responsible for, ALL advertisers! Even the bogus popup error/virus warnings:
=============