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It is so weird to me what they decide to open and what they don't. Like it obviously takes a lot of behind the scenes planning to open the eateries (getting staff scheduled, getting things stocked), yet it seems so random.
 
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Beignets are definitely not reliable. First time, in France, puffs of air wrapped in a thin layer of heaven. 2nd, from the shop in Rhinefeld, greasy collapsed things, though still sweet I guess. Twice the weight for your money but if that's what you want they're not the item.
 
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We're thinking about going for F&WF this year. We like BGW generally (love the atmosphere and coasters) but have never been for Food & Wine before- I'm worried based on what's been said that it might not be worth it this year? No kids in our group, will want to ride Apollo's Chariot/Alpengeist/Verbolten probably as much as possible, takes a few hours to drive there, don't like more than moderate crowds. We were thinking about going on a Sunday (not Memorial Day Sunday) or possibly the 7th since it'd be cooler with occasional showers.
 
Now that Spring Break is over, things have been a lot more tolerable. Don't expect short lines if the weather is good, but there's still a good time to be had in my opinion.

Make sure you plan to eat at odd times though—food lines have been long and slow.
 
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This may be comparing apples to oranges, but generally speaking; how is the end of the event?

Do they wind things down pretty quickly, and/or run out of food and samples? Or course they could extend the event to fill that gap between events, so this might not be an issue.
 
This may be comparing apples to oranges, but generally speaking; how is the end of the event?

Do they wind things down pretty quickly, and/or run out of food and samples? Or course they could extend the event to fill that gap between events, so this might not be an issue.
I have never seen them run out but things are so different this year that who knows.
 
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The emoji review woulda been a disaster this year—it was SUPER time consuming in 2019. We'd have gotten to maybe a third of the booths this year if we had attempted it. We were seriously booking it towards the end this time because of the limited hours and lines.

Still lobbying for my Emoji Scale idea though... Maybe next year...
 
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Thank you.

I don't suppose anyone knows more details about the Food & Wine crawl and how the front of the line access works?

Based entirely on past experiences on other tours...

It looks as if you will get 15 items from the various booths, including food, refreshers, and sample-sized alcoholic beverages. You will have a tour guide, who will probably take you in either the exits or the QuickQueue entrances to the rides. Or maybe they will just give you QQ to use after the tour? I've experienced both. Given the lines we have been seeing, that sounds useful. The VIP parking is in the England Lot, which is the closest to the park. I can't tell if you can skip the lines at the booths, as well.

Sorry I can't be more helpful.

Enjoy the best of Busch Gardens' Food & Wine Festival including your own Park Guide for 4 hours to escort you through our ten villages, as you sip and savor your way around the world. This special event tour also includes a 15-Sample Tasting Card, a Busch Gardens Food & Wine Glass, VIP Parking and Front of Line Access to rides.

The emoji review woulda been a disaster this year—it was SUPER time consuming in 2019. We'd have gotten to maybe a third of the booths this year if we had attempted it. We were seriously booking it towards the end this time because of the limited hours and lines.

Still lobbying for my Emoji Scale idea though... maybe next year... ?

The Emoji Review was a shit show and an emoji scale sounds illiterate.
 
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