Imagine Dad at an 11:30 all you can eat, he'd be delighted. I can see how the Tivoli roller coaster inspired the original Matterhorn ride in DIsney, it looks like a very pretty park.
When visiting Denmark be aware that there is a 25% sales tax on everything, though included in the listed price. This is how Denmark is able to tax the many tourist visiting, but this also mean that the infrastructure is excellent and everything is kept clean and there is quite a lot of free stuff. You visited Tivoli that is quit expensive , but the worlds oldest amusement park (founded in 1583) only a 10 minutes drive north of Copenhagen, actually has free entry, if you do not intent on going on any of the rides. Also, when eating out the food is not really all that pricy considering the quality, but the beverages are often almost as expensive as the food, and would cost you around £0.5 at a supermarket, so good advise is to buy your beverages at a supermarket and not at a restaurant where you will get totally ripped off, even at a fast-food McD.
Oh wow I didn't know the oldest amusement park was also near by, we will have to have a trip to that one if and when we return! Thank you for all the information :)
Imagine Dad at an 11:30 all you can eat, he'd be delighted.
I can see how the Tivoli roller coaster inspired the original Matterhorn ride in DIsney, it looks like a very pretty park.
Well that made me laugh a lot!
Yes, I hadn't thought about the Matterhorn but I can see it now.
When visiting Denmark be aware that there is a 25% sales tax on everything, though included in the listed price. This is how Denmark is able to tax the many tourist visiting, but this also mean that the infrastructure is excellent and everything is kept clean and there is quite a lot of free stuff. You visited Tivoli that is quit expensive , but the worlds oldest amusement park (founded in 1583) only a 10 minutes drive north of Copenhagen, actually has free entry, if you do not intent on going on any of the rides.
Also, when eating out the food is not really all that pricy considering the quality, but the beverages are often almost as expensive as the food, and would cost you around £0.5 at a supermarket, so good advise is to buy your beverages at a supermarket and not at a restaurant where you will get totally ripped off, even at a fast-food McD.
Oh wow I didn't know the oldest amusement park was also near by, we will have to have a trip to that one if and when we return! Thank you for all the information :)