As a sequel to the last post, here are some more theme park attractions that reference Duck comics.
This won't be a comprehensive list, just a few interesting items. Starting with...
Camp Woodchuck Kitchen - Tokyo Disneyland
What better place to start than the location of the subject of my last post? Honestly, the entire restaurant is a Duck comic reference, but let's take a look at a few specific examples.
Map of the Black Forest
This map, which can be found hanging on the wall of the restaurant, charts nothing less than Duckburg's famous Black Forest, a common fixture of the comics since the days of the great Carl Barks.
But that's not the only reference the map has to offer. If you look to the top-right corner, you'll see old Mount Demontooth (here called "Demontooth Mountain"), which first appeared in the 1948 Barks story The Golden Christmas Tree, and later made an arguably-more-famous appearance as the setpiece of 1953's Mastering the Demontooth.
The mountain also appeared in Don Rosa's 1994 story The Invader of Fort Duckburg, where it can be seen on a map of Calisota (the state in which Duckburg is located) in roughly the same place in relation the the Black Forest that the Camp Woodchuck Kitchen map shows it to be.
Mudhen Lake, meanwhile, first appeared in 1954's A Fishy Business, also by Carl Barks.
And New Fort Duckburg is none other than the rebuilt Fort Drakeborough, which was first referenced in passing in 1956's Migrating Millions. The Fort's reconstruction was chronicled in 1997's W.H.A.D.A.L.O.T.T.A.J.A.R.G.O.N..
What of Precipice Peak? Well, the perilously tall mountain is from a 1960 Bob Gregory story, A Sticky Situation.
And finally, Pickpocket Peak is the home of the Tri-Crested Tittertwill in 1988's Assignment Birdwatch, by John Antrobus and Dave Angus.
And that's everything from the map of the Black Forest - but it's not all that the restaurant has when it comes to comic references!
The Tailpin Ceremony
This painting can be found on the wall of the Kitchen alongside the map, and, also like the map, has its own share of references.
First off, the most obvious: the Tailpin Ceremony itself, at which a Woodchuck becomes an Exalted Hightail, one of the highest ranks of the organization, is from the 1953 Carl Barks tale My Lucky Valentine.
Of course, in the story itself, Donald is very much not present for the ceremony - he's busy pushing his way through a snowstorm to deliver a letter that he'd really rather not. And Daisy is at her home, having a letter delivered. But maybe HD&L were only giving the title during the events of the story, and the official ceremony was held late.
And now, onto the characters. Watching from the background, we see Doofus and Webby from DuckTales (not comic references, exactly, but still references to Duck lore), and a few others.
First, there's a pigfaced lad at the far left, who appears to be the recurring Woodchuck character Lardello from the Italian comics.
(The outfits worn by the Woodchucks are clearly inspired by the Italian outfits rather than the Barks-created ones, by the way - just look at those green shirts, red neckerchiefs, and yellow-diamonded Woodchuck caps.)
And one over from the far right is another familiar face - Newton Gearloose, Gyro's nephew created by Vic Lockman in 1965, who's been a recurring comic character ever since!
The Woodchuck Guidebook
The most famous fixture of the Junior Woodchucks in the comics, the Guidebook has appeared in thousands of stories - and here it is, in the flesh (er, paper?)!
This may well be a more specific reference, as well - this is obviously a very old copy of the Guidebook, and that, combined with its green color and the fact that it's being displayed in a case, may prove that it was inspired by the Prototype Guidebook, which appeared in a few Rosa stories.
Now, we're on to....
Mickey's Birthdayland (and whatever else it was called through the years) - Walt Disney World
Well, of course this place had Duck comic references - juts look at the sign that once greeted visitors upon entering the now-closed attraction:
The Clinton Coot Statue
The central landmark of the area was nothing less than Duckburg's famous statue of Clinton Coot, which first appeared in Carl Barks' 1952 story Statuesque Spendthrifts.
That wasn't all the attraction had in terms of references, though.
Here we have Cornelius Coot's County Bounty - which, I would imagine, is meant to be themed as some sort of general store, much like the one Cornelius's son Clinton once owned.
Grandma Duck's Farm
For your reading pleasure, here's a tie-in illustrated story (well, more of the reverse of that, really - an illustration accompanied by some text rather than some text illuminated with an illustration):
Il Paperino - Shanghai Disneyland
Yes, it's Il Paperino, an Italian and Donald Duck-themed ice cream restaurant in the Shanghai Disneyland theme park.
Paperino is, of course, Donald's Italian name - and the font on the sign there is the same as (or at least very similar to) the one used on the covers of the Italian comic books.
Donald Duck's Fore-feathers
Looking inside the restaurant, we find a painting which is very interesting to a comics fan:
Here it is - Donald Duck's Fore-feathers!
Now, this tree features a few characters from the comics - Hortense and Quackmore:
And Elvira and Humperdink (called Dabney in the image below - this was changed in later printings):
... but perhaps the most interesting thing about it is the new ancestors it introduces - sure to hold a place on any Duck family tree (they're definitely on mine!).
Well, I suppose that nicely finishes up this post! Let's end things with a rhyme:
He founded what!?






























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