The first time I ever experienced Soarin' Over California, I was just 14 years old. Almost 25 years later, I still vividly remember the aroma of fresh oranges pumped through the Disneyland ride system as the flight simulator whisked me over California's famous groves.
Everyone who's been to Disneyland can list their favorite nostalgia-laden scents of the parks -- the water in Pirates of the Caribbean, freshly baked churros on Main Street USA, gingerbread-scented "snow" drifting over the crowds during the holiday fireworks show.
Disney knows that the key to memory-making is not only sight and sound; it's also smell. That's why it pumps scents out all over its theme parks and attractions through a patented scent-dispersing system.
In 2001, Disneyland opened its second California-based theme park with a marquee attraction called Soarin' Over California. A flight simulator with three levels that lift you off the ground, legs dangling, as you watch a giant screen in front of you, Soarin' makes it feel like you're flying across the state's most famous landmarks. It remains one of the most popular rides at the park to this day, with other versions at Epcot, Shanghai Disneyland and Tokyo DisneySea.
A second version of the ride called Soarin' Around the World, with the video swapped out for global landmarks, launched in 2016. And now, for the 250th anniversary of the United States this month, it has been transformed into a third version: Soarin' Across America.
The launch of the recent Artemis II mission around the moon is the first sight you see on Soarin' Across America. Corinne Reichert/CNET
I got to experience Soarin' Across America on its opening morning on July 2 at Disney's California Adventure. The flight opens with a breathtaking shot of the launch of Artemis II, followed by a flyby of the Statue of Liberty and the New York City skyline, a dip past the New England coastline, a flight over the Washington Monument, a look at the Louisiana bayou as you follow an airboat, fall forests, grassy plains, the Grand Canyon, Mount Rushmore, snow-capped Alaskan mountains, Los Angeles and, finally, Disneyland during its nightly fireworks spectacular.
With the wind blowing through your hair, you do, of course, also get to smell a lot of these places: fresh grass as you chase cattle over the plains, sea salt when you soar above New England, the earthy bayou, and the one that I haven't been able to forget, and perhaps won't for another 25 years, fresh pineapple and coconut as you take in the tropical Hawaiian paradise.
To film these locations across the US, Disney's production team traveled more than 28,000 miles, with almost 900 helicopter passes and more than 60 drone flights by landmarks.
The aroma of pineapple and coconut is pumped through the Soarin' attraction while you fly above Hawaii. Corinne Reichert/CNET
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