I see that you have to buy a ticket for anyone 3 and up. My DD is 2 1/2 and I was wondering do they ever ask for proof of age at Disneyland? TIA
One of our visits a family in front of us entering DCA had 2 small boys in strollers, 1 was under 3 for sure, the other was quite tall and did not appear to be under 3 (he didn't have any baby fat and honestly he looked about 5) the CM argued and did not want to let them in without buying a ticket for the older boy. She did end up letting them in but she told them they needed to buy the older boy a ticket their next visit, after they got in they looked at each other and said "well I guess this is the last time we can fake his age". They spoke perfect English but at the gates they pretended to not understand the CM, speaking in broken English "he no 3" over and over, they were totally lying about their son's age to get him in for free.
I don't know that questioning the age of a child (aka, doing their job) is...Going in once, the CM asked the woman in front of us where her son's ticket was, and she said she was going to buy an AP at City Hall, but he made her go to the ticket booth and buy it. If the parent puts up a fight, there's only so much the CM can do. Why put a blip on your own day, and possibly the day of other guests around you by arguing with a parent? Disney'll get their money in food, souvenirs, etc.
I believe it is an odd statistical anomaly at DL - an inordinate number of 2 and 4 year olds, not very many 3 year olds.![]()
Oooooh, Kerri, that makes me so mad that people would so clearly scam DL like that. ARGH! As the mama of children who are tall for their age, I really appreciate when I am *not* questioned on their age--and then I hear about nutty people who go and do stupid stuff like what you're describing. UGH!
That's when you ask the kid how old they are, haha! I remember my cousin telling me how she tried to get her 3 year old to say he was 4 so he could go on some kiddie ride at a fair (he's big enough to look a year, year and a half older than what he is), but when asked, he proudly told them he was 3!
Going in once, the CM asked the woman in front of us where her son's ticket was, and she said she was going to buy an AP at City Hall, but he made her go to the ticket booth and buy it. If the parent puts up a fight, there's only so much the CM can do. Why put a blip on your own day, and possibly the day of other guests around you by arguing with a parent? Disney'll get their money in food, souvenirs, etc.
I took my DD on the day before her 3rd birthday and was not questioned, and she is/was a giant kid.
I just realized from reading this thread that I have to pay adult prices for her the first time this year. She is 10 now. That makes this mamma sad!!!
Now I do think that you should pay based on how tall you are, since my now 3 1/2 yr old ds isnt quite 40 inches it kinds stinks to pay for him since he cant do any more then he could 6 months ago when he was free.
... Now I do think that you should pay based on how tall you are, since my now 3 1/2 yr old ds isnt quite 40 inches it kinds stinks to pay for him since he cant do any more then he could 6 months ago when he was free.
Wouldn't that penalize long kids who are younger?