tink'smom2B
Chasing Tinkerbell Full Time
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2004
- Messages
- 452
We were invited to build sandcastles on the beach every night. How could anyone think it wasn't safe? This little three rope fence won't stop an alligator.
It's not meant to stop an alligator. It's meant to stop a human.We were invited to build sandcastles on the beach every night. How could anyone think it wasn't safe? This little three rope fence won't stop an alligator.
50 years from now, people will walk along the fence lines of the lakes and lagoons at WDW and vaguely remember that those were put there because a child lost his life when attacked by a gator.
Playing on the beach is fine. Watching a movie on the beach is fine. Getting in the water (which includes wading/splashing around) is not. The latter is where an element of risk comes in.We were invited to play on the beach. Maybe because you live here you wouldn't do it, but my family and I had no idea there would be danger. Just because it wasn't my 2 year old granddaughter, doesn't make it any easier.
I am not from Florida and I knew all about them. And yes if I was traveling somewhere else I would be aware of natural dangers. That is my responsibility to keep myself and family safe.
That's right. Disney makes it perfectly clear that you have to stock up on bottled water to go build sand castles on their beaches. This is the single most ridiculous thing I have ever seen on these boards. Some of these posts defending Disney are so flat out ludicrous, I just assume people are taking advantage of Internet anonymity and trolling. As for me, the more I learn, the more I hope Disney has to pay through the nose.
Either: A) SOME people without kids/grandkids who may not fully understand B) people who refuse to put themselves in that family's shoes, C) people who are simply insensitive and enjoy arguing, or D) people who can't set down the Disney Kool-Aid, or E) all of the above.Who are you people?? I really can't believe what I'm reading.
I see ads all the time with images like that inviting families to come play at real beaches along the Atlantic seaboard. Does that mean there is no danger? Do people from the inland U.S. and other regions of the world know about sharks and rip currents? Off the coast of my state (NC) alone last year, between June 11th and July 4th, 8 people were attacked by sharks including two (a 12 year old and 16 year old) who each lost part of an arm and others who sustained several critical injuries to the back, hands, buttocks, and legs. These people were often waist-deep, walking on the ocean floor mere yards from dry land.We were invited to play on the beach. Maybe because you live here you wouldn't do it, but my family and I had no idea there would be danger. Just because it wasn't my 2 year old granddaughter, doesn't make it any easier.
Interesting...we have always assumed there IS a strict rule not to touch WDW water, even when it is next to a beach. We just told our kids the water was to look, and not touch. We own DVC at the Beach Club, and every trip we spend a great amount to time on the beach. We swing, watch movies, eat s'mores, enjoy an adult beverage after sunset, and have a wonderful time...but, never once have my kids so much as stuck a single toe in that nasty swamp water. I always thought the beach was the amenity, not the water. Of course, my primary concern has always been bacteria and amoebas, but snakes and alligators as well. Beyond the safety issue...it's just nasty.You cannot credibly attack the parents for not following the rules when Disney has allowed wading in that water for decades. Disney knew that children played on the edges of that water and did nothing. It didn't put up a barrier to make clearer that the water was off-limits. It didn't ask people to get out of the water when it saw them in it. It didn't change the wording of the sign from No Swimming to Stay Out of the Water. Disney's own actions make it clear that it was not a violation of the rules to play at the edges as long as one didn't swim. Indeed, it makes little sense to have a beach lead directly into water if the strict rule is not to touch the water under any circumstances.
Disney likely concluded that there existed little risk in allowing guests to play in the water at the edge. The reasonableness of that decision can be debated on both sides. But stop blaming the parents for doing something Disney has allowed thousands of others to do.