_auroraborealis_
I like marshmallows. And adult beverages.
- Joined
- Oct 18, 2015
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And then, there are the invasive snakes...
The fence is meant to stop people from going into the water. They tried signs that said, "no swimming." But people assumed that it meant no lap swims. So they needed to get more aggressive.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 doesn't matter what Disney does, Disney will be liable. Same as a person slipping in the grocery store. Someone is on your property, you are liable for pretty much anything that happens to them.I think Disney missed the boat on their level of safety on the beaches. They should have had better worded signage because they DO KNOW that alligators and poisonous snakes are in those lakes. But no swimming is a little less threatening and better for guest relations. I and my family know of the dangers as well and yet my grand kids have walked the same waters edge in the evening with little fear despite knowing the possiblities. I don't think the gator came to shore to hunt and attack this poor little boy. I think he was just sitting close to shore in the dark where he was invisable to the child and his parents and the boy stepped on him and it was a reaction strike to what he thought was an attack on him. He was found intact. One bite. No attempt to consume for food. Just a horrible accident.
I always thought a rope line would be a good idea. More accurate signage may have avoided it as well. Both together should do the trick. If that doesn't stop you, at that point it's no longer Disneys fault. It's your own stupidity.
But as it happened, I think the mouse is going to be liable.
More accurate signage may have avoided it as well. Both together should do the trick. If that doesn't stop you, at that point it's no longer Disneys fault. It's your own stupidity. But as it happened, I think the mouse is going to be liable.
Well...except that the gator took the little boy down into the lake, wrestling him away from his father. And gators don't eat their prey for a few days because they have to wait for it to decompose somewhat as they can't really chew.I think Disney missed the boat on their level of safety on the beaches. They should have had better worded signage because they DO KNOW that alligators and poisonous snakes are in those lakes. But no swimming is a little less threatening and better for guest relations. I and my family know of the dangers as well and yet my grand kids have walked the same waters edge in the evening with little fear despite knowing the possiblities. I don't think the gator came to shore to hunt and attack this poor little boy. I think he was just sitting close to shore in the dark where he was invisable to the child and his parents and the boy stepped on him and it was a reaction strike to what he thought was an attack on him. He was found intact. One bite. No attempt to consume for food. Just a horrible accident.
I always thought a rope line would be a good idea. More accurate signage may have avoided it as well. Both together should do the trick. If that doesn't stop you, at that point it's no longer Disneys fault. It's your own stupidity.
But as it happened, I think the mouse is going to be liable.
Well...except that the gator took the little boy down into the lake, wrestling him away from his father. And gators don't eat their prey for a few days because they have to wait for it to decompose somewhat as they can't really chew.
So, I don't think the gator was just defending itself. It saw a small creature splashing and wading at the edge of its habitat the way a water bird might, and it did what came natural to it. The fact that it resisted the father's assault and continued to take the child into the lake kind of proves that it was determined not just to protect itself, but to take what it was hunting.
Horrifying. HORRIFYING. But nature can be brutal. When we were at Animal Kingdom on Easter Sunday, a bunny rabbit had gotten into the meerkat enclosure. We didn't realize this until we noticed all the meerkats getting excited about something and coming to check it out. The CM in attendance was near me and when I said, "They see the bunny," he said, "This isn't good." I had no idea that meerkats would attack a rabbit, so when I looked at the CM with wide eyes and said, "It isn't?" He shook his head and said, "It's going to be pretty brutal." He looked dismayed because there were a lot of small children there, and the scene that was unfolding was nothing he could stop. There was no way for the rabbit to escape easily, I don't know how it had gotten in there. We left immediately, as I didn't feel like watching a bunny get attacked by a mob of meerkats on Easter morning. Hopefully he found a way to escape.
Point is. Animals are animals. And as horrible as it is for us to think that gator purposely attacked and took that baby, it is what it is.
It is very scary that people would assume high price vacation = safety. To me if I see a "no swimming" sign, that tells me through common sense that I'm not wanted in the water at all.....wading, dipping toes, etc. That and I also consider it common sense that there is potential for gators anywhere in Florida....but that's just me.The first part might be true, but I doubt Disney is going to lose any revenue because of this. Sure, some people may stop going, but plenty of people still will.
There is no place, home or on vacation that is "perfectly safe". That is the scary assumption that people make - that because a lot of money is being spent to stay at WDW, that you are somehow safe from animals, criminal activity etc. I would like to know what exactly Disney has kept from anyone. Have they ever declared the waters to be alligator free? As far as I have seen, the risk of alligator attack at WDW is minimal given it has happened twice in the last 25 years or so.
And then, there are the invasive snakes...
Once we get past the shock and the blame we're left with a Disney World that is tainted. It used to be the one place I could take my kids and not worry about their safety. Now in the course of a few days I find out the place is teeming with threatening reptiles and walking at night along waterways is a major hazard, letting my young teens ride their own water sprites on Bay Lake is a hazard, alligators stalking, snakes in shrubs, it's changed how I look at the place forever.
Signs and fences just aren't enough. Disney has to develop and announce a comprehensive plan to rid the property of these pests. Turns out we were under the illusion that Disney did this already all these years; now they actually have to.
Retaining walls will not deter them.
I have vacationed here for over twenty years and alligators were never on my radar. We even spent nearly half of those years in the campground. Snakes are everywhere in the Wilderness resort. So many, in fact, that I won't stay there anymore. Now alligators, and you all are telling me it's just something I'm supposed to accept and get over. Well, I'll just take my money elsewhere, thank you!
Exactly. As of today any parent whose child suffers the same fate can blame themselves; not so last week.
... It used to be the one place I could take my kids and not worry about their safety.
The dangers of Florida waterways are routinely taught to people who attend school in Florida.I thought the dangers of alligators in Florida waterways was common knowledge. I learned about it in school.