huggiebear23
Can't wait for Disney!!!
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2006
- Messages
- 2,188
Do they still do it? I'm not sure if my dd8 will want to go on roller coasters. How do I make it work with the fastpasses?
Do they still do it? I'm not sure if my dd8 will want to go on roller coasters. How do I make it work with the fastpasses?
Do they still do it? I'm not sure if my dd8 will want to go on roller coasters. How do I make it work with the fastpasses?
Child swap is only for those children that are not tall enough to ride a ride not those that don't want to ride. QUOTE]
Yup, this is what we've witnessed. Plus, with DD, we've always had to bring her to the CM to prove she wasn't eligible before they'd give us the pass.
JillyBean1899 said:Wow, I've never had anyone question me about a child swap before. My oldest niece doesn't like any ride that has even a hint of "funny tummy", so we would always child swap with her, even on rides she was tall enough for. Eventually we got to the point where on some rides she would wait by herself in the child swap area (Volcano and Flight of Fear at King's Dominion were good for this, because they had enclosed areas where the non-riding part of the group waited, and she could be trusted to not open the gate for the 3-5 minutes we were on the ride), so both of the adults could ride at once, but nobody *EVER* questioned us about if she was too short or not.
Actually Disneys website specifically states "too short or doesn't want to ride"
That may be what the site says but in reality it is not how it works. I took my kids from the time they were infants and used many a child swap. My ds is 12 but does not ride any thrill rides. I have tried to use child swap after he was tall enough to ride - many many times. It does not happen.
The disney website is full of errors. The policy is for CMs to follow their training, not what the website says.
If Guests in your party dont want to board an attraction, you dont have to miss out. One adult can wait with the non-rider while the rest of the party experiences the attraction. The waiting adult can then board the attraction without having to wait in the regular line again when another adult in the party returns to supervise the child or children who do not rideeither because they do not meet the height requirement or simply do not wish to ride.
The disney website is full of errors. The policy is for CMs to follow their training, not what the website says.
That's like saying "oh, the website shows tickets are $50 but can only be purchased at the park, but when I go to the park they make me pay $90, but that's OK because that's how they were trained, and the website is full of errors."
Direct quote from the Disney "Rider Switch Service" page:
You're going to tell me that Disney won't follow their own policies that they have advertised on their website? As I said, I've *NEVER* had anyone question me at *ANY* park or ride about using child swap. Disney, Sea World, Universal, Busch Gardens (FL and VA), Carowinds, King's Dominion ... heck, even the small amusement park in Panama City where I worked let people child swap on rides with long lines, even though there was no written "policy" on it, because it made sense and was the right thing to do for the guests.
Obviously, I could see if someone was trying to abuse it ("oh, grandma doesn't want to ride, so we have to take turns waiting with her" wouldn't really fly in most cases), but just because my kid is 41" and is scared of a ride with a height requirement of 40", we have to wait twice through a 2 hour long line? Um, no.
A CM's training should not take precedence over a publicly communicated policy of the company.
So if the website erroneously says that the height requirement for RNR is 4" instead of 48", the CMs should let infants ride?
An obvious data entry mistake (such as your example) is vastly different than a thought out, approved (by somebody) policy that is publicly available. Unless, of course, you think the following is a typo:
"If Guests in your party dont want to board an attraction, you dont have to miss out. One adult can wait with the non-rider while the rest of the party experiences the attraction. The waiting adult can then board the attraction without having to wait in the regular line again when another adult in the party returns to supervise the child or children who do not rideeither because they do not meet the height requirement or simply do not wish to ride."