JimmyV
Por favor manténganse alejado de las puertas.
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2008
- Messages
- 8,060
Lost me there.How is depriving yours child's experience any more valuable than depriving an adult's experience of wanting to enjoy a grown up and adult meal?

One question about your time restrictions: are you saying to only have 2 seating times? A 5pm seating for children & a 7pm seating for adults? I would be fine with that as well. If it is not only two seating times though, it would not work.
It could work either way. 2 seatings might be easiest, but it is not necessary. Without it, if you are making an ADR by phone and request a time after, say, 6:15 or 6:30, the reservationist simply asks if there are any children under 8 in the party. (They ask already ask about children. They can simply ask about a specific age). If the answer is yes, the guest is told of the policy. If making the ADR on line, the on-line page will note the age restriction same as V&A.
Is WDW the only vacation spot (or area) that offers fine dining restaurants??? Sorry, I'm not OK with your little one working out the kinks of learning how to behave in a fine dining restaurant while I'm trying to enjoy a romantic and grown up meal with my DF.
I'll turn this around on you. You are right. WDW is not the only place for fine dining. But it is the place with the SINGLE HIGHEST CONCENTRATION OF CHILDREN. If you insist on a "romantic and grown up meal", you can go elsewhere. It is easy to say: "go elsewhere". You can say it to people with kids, and people with kids can say it to you. It's a tie. But ultimately, there is no need for anyone to go elsewhere. I simply have no sympathy for your argument if you are trying to have a "romantic and grown up meal" at 5:30 or 6:00. But I will cut you plenty of slack if you are trying to do so at 8:00. 5:30 at WDW is the PERFECT PLACE AND TIME to work out the kinks in a fine dining restaurant. Sure beats trying to do it in Manhattan or San Francisco.