I said:
I don't want to hear my granddaughter rave about a ride or attraction and hear anyone say "gee - I wish WE could have seen that!"
And belledreamer responded:
Please forgive me for saying so, but that's a TON of pressure to put on yourself... And it's okay to not experience every ride or attraction; it's all the more reason to go back!
My clarification -
I mean I'd rather not have anyone say "gee - I wish we could have seen HER reaction" - meaning the reaction of the the 4 year old.
All is good - I'm not putting too much pressure on myself - just trying to find the balance. You see - the fact that Disney allows ride reservations 60 days out (and experimenting with 90 days out?) implies it's needed - right? And those saying how great it is - the implication is "if you get the ones you want".
So where is the pressure coming from? From Disney and from those saying how great this whole FP+ thing is.
It doesn't work well with a large crowd - I certainly see that. But splitting up the large crowd because FP+ doesn't work well with a group this large? What does THAT say? Don't go with a large group? Act like you guys just coincedentlly met there? Of course we won't do everything together - but we actually need to decide that 2 months from the day?
Obviously.
Bottom line - we absolutely HAVE to work out a FP+ plan WAY in advance. And make sure it's flexible so if/when we see we can't get all we want, we have a plan B (and C and D etc)
That's step 1. Then I guess step 2 is revising it. Throughout the 60 days? Even though as some say few FPs become available until the actual day (which makes sense). So in the parks, IF there is something important we want to see that we don't' have passes for - we'll have people constantly refreshing the app instead of enjoying the experience.
Sorry - at least for a large group I see this as stress on SOMEONE - whether it's me or not. And the reality is - someone (probably several someones) will say "this didn't work out like I thought". Because how can it? We're not going to split up ALL the time.
Sure - it's OK not to experience it all. This will be our 9th trip. And as I've said, simply being there with my granddaughters will be magic I haven't experience in nearly 30 years when my kids were that age.
All I'm trying to do is maximize the chances of seeing the attractions we decide are most important. Pans B, C, D etc will still be wonderful.
But the fact we need plans A, B, C D etc is WAY different than 7 years ago (and we had a group of 7 then and it all worked out fine without FP+).
Face it - Disney is simply creating a need to stay on site; and now creating a need for a concierge so they can convince those that can afford it to give them even more.
Universal IS actually better in terms of seeing all you want. It's just that Disney itself is so much better. I suspect at some point Universal will start advertising their convenience vs the implied need to plan your Disney trip 60 days out.