UmmGooD
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2007
- Messages
- 916
Just an FYI, the whole family can come back for the encounters if you want them to. Our parents stayed on the observation deck and took photos and videos. It was a great experience for everyone.
I felt bad because a mother and son did the sea lion encounter and the dad stayed back because he didn't know he could come with the group, do the educational part together, and then watch the encounter from the platform. He missed half the day with them.
You don't have to be IN an encounter to go back and be an observer! Just thought you should know in case the wife and son wanted to watch your encounter and THEN go to the beach for a fun time!
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Thanks so much for giving us some insight. We are concerned that our son will not understand why he is not in the water and will have a major melt down. Unfortunately melt downs are a new way he is trying to get his way and he is at that age where communication is difficult so the meltdowns tend to be large and draw lots of attention to him. As well causing lots of stress to the parent that is holding him. We haven't decided how to deal with this yet. If it would be better to just take him straight to the beach and avoid this from occurring or try it out, if it happens take him to the beach. At this point he wants to do whatever his big sisters are doing and doesn't understand why some things he cannot do. His fits are getting better but they still do occur and we think currently he will have one just because sisters are doing something he can't do. If we take him straight to the beach he will be having fun and not worrying about what sisters are doing. We might change our mind on it but that is the direction we are thinking about going at this point.
We did the tour. You're in a van without seatbelts driving through Nassau. You go into a small chocolate store with chocolate and cookies and good-smelling bath items out in hand's reach. You have to be quiet and listen to the tourguide. You have a walking tour where you are standing and listening quietly. And not touching things. You then sit on hard, tall, stools for nearly an hour, making your chocolate creations. And then having the creations taken from you to harden, then again to have them boxed up. At one point when you are making the chocolate bar, everyone is slamming their trays on the metal tables, making a huge racket that would have terrified my son just a couple years ago. Then the tour is done and you're milling around the store again for about half an hour until the tourguides come back.
It's good they have an age requirement.
That said, it's possible you can organize it through Greycliff themselves, perhaps one that's just a walking tour and not a making tour, so you don't have to try to keep bitty kids on their stools and not eating everything?
Thanks for this! I guess it just isn't how I was expecting it to be. I have been on two chocolate tours in my life. One was the Hershey tour when I was a kid and it was inside the factory seeing all of the machinery. That factory in California is no longer open as far as I know but I think my kids could handle that tour.
The other tour was at the Cailler chocolate factory in Switzerland. That one had a history of chocolate tour with animatronics and effects. Then after that tour you were dumped into a small section of the factory where you could see a small factory line and sample chocolates. Again it would be appropriate for any age (there were 2 year olds with us).
I was thinking it would be like these but thanks for the explanation. It helps me understand why they have an age limitation. I thought chocolate tours were similar
