Does anyone know if WL has the bathroom alcove?

310girls2

Mouseketeer
Joined
Feb 28, 2004
Messages
98
We have a 12 yr old and a 21 month old (23 months) at our vacation and I was wondering if anyone can tell me if the WL has the bathroom alcove that you can kind of close off so you can put the baby to sleep in the pack n play.

She will not go to sleep if she can see us. Also we requested bund beds and I was wondering if anyone had any luck with an almost 2 yr. old sleeping in it. I'm planning on bringing her blankie, bunnies and nite lite and cd that she falls asleep to and trying hard to stick to her nite time routine. Any suggestions greatly appreciated.
 
Yes it does have a bathroom alcove area. Here is a link to a site that has pictures of the resort, including the interior rooms: http://allearsnet.com/acc/wlss.htm

It's a slide show. The picture that shows where the bathroom is #30 of 114. The pic of the bunk beds is #34.

If you're planning on putting the 2-yr old on the bottom bunk why not hang a blanket from the top bunk to sort of enclose the bottom one? Just a thought!

hth!
 
310girls2 said:
We have a 12 yr old and a 21 month old (23 months) at our vacation and I was wondering if anyone can tell me if the WL has the bathroom alcove that you can kind of close off so you can put the baby to sleep in the pack n play.

She will not go to sleep if she can see us. Also we requested bund beds and I was wondering if anyone had any luck with an almost 2 yr. old sleeping in it. I'm planning on bringing her blankie, bunnies and nite lite and cd that she falls asleep to and trying hard to stick to her nite time routine. Any suggestions greatly appreciated.

I've stayed in the very room you're describing. The bathroom is a type of "alcove", but it doesn't have a close-off door. It's open to the rest of the room. A pack-and-play would take up all the space, so you would not be able to access your sinks or the bathroom door.

I think the other poster gave a great idea: make a little "room" from blankets using the bunk beds.
The nightlight might be a problem in the "blanket-made bunk room", but you could bring glow-sticks.
Another idea: you go sit on the balcony and relax until she's asleep.

Be sure that she's really worn out by the end of the day (won't be hard to do at Disney), and don't let her have any caffeine drinks. Those things will give you a good, fighting chance to get her to sleep easily. I understand your situation perfectly: my kids were awful about sleeping when they were younger.
 












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