snikelfrizt
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2008
- Messages
- 105
Maybe someone can find the Disney rule that states no tall shoes??? I didn't see one but maybe I am looking in the wrong spot........
Yes, and I can't believe only about 3 people in this entire thread have said that. It's not like pool hopping or refillable mugs or any of the other zillion issues everyone likes to get all spun up about -- it's a safety measure that's put in place for the protection of visitors.
I guess the rest of us should be brought up on child endangerment charges????
I agree with a PP...I have a DD and she is 41" tall but if they tell us she is not tall enough to ride then so be it...I want her to be safe. It may not make her happy at the time but at least she will be safe...
For everyone who says the OP (or anyone replying) is breaking safety rules- they clearly are not. It was specifically mentioned that the child is tall enough. The child has been measured by a doctor and I am sure other places. I would take a dr's word over a stick at disney. I don't see why you are saying everyone on here is endangering a child. I could see if you were having a child wearing 5 inch heals just to get on, but be realistic. If the child measures tall enough and then a stick at the park says no, the stick is wrong. The end... a quarter inch thickness on a shoe will not make the child fall out of the ride. Like someone said, when height regulations were put into place, the people most likely took into account that there are thicker soled shoes.
Good for you mom. She will also learn to that rules are made to be followed.
I'm not saying this about the OP, as I do not know her, nor her DR.
But let's say some random kid slips out of a ride and is injured (or worse!) And the parents say the doctor said the child was 40 inches and (coveniently leaving out the part of the story about purchasing thick soled skate shoes and adding folded up socks inside to make height) he passed the measure stick test, who do you think the family will sue, the doc, WDW or the shoe company?
I think that if you put Heelys on your kid, even without the wheels, you'd just be attracting more attention to your child from the CMs
If he's 40 inches, you should be okay. If it turns out that he isn't tall enough for something, they do have parent swap and there are so many other attractions to see. He might be disappointed for a few minutes but it won't be long before he forgets all about it.![]()
Right- rules are made to be followed and that is why I am sure no one in here that is bashing others decisions have ever broken the rules or let their children slide on some things...
And again I will say- no one here is BREAKING any rules. They are letting a child ride a ride that they are tall enough to ride based on the written height restriction.s
The heely's without the wheels just look like regular sneakers. there is nothing about them that would draw anyone's extra attention to them. They look like skechers or something like that.
And for the record- you may not think it will be long before he forgets but I experienced first hand this summer that that is not always the case. I went to an amusement park this summer with kids that were finally tall enough to ride some ride. We got there and one of the kids was not tall enough. It was a couple hours before she "forgot" that she had to sit in a "cage" while all the other kids got to go on the ride. And then once she forgot, we got in line for another ride that her and another child ended up not being tall enough. Their mother had to take them elsewhere because they got so down about it. Now no I am not saying they should have broke the rules (and they didn't)- I am just saying, not all kids will forget, especially having waited so long and FINALLY being the right height but being denied (in the OPs case, not mine).
Good for you mom. She will also learn to that rules are made to be followed.
The child has been measured by a doctor and I am sure other places. I would take a dr's word over a stick at disney.
The heely's without the wheels just look like regular sneakers. there is nothing about them that would draw anyone's extra attention to them. They look like skechers or something like that.
I agree. Ds and I have shared many Mickey ice cream bars while older ds and dh went on Aerosmith. It's nice now that we can all go on. I think anything less than 1/4" is a moot point though.Check out one of the CM sites on the web. You'd be surprised how quickly a CM can spot a pair of heelys.
I've been to the parks when one of my kids wasn't tall enough to ride and one was. DH & I split up and took the non-rider on another cool ride or got him a little treat to keep him occupied while we waited. A lot of times, how a parent or adult responds to a situation will dictate how well a child reacts. At least that's been my experience, can't speak for others. JMO