Aerorea
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jan 14, 2009
- Messages
- 153
I just got back from a trip to WDW last week. I am legally blind (retinitis pigmentosa) and have limited vision. I normally get around ok, but am trying to teach myself to use a white cane in unfamiliar surroundings. I'm getting better and better at it and this trip was the most I've ever used it. I am getting over my own emotional barriers with using one and having it in public where nobody knew me was great. I'm more confident when I have it, can handle steps better, and it also serves to let others know that I didn't bump into them on purpose.
I can normally see people walking towards me from straight ahead, but never from the sides and at night all bets are off, so having the cane for this trip is a good idea.
DH & I stayed at the YC, and the staff was wonderful. We took the Friendship boats almost daily to/from MGM and Epcot. The boat crew was really great and I'm sure by the end of the week they were used to seeing me come aboard! Some would tell me if the step was even or how many inches I'd need to step up/down.
Through the parks, I'd usually just carry my cane, unfolded, and take DH's arm. I'd use it when left alone, mostly with restrooms. I found crowd reaction to be very mixed. A lot of people would see me coming and move out of the way or gather their kids so they wouldn't trip me. There was also an unfortunate large number of people who apparently didn't know what the white cane meant, as evidenced by people who would walk right out in front of me or run into me and never say a word. DH was wonderful though and tried to navigate me around people the best he could.
CM's were great for the most part. I tend to have difficulty inserting my card when entering the parks. One CM scanned it for me (I didn't know they could do that), but many seemed annoyed that I took longer. It would have been nice if they would have opened the wheelchair gate for me as well because navigating the cane up & over the turnstiles is a pain. When leaving, it was a 50/50 shot whether the CM would see us coming and open the gate for us or make us go through the turnstile again.
I did get a GAC, but don't think I would have needed one. We were allowed front row/early entry to the shows. If not for that, there's no way I would have been able to enjoy the bird show at AK at all. Of course I collapsed the cane for all the rides. I had some difficulty getting on/off rides without my cane to help me judge depths, but DH was there to help me so all was well.
The airports were their own adventure! Security in Atlanta was great, Orlando not so much.

DH & I stayed at the YC, and the staff was wonderful. We took the Friendship boats almost daily to/from MGM and Epcot. The boat crew was really great and I'm sure by the end of the week they were used to seeing me come aboard! Some would tell me if the step was even or how many inches I'd need to step up/down.
Through the parks, I'd usually just carry my cane, unfolded, and take DH's arm. I'd use it when left alone, mostly with restrooms. I found crowd reaction to be very mixed. A lot of people would see me coming and move out of the way or gather their kids so they wouldn't trip me. There was also an unfortunate large number of people who apparently didn't know what the white cane meant, as evidenced by people who would walk right out in front of me or run into me and never say a word. DH was wonderful though and tried to navigate me around people the best he could.
CM's were great for the most part. I tend to have difficulty inserting my card when entering the parks. One CM scanned it for me (I didn't know they could do that), but many seemed annoyed that I took longer. It would have been nice if they would have opened the wheelchair gate for me as well because navigating the cane up & over the turnstiles is a pain. When leaving, it was a 50/50 shot whether the CM would see us coming and open the gate for us or make us go through the turnstile again.
I did get a GAC, but don't think I would have needed one. We were allowed front row/early entry to the shows. If not for that, there's no way I would have been able to enjoy the bird show at AK at all. Of course I collapsed the cane for all the rides. I had some difficulty getting on/off rides without my cane to help me judge depths, but DH was there to help me so all was well.
The airports were their own adventure! Security in Atlanta was great, Orlando not so much.