Has anyone had their kids help choose restaurants?
I have ADRs for Ohana (dinner) and Whispering Canyon Cafe (dinner) on the same day. I am going to let our niece pick which she would rather go to.We usually do 1 or 2 character meals, and I give DD8 a couple of options to choose from based on which characters she would rather meet. I am giving her one day of our next trip to plan the entire day - parks, rides, dinner (within reason, and with some help, when I told her about it she said she wanted to go to every park in one day - nope!).
I have ADRs for Ohana (dinner) and Whispering Canyon Cafe (dinner) on the same day. I am going to let our niece pick which she would rather go to.
I haven't been to either and both have been on my list of to-go restaurants so I will be happy with either choice she makes.Ohana is the only place my DD requests every trip!
We let our two girls (14, 13) help out. They have gone with us every year since our youngest was 1 yr old. It's been fun to see how their requests have changed over the years, too. I'm just glad that neither of them are interested in the character meals anymore.
Anyway...THIS LINK can give some extra information on dining establishments around WDW (although probably not as entertaining as YouTube).
I have ADRs for Ohana (dinner) and Whispering Canyon Cafe (dinner) on the same day. I am going to let our niece pick which she would rather go to.
Our niece has never been there so I went ahead and already booked adr’s. I made sure to pick lots of character meals because we have a short trip and don’t want to spend a ton of time waiting for characters.Hmmm... this sounds like a great plan! I might steal it.
Although I encourage participation, I'll throw out one caveat I haven't seen mentioned. You'll be on the dining plan - which means your 9 and 6yo will be ordering off the kids menu at TS restaurants (unless the adults swap). The kids selections are mostly uninspired and largely the same everywhere - so the dining experience can be very different for them than what the adult menu reflects. That can be especially challenging for older kids (like the 9 yo) or kids with more adventurous palates. Something to keep in mind if the kids are basing selections on the food/menu.
On way to sidestep this problem, however, is to look at TS restaurants that are buffets or family style. Those tend to fare much better (no pun intended).
Ha! That is a downside. Luckily, my 9yo is not as interested in character buffets as sheonce was - so, I have that going for me.Beware. Participation by the offspring are why we’re eating at Coral Reef and Crystal Palace. Again.![]()
My 9 yo niece told me today she doesn’t want to eat at crystal palace. I still have the adr just in case but I think she is “too old” for Winnie the Pooh. I love meeting him but she’s never been to Disney so I’m sure her mind will change.Beware. Participation by the offspring is why we’re eating at Coral Reef and Crystal Palace. Again.![]()
My 9 yo niece told me today she doesn’t want to eat at crystal palace. I still have the adr just in case but I think she is “too old” for Winnie the Pooh. I love meeting him but she’s never been to Disney so I’m sure her mind will change.
My favorite characters to meet are the ones that don’t talk lol. They make funny gesturesMy 9 yo still likes to meet the Winnie the Pooh characters (probably wouldn’t admit it to her friends though). They are pretty cuddly.