GroovyWheeler
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2004
- Messages
- 117
Dan and I are getting excited about our trip to Disney World on Friday. My mom, caregiver, Dan and I will be leaving for the airport in Portland, Oregon around 8, then 2 planes later, we'll be there!!! We're getting in late at night, though. +++The next day, OFF TO EPCOT!!!! (Dan wants to go on Test Track, and I want to see The Living Seas) I'm already cleaning off my manual wheelchair and getting it ready to go. It's been sitting in my room, hardly used since the last Disney World trip, so it had a lot of dust on it. It just got a brand-new wheelchair cushion put into it, and I'm anxious to see how it works out when I have to sit for long periods of time, in it.
I'm taking my quad cane too, and that will hopefully help a lot, especially with getting on/moving around on the plane and hotel room. We're flying on Delta, and I'm praying that they don't rip my sling-seat back like they did with my rental wheelchair that I had, before my mom was able to get the insurance to buy me my own.
The thing that going to excite me the most, is seeing other kids and young adults who use their own wheelchair, like I will be doing. I've seen a number of them use a power chair, and it just makes me ache so bad because I wasn't/haven't been able to bring mine each time we went. I'll try to see if that can be possible for next time, though as I do really want to take my power chair on its' first airplane trip to Disney World. All it takes, is a matter of finding an accessible rental van for it. My mom is worried that if we did take it on an airplane, it has a greater chance of breaking down/getting damaged in some way.
She also says that anyone who generally brings their power chair to Disney World, lives in Florida or some nearby state, where they have their own car to be able to transport it. But, that doesn't mean that a power chair can't be flown across the country from Oregon to Florida, without little or no damage to it, can it? I was hoping to bring my power chair this year because due to Dan's Traumatic Brain Injury, he can't see very well, and pushing me in my manual wheelchair is going to be a nightmare for both of us, because he can't determine when to stop if someone is in front of us, or when we're coming to an obstacle in the path (although I've always let him know). And, people have tripped over us, usually winding up on top of me. Oh well, we'll see how it goes this year.
Samantha

I'm taking my quad cane too, and that will hopefully help a lot, especially with getting on/moving around on the plane and hotel room. We're flying on Delta, and I'm praying that they don't rip my sling-seat back like they did with my rental wheelchair that I had, before my mom was able to get the insurance to buy me my own.
The thing that going to excite me the most, is seeing other kids and young adults who use their own wheelchair, like I will be doing. I've seen a number of them use a power chair, and it just makes me ache so bad because I wasn't/haven't been able to bring mine each time we went. I'll try to see if that can be possible for next time, though as I do really want to take my power chair on its' first airplane trip to Disney World. All it takes, is a matter of finding an accessible rental van for it. My mom is worried that if we did take it on an airplane, it has a greater chance of breaking down/getting damaged in some way.
She also says that anyone who generally brings their power chair to Disney World, lives in Florida or some nearby state, where they have their own car to be able to transport it. But, that doesn't mean that a power chair can't be flown across the country from Oregon to Florida, without little or no damage to it, can it? I was hoping to bring my power chair this year because due to Dan's Traumatic Brain Injury, he can't see very well, and pushing me in my manual wheelchair is going to be a nightmare for both of us, because he can't determine when to stop if someone is in front of us, or when we're coming to an obstacle in the path (although I've always let him know). And, people have tripped over us, usually winding up on top of me. Oh well, we'll see how it goes this year.
Samantha
