Dyefrog
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2021
- Messages
- 66
Finally, my planets have aligned and I'm seriously considering buying a DVC contract. A little background;
Honeymooned at WDW in '85 for 3 days shortly after Epcot opened. Experienced the magic enough to know we'd be back.
Visited next in Spring of 94. I only know this as I saw the headlines on my morning jog that Nixon had died. We had 3 kids with us, ages 7-4. Probably the most memorable vacation ever. Happened upon a DVC kiosk and listened to the pitch and while interesting and gears were spinning, we had more pressing priorities that most young families endure. If we were within driving distance, it stood a chance but flying 5 at the time and then 6 was pricey.
We visited again in 96, brought our fourth child who was 3 (too young in 94). Wife took our 2 youngest (daughters) in 2001 and then again in 2008, myself, wife, daughters and our foreign exchange student from Norway. That was hoot when we visited the Norway exhibit in Epcot and she fit right in, almost in tears. Needless to say, we went to the front of the line for the boat ride.
Over the years, knowing how much my wife and daughters loved Disney, I would poke my head in the world of DVC but never really could justify the expense. We've since divorced about 12 years now and are still very close and involved with the kids, vacation together, and now our first grandchild. I'll be retiring this summer and all that financial responsibility for all those years has put me in a much better position to make the leap. Not just financially but also timewise with my pending retirement. My youngest interned at Disney in her senior year at college and is a full on Disney fanatic. I really have no good reason now not to buy in but where to make my home resort?
As a building designer, I've marveled at the WDW properties and was really drawn to the Wilderness Lodge so my first instinct was Copper Creek. My partner and I visited my daughter when she interned there a few years ago and she booked us at Coronado which was my first time staying on Disney property and my girlfriend's first trip to Disney. I really came to appreciate the benefits of staying on site but if I paid full price, it would be a stretch to justify. However, DVC to the rescue.
So from our perspective, the parks aren't as critical at our age, or so I think, but we plan on having other family members at times where it will be. We will probably save our trips to the parks when they visit. I'm 64, she's 62 so we will never outlive even the 2042 resorts but I'm looking at the legacy aspects and on paper, it appears the AKV is the better value even though the maintenance is $.40/point more. Not enough for me to sway my decision. I do like the convenience of the monorail at CCV as we would spend time at the boardwalk or other restaurants. May even get the Platinum Pass just for the golfing. Any advice or things I may have missed greatly appreciated. One last thing, I fully expect to suffer from addonitis so maybe in a few years, I add the second choice.
Honeymooned at WDW in '85 for 3 days shortly after Epcot opened. Experienced the magic enough to know we'd be back.
Visited next in Spring of 94. I only know this as I saw the headlines on my morning jog that Nixon had died. We had 3 kids with us, ages 7-4. Probably the most memorable vacation ever. Happened upon a DVC kiosk and listened to the pitch and while interesting and gears were spinning, we had more pressing priorities that most young families endure. If we were within driving distance, it stood a chance but flying 5 at the time and then 6 was pricey.
We visited again in 96, brought our fourth child who was 3 (too young in 94). Wife took our 2 youngest (daughters) in 2001 and then again in 2008, myself, wife, daughters and our foreign exchange student from Norway. That was hoot when we visited the Norway exhibit in Epcot and she fit right in, almost in tears. Needless to say, we went to the front of the line for the boat ride.
Over the years, knowing how much my wife and daughters loved Disney, I would poke my head in the world of DVC but never really could justify the expense. We've since divorced about 12 years now and are still very close and involved with the kids, vacation together, and now our first grandchild. I'll be retiring this summer and all that financial responsibility for all those years has put me in a much better position to make the leap. Not just financially but also timewise with my pending retirement. My youngest interned at Disney in her senior year at college and is a full on Disney fanatic. I really have no good reason now not to buy in but where to make my home resort?
As a building designer, I've marveled at the WDW properties and was really drawn to the Wilderness Lodge so my first instinct was Copper Creek. My partner and I visited my daughter when she interned there a few years ago and she booked us at Coronado which was my first time staying on Disney property and my girlfriend's first trip to Disney. I really came to appreciate the benefits of staying on site but if I paid full price, it would be a stretch to justify. However, DVC to the rescue.
So from our perspective, the parks aren't as critical at our age, or so I think, but we plan on having other family members at times where it will be. We will probably save our trips to the parks when they visit. I'm 64, she's 62 so we will never outlive even the 2042 resorts but I'm looking at the legacy aspects and on paper, it appears the AKV is the better value even though the maintenance is $.40/point more. Not enough for me to sway my decision. I do like the convenience of the monorail at CCV as we would spend time at the boardwalk or other restaurants. May even get the Platinum Pass just for the golfing. Any advice or things I may have missed greatly appreciated. One last thing, I fully expect to suffer from addonitis so maybe in a few years, I add the second choice.