I'm going to drag out my soapbox and say there's no such thing as doing it all. I'm sure that many of the locals with Annual Passports haven't done it all. And that's because "doing it all", if taken literally, means not just riding every ride, seeing every meet and greet, show, parade, and fireworks, doing Sorcerers of the Magic Kingdom indefinitely, Agent P, experiencing the outdoor rides both night and day, etc. And that's not even counting all the special tours, extra cost shows like HDDR or dessert parties, or eating at all the park table service restaurants.We will be going Mid January 2017.... How many days would you give yourself with 2 adults and 2 kids (12 and 7) at each park? Trip time isn't limited, we want to make sure we can see and do it all.
I'm going to drag out my soapbox and say there's no such thing as doing it all. I'm sure that many of the locals with Annual Passports haven't done it all. And that's because "doing it all", if taken literally, means not just riding every ride, seeing every meet and greet, show, parade, and fireworks, doing Sorcerers of the Magic Kingdom indefinitely, Agent P, experiencing the outdoor rides both night and day, etc. And that's not even counting all the special tours, extra cost shows like HDDR or dessert parties, or eating at all the park table service restaurants.
Obviously I'm exaggerating the problem, but still, you need to get a handle on what you really want to accomplish. I haven't done Sorcerers yet, but I get the impression you could spend an entire day doing that without running out of cards - but few would want to. (Or maybe I still don't understand it.). At a minimum, there may well be things none of you want to do. (Epcot travelogues, anyone?).
Most people who try to accomplish "everything" have a sense of what rides they consider important, which characters they consider important to meet, and work around that. People who start out with a one week constraint and have kids typically allocate two days to MK and one to the other parks, or they'll get park hoppers and maybe do less at DHS/Epcot/AK and hop back to MK. With two weeks, I think I could successfully plan 6-8 days in the WDW theme parks, with time off for USO, relaxing, or other things. There would still be undone things for the next trip, but out people would be burned out with that many days before they could see and do everything.
I couldn't agree more. "Seeing it all" will have different meanings to different people. However, if you truly want to experience all that WDW has to offer, you're not going to get it in one vacation. We just got back from our 9th or 10th visit to WDW...and 6th in the past 12 months. This most recent trip was 17 days and we still didn't get to everything we really wanted to. Some of it was because we did things we really liked multiple times, or we just decided to call it a night when we got tired. But there's just so much to do. To get a strong taste of Disney in your first visit, I'd say 7 days minimum, 14 days are ideal. Many people will plan breaks in...such as the beach or a full day at their hotel or something like that. We "plan" those too...we had planned to go to Daytona for a day. But it rarely works out because we'd rather spend the time at Disney.
I think there's just something in the way the OP is worded that makes me think it was intended literally.Oh my gosh! That "seeing it all" thing just hit a nerve
I think there's just something in the way the OP is worded that makes me think it was intended literally.