BSBNess
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2015
- Messages
- 235
Thank youSee screenshot post #594
Thank youSee screenshot post #594
If I were you, I would cancel/reschedule and not fly into the mess tomorrow. If you call now before you are scheduled to leave, the airline will likely refund your money or waive all fees and re-book you, or give you a credit for the amount you paid to be used in the next 12 months. They won't cancel your booking on their own. If your return flight gets cancelled, it is going to be up to you to try to get yourself re-booked on a different flight-- people were on the phone for hours and hours and some could not get out for days. Everyone that was on a flight for Monday that is now cancelled are already trying to find other flights later in the week- if it is bad and the airport remains closed a couple of days and your Weds flight gets cancelled- you are competing with all the other people who are already trying to re-book from Monday and Tuesday to try to get on the earliest flight.
The hurricane isn't going to go away-- it looks like the best case scenario (and unlikely according to the spaghetti models) is that it skirts the coast and is not a direct impact. You are still likely looking at a couple of days of rain (maybe even torrential rain) and high winds even if it is not a direct hit. Less damage- but still not much fun in the parks. Having ridden out Matthew at the resort-- there is no way I would fly down there knowing that a Hurricane was coming especially for a short trip. Yes- WDW did the best they could on taking care of everyone during Matthew--- but I wouldn't exactly call it fun (at least not for DH and I). Yes, they will try to get the parks re-opened as quickly as possible-- but if they do sustain quite a bit of damage and there are tree branches and trees down in the parks-- it could talk a while to clean up and get things moving again.
To the coast yes. To Orlando not likely. Though still taking about mother nature and she does what she pleasesEven if it were to skirt up the east coast, will that just help it keep it intensity? A slow moving cat 3-4 up the coast would still be horrific, right?
If it does skirt up the east coast, wonder where landfall would most likely be? Or if it was to hit land at all? Georgia, the Carolinas?
Even if it were to skirt up the east coast, will that just help it keep it intensity? A slow moving cat 3-4 up the coast would still be horrific, right?
What happens to your pending flights?
We are scheduled to fly out of MCO Wednesday night.
I understand that's probably not happening, but we have been waiting to reschedule as we weigh our options.
We fly down tomorrow morning. Now that the airport is closing, will they cancel my entire booking (including tomorrows ticket) or just the flight home?
Can I just leave my Wednesday flight sit there and figure it out later still? Or am I forced to make a decision now that they are closing Monday?
We are scheduled to go Sunday morning to VWL.is anyone still going this weekend? we fly in tomorrow.
New Orleanian here & I can’t agree more especially not a 4 or 5! And I was thinking it also puts an extra strain of FL’s resources. That has to be frustrating for FL officials.Texas gulf coast mama here. I cannot imagine purposefully heading toward a storm. I just cannot. We have areas STILL recovering from Harvey, 2 years later. The slow-moving, rain-dumping storms are the worst kind. I get the love for Disney, and the agony of cancelling. But it’s dangerous, y’all! And that’s an expensive vacation to burn potentially sitting in a hotel, no matter that it happens to be a Disney hotel. The locals will need all of the resources they can get for a while after this storm, and then when they are ready they’ll need your tourism dollars. (I live in a high tourism area too, and really we do not need extra people around when we are in dire straits ourselves.). Help them out by staying away, and keep yourself safe.
There are rides that close for heavy winds even if no rain (Rock n roller coaster comes to mind but I’m sure there are others), and it has happened that winds prevent fireworks, parades, and other outdoor events. I don’t think there’s one specific wind speed, I think it varies by attraction.Just curious what Disney does when the winds are very high? From what I am hearing the winds could be a factor even if the storm doesn't directly impact Orlando.
When does Disney shut down the outside rides? Anyone know what the policy is for the wind speeds and rides? I know some rides shut down just with rain but just wondering if they winds are severe will they shut down most of the rides, fireworks, parades etc?