Groot
I am Groot
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2018
- Messages
- 855
I have a trip in 59 days, and up until recently, the plan was to take my own personal powerchair down to Disney with us. Wouldn’t have to worry about renting a scooter, getting through the airport, etc. Until my mom reminded me that we can always rent a scooter down there and as an added incentive to that second idea, she’d start the process of letting me upgrade my current powerchair to a newer model when we get home.
So basically, the pros and cons of each situation is like this:
Powerchair:
Pros: 1. Don’t have to remember to do a rental when we get down there. 2. I would have it for the airport. 3. I wouldn’t have to climb the bus stairs, instead just “Drive on” the the bus myself. 4. No “Nose” to worry about when making tight turns. 5. It’s my own personal device that I use everyday, so there won’t be no “getting used to it” period.
Cons: 1. Worrying about how it’s going to be loaded onto the plane. (Especially since we have to fly Spirit, who has a death grip on the closest airport to me, so there’s no other airline to fly.) 2. Waiting an extra 10 minutes for the baggage handlers to unload my chair and pray that they don’t damage it. 3. An extra 5 minutes to set up my chair (put the seat cushion on, putting the batteries back inside, plugging the joystick in, etc.). 4. Having to allow for extra room in the car. 5. Remembering to fill out the wheelchair information card and taking the removable parts off my chair when it gets loaded onto the plane. (Spirit has the planes that DON’T HAVE a closet in the cabin, so it’ll have to be stowed underneath.)
Scooter:
Pros: 1. Not having to worry about Spirit damaging my chair and ruining my vacation. 2. Luggage room in the car won’t be at a premium. 3. Wouldn’t need to wait an extra 10 minutes for the crew to get it off of the plane. 4. No extra forms to fill out. 5. No need to dismantle anything.
Cons: 1. Bigger turning radius and having to take that “Nose” into account. 2. Remembering how to parallel park on the park buses. 3. Having to climb the airport bus steps instead of simply “Driving” onto the bus. 4. Having to deal with the airport’s manual chairs and having to find one that I can easily push myself and having to remember to buy a new set of pushing gloves. (Even though my mom said that she wants one of the airport people to do that for me, I want to prove to her that I CAN push myself in a manual if that’s what I end up with after we move.) 5. Not having my own personal powerchair for the airport.
I don’t know what to do.
So basically, the pros and cons of each situation is like this:
Powerchair:
Pros: 1. Don’t have to remember to do a rental when we get down there. 2. I would have it for the airport. 3. I wouldn’t have to climb the bus stairs, instead just “Drive on” the the bus myself. 4. No “Nose” to worry about when making tight turns. 5. It’s my own personal device that I use everyday, so there won’t be no “getting used to it” period.
Cons: 1. Worrying about how it’s going to be loaded onto the plane. (Especially since we have to fly Spirit, who has a death grip on the closest airport to me, so there’s no other airline to fly.) 2. Waiting an extra 10 minutes for the baggage handlers to unload my chair and pray that they don’t damage it. 3. An extra 5 minutes to set up my chair (put the seat cushion on, putting the batteries back inside, plugging the joystick in, etc.). 4. Having to allow for extra room in the car. 5. Remembering to fill out the wheelchair information card and taking the removable parts off my chair when it gets loaded onto the plane. (Spirit has the planes that DON’T HAVE a closet in the cabin, so it’ll have to be stowed underneath.)
Scooter:
Pros: 1. Not having to worry about Spirit damaging my chair and ruining my vacation. 2. Luggage room in the car won’t be at a premium. 3. Wouldn’t need to wait an extra 10 minutes for the crew to get it off of the plane. 4. No extra forms to fill out. 5. No need to dismantle anything.
Cons: 1. Bigger turning radius and having to take that “Nose” into account. 2. Remembering how to parallel park on the park buses. 3. Having to climb the airport bus steps instead of simply “Driving” onto the bus. 4. Having to deal with the airport’s manual chairs and having to find one that I can easily push myself and having to remember to buy a new set of pushing gloves. (Even though my mom said that she wants one of the airport people to do that for me, I want to prove to her that I CAN push myself in a manual if that’s what I end up with after we move.) 5. Not having my own personal powerchair for the airport.
I don’t know what to do.