I am not making this up, and I have some common sense. I know what I saw and what I am talking about. It was first thing in the morning before she had time to shrink, and she definitely had a handle on how to stand up straight. She wasn't a difficult child. She listened well and did as she was told. it definitely was about 3/4 inch taller than the one at btmrr, and off from the one outside at least at that time. That's probably why your son didn't make it too. He is close in age to my DD. The second measurement at star tours just before boarding was done on a slight slope. It was the only place all week she was questionable. It was different from all the others, and it has since been repositioned in a refurb.It isn't 3/4" off for others.
We are all smaller towards the end of the day. Our height rebounds overnight with rest and hydration. The forces of the day and of other rides smoosh us down.
And kids are difficult. My son was righteously tall enough for ST at the first marker at DL and then grew bored during the line and slouched. Then the CM put his hand on DS's shoulder as he measured at the second mark. DS slouched more and there was no ride. It was the same height as outside. But a bored kid with a dad who didn't react in time with encouragement.
Has anyone done Mission Space since they brought in the new Green version? My son is under 44" right now, and I wondered if we could sign up for the ride, and then just go to the 'lite"version if he is too short for the Orange version. We don't want to count on a growth spurt by then, but I would hate to miss out on some cool rides because we were being too cautious.
Kerriowl, we might try to see if we can get him some boots, in case we are a hair or 2 short of 44.
WDW did measuring and wrist bands for a very short time.It has been a long time! More than a decade. But when our DD was exactly at the height requirement for RnRC some CMs would pass it and others not. We got her measured at guest services, which am extremely accurate measure, and she got a wrist band. Don't know if they still do it, but it saved a lot of time.
try having him push the ruler out from in front as the bar will be in front not on top of headThanks all for the help! We've already started practicing 'standing tall like superman' and I put the ruler right at the 40" mark and tell him to push it up with his head. He thinks it's funny. He's generally a little shy with people he doesn't know so I'm trying to turn it into a game so when we get to the actual time he'll know exactly what to do!
DS is right at 40". The only measuring bar he was questionable at was for Dinosaur - we asked to use another measuring stick right next to the entrance (idk why there were two?) and he was fine w that one. Never had to take his shoes off.
We had the same experience on our very first trip.Nope, because the the bar was about 3/4 of an inch higher. We went back to MK the next day and rode BTMRR without a problem.
We are headed to WDW in 3 months, and my son is 40 and 1/8" barefoot. I'm hoping he grows a bit between now and the time we go as well to give us more 'cushion' to get on the rides with 40" requirements, but I'm wondering how accurate the measuring stations are at the rides. Are the 40" ride measuring stations taller than 40" in your experience? Do they always make the kids take their shoes off (he wears tennis shoes, not platform sandals)? I'm not trying to cheat the system, and I know the requirements are strict for a reason, I just want to know if 40" is really 40" or more like 40.5-41".
also as others have said kids plus adults tend to shrink during the day so a child might make the height in morning but later in the day not make if they are just making the heightOn two different rides, my DS was measured and let in by the CM at the ride entrance (Flight of Passage and Space Mountain) and then measured again and rejected by the CM in the ride boarding area. My DS was also measured and successfully rode Mission Space Orange and Everest. These are all 44" rides and this all occurred on a one week trip. If your child is right at the height requirement, be prepared for some tears. Kids don't stand perfectly tall and I'm not positive the height sticks all measure exactly the same.![]()
also as others have said kids plus adults tend to shrink during the day so a child might make the height in morning but later in the day not make if they are just making the height
Right, but my DS -- on two different rides -- passed the measurement at the entrance to the ride and then was turned away at the loading area. Did he really shrink that much in the 20 minutes standing in line? Telling a kid he can ride and then taking that away after he's waited in line is pretty upsetting to a young child. It would be nice if the measuring devices and the CMs measuring were perfectly consistent, but, IME, they are not.
yes had that happen with one grandson who would duck just enough to not hit the bar. but have also had another grandson who made the height and rode for a ride in morning but that afternoon didn't make height and this was same ride and stick. stick was in ground so CM was not able to change out come and not touching grandson. which was why a mentioned about shrinkingRight, but my DS -- on two different rides -- passed the measurement at the entrance to the ride and then was turned away at the loading area. Did he really shrink that much in the 20 minutes standing in line? Telling a kid he can ride and then taking that away after he's waited in line is pretty upsetting to a young child. It would be nice if the measuring devices and the CMs measuring were perfectly consistent, but, IME, they are not.
This is my biggest WDW pet peeve. We took our twins, who measured the exact same height in 2015 and the measuring sticks at WDW were all over the map. Sometimes one of the twins would make the height, sometimes they both would, sometimes neither. It was completely inconsistent and incredibly annoying. Not to mention how to explain to a couple of 5yo's why there was no consistency in whether or not they could ride a ride, especially if they were let on the day before but not the next day.Right, but my DS -- on two different rides -- passed the measurement at the entrance to the ride and then was turned away at the loading area. Did he really shrink that much in the 20 minutes standing in line? Telling a kid he can ride and then taking that away after he's waited in line is pretty upsetting to a young child. It would be nice if the measuring devices and the CMs measuring were perfectly consistent, but, IME, they are not.
This is my biggest WDW pet peeve. We took our twins, who measured the exact same height in 2015 and the measuring sticks at WDW were all over the map. Sometimes one of the twins would make the height, sometimes they both would, sometimes neither. It was completely inconsistent and incredibly annoying. Not to mention how to explain to a couple of 5yo's why there was no consistency in whether or not they could ride a ride, especially if they were let on the day before but not the next day.