cupcake
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2002
- Messages
- 486
Hello, all! Here are some highlights from our recent trip. We were at the Swan for a week for a conference with my dh, and then went on the 7 day Western Disney cruise on the Magic.
-- Used Walker and rented a scooter for the first time. Yes, I did drive into someone (thought I was backing up) on the first day, but overall, after a few hours, I was scooting around like a pro and getting complimented by cast members for my ability to back up at rides, etc. The boats are a piece of cake, and it was also really easy to zip over to Epcot. Monorails were also no problem, I didn't have any trouble backing up off the ramp. Had a bad first experience on a bus, the driver wasn't helpful and there were many people who did not get out of the way. I was too freaked to say anything, but afterwards in other situations it helped me be more aggressive about asking people to move. Ran into a mega-nice woman on a boat to MGM who gave me some great tips -- eg you can call the concierge at the hotel (or ask at guest services at a park) and with 45 minutes notice, they will send over the wider very easy to maneuver in handicapped bus to the locale of your choice (nice even if you don't need the larger bus to avoid buses with non-working lifts, etc). But after the bad first trip, I ventured out again in a bus and bc I was more comfortable in the scooter, I backed in great. The trick is to back into the ramp and then cut the wheel as sharply as it will go and you can parallel park w/o a problem. No guts, no glory! I have never felt so independent, I zipped all around.
--AK was not fun in the mornings for me. I should have avoided the animal viewing areas and stuck to shows in the mornings till it cleared out. There are many doors (which people waltzed through, cutting in front of my scooter and then letting it shut on me) and my theory is that people are looking at animals, etc and are even more oblivious than usual to wheelchairs/sccoters. It was pretty frustrating.
-- Weird experience with a wheelchair at the MK (we had a day post-cruise so I did not have the sccoter). For rides with access thru fast pass, they have always just let us go ahead w/o a fast pass except for rides with big lines like Splash Mountain. This time, they said I needed a fastpass or the cast member gave us a return ticket with a time 1 to 2 hours out on it. It was really annoying bc the rides had short waits in the standby line (10-25 minutes) and yet we were stuck bc it isn't like we could go thru the regular line. It's impossible to plan one's day when you have no idea whether you can ride or not. Eg, 10 minute regular line at the Haunted Mansion, no fastpass line at all, we got a ticket to return 90 minutes later. Since it was a half day for us at the park we did not go to guest services. We stopped by on our way out to enquire but there was a huge line and we had to leave anyway. I thought we would be ineligible for a GAC since I can use the regular wheelchair access. It just seems to make it harder for guest in wheelchairs in that it penalizes you bc you cannot use the regular line when it is short to non-existent. It was access as usual at the other parks, and in fact most of the time when I rolled up to even get a fastpass the cast member there gave me one for immediate access. Kinda frustrating, and since it's hard to do the MK anyway bc of the crowds & layout it was not ideal to be constantly circling around. Also, when I had the scooter and went by myself to the MK when my dh was working, they didn't do this. The inconsistency was bad, if they are going to change the rules they should be consistent so you can plan your day.
-- The Swan stashed the scooter in a room by the concierge desk, and let us keep it there overnight. Our room was right by the elevator (but quiet) so it was s short walk upstairs and we did not have to keep it in the room.
-- The Swan, unlike the "real" Disney resorts, does not have wheelchairs to borrow. We showed up Saturday post-cruise for our last night and were stuck renting at the parks. They rent them for guests and with no notice it was way pricey. LOVE the new temporary wheelchair policy to get to and from the car!!! What a blessing, so it was fine w/o the wheelchair from the resort anyway.
--The Fallene sunblock (from drugstore.com for lots of $$$) was a total winner. It's icky to apply (it's got zinc oxide and various physical blockers in it, so it is gloppy) but boy, it works. This is the first trip someplace sunny since I started the meds that make me photosensitive that I haven't gotten sun poisoning and/or the dreaded itchy rash. If anyone decides to try it, unless you are very fair, I would get the tinted kind (has a tube of colorant to darken it as much as you want). The "clear" is really a very pale skintone. It was perfect for me, but I have extremely pale skin (typical red hair coloring).
This is getting long, so I will take a break for now! Overall, we had an absolutely super trip in every way. A huge thank you to everyone for all the information and encouragement re the scooter. It was totally worth the $$$.
Cupcake
-- Used Walker and rented a scooter for the first time. Yes, I did drive into someone (thought I was backing up) on the first day, but overall, after a few hours, I was scooting around like a pro and getting complimented by cast members for my ability to back up at rides, etc. The boats are a piece of cake, and it was also really easy to zip over to Epcot. Monorails were also no problem, I didn't have any trouble backing up off the ramp. Had a bad first experience on a bus, the driver wasn't helpful and there were many people who did not get out of the way. I was too freaked to say anything, but afterwards in other situations it helped me be more aggressive about asking people to move. Ran into a mega-nice woman on a boat to MGM who gave me some great tips -- eg you can call the concierge at the hotel (or ask at guest services at a park) and with 45 minutes notice, they will send over the wider very easy to maneuver in handicapped bus to the locale of your choice (nice even if you don't need the larger bus to avoid buses with non-working lifts, etc). But after the bad first trip, I ventured out again in a bus and bc I was more comfortable in the scooter, I backed in great. The trick is to back into the ramp and then cut the wheel as sharply as it will go and you can parallel park w/o a problem. No guts, no glory! I have never felt so independent, I zipped all around.
--AK was not fun in the mornings for me. I should have avoided the animal viewing areas and stuck to shows in the mornings till it cleared out. There are many doors (which people waltzed through, cutting in front of my scooter and then letting it shut on me) and my theory is that people are looking at animals, etc and are even more oblivious than usual to wheelchairs/sccoters. It was pretty frustrating.
-- Weird experience with a wheelchair at the MK (we had a day post-cruise so I did not have the sccoter). For rides with access thru fast pass, they have always just let us go ahead w/o a fast pass except for rides with big lines like Splash Mountain. This time, they said I needed a fastpass or the cast member gave us a return ticket with a time 1 to 2 hours out on it. It was really annoying bc the rides had short waits in the standby line (10-25 minutes) and yet we were stuck bc it isn't like we could go thru the regular line. It's impossible to plan one's day when you have no idea whether you can ride or not. Eg, 10 minute regular line at the Haunted Mansion, no fastpass line at all, we got a ticket to return 90 minutes later. Since it was a half day for us at the park we did not go to guest services. We stopped by on our way out to enquire but there was a huge line and we had to leave anyway. I thought we would be ineligible for a GAC since I can use the regular wheelchair access. It just seems to make it harder for guest in wheelchairs in that it penalizes you bc you cannot use the regular line when it is short to non-existent. It was access as usual at the other parks, and in fact most of the time when I rolled up to even get a fastpass the cast member there gave me one for immediate access. Kinda frustrating, and since it's hard to do the MK anyway bc of the crowds & layout it was not ideal to be constantly circling around. Also, when I had the scooter and went by myself to the MK when my dh was working, they didn't do this. The inconsistency was bad, if they are going to change the rules they should be consistent so you can plan your day.
-- The Swan stashed the scooter in a room by the concierge desk, and let us keep it there overnight. Our room was right by the elevator (but quiet) so it was s short walk upstairs and we did not have to keep it in the room.
-- The Swan, unlike the "real" Disney resorts, does not have wheelchairs to borrow. We showed up Saturday post-cruise for our last night and were stuck renting at the parks. They rent them for guests and with no notice it was way pricey. LOVE the new temporary wheelchair policy to get to and from the car!!! What a blessing, so it was fine w/o the wheelchair from the resort anyway.
--The Fallene sunblock (from drugstore.com for lots of $$$) was a total winner. It's icky to apply (it's got zinc oxide and various physical blockers in it, so it is gloppy) but boy, it works. This is the first trip someplace sunny since I started the meds that make me photosensitive that I haven't gotten sun poisoning and/or the dreaded itchy rash. If anyone decides to try it, unless you are very fair, I would get the tinted kind (has a tube of colorant to darken it as much as you want). The "clear" is really a very pale skintone. It was perfect for me, but I have extremely pale skin (typical red hair coloring).
This is getting long, so I will take a break for now! Overall, we had an absolutely super trip in every way. A huge thank you to everyone for all the information and encouragement re the scooter. It was totally worth the $$$.
