StormyCA
Chief Troublemaker
- Joined
- Sep 22, 2014
- Messages
- 3,345
We know someone who owns a cattle ranch cum campground. They do 'tie' the rig type and license plate to the reservation to avoid 'overstayers', although they're small enough that they just drive through and do a manual check. As someone mentioned above it'd be easy enough for Disney IT to program an alert for contiguous 30 day reservations based on rig license plates.
The 28 day 'stay-away' period is a long one! I've seen 48 hrs to a week but never 4 weeks. But for those who can afford it, at least they didn't put a yearly cap on it like a lot of places (Natl Parks especially) do. At least, I don't THINK there's a yearly cap on staying at the Fort. Not that that would ever be anything I'd have to worry about. lol, I just wish it were!
I think it will 'free up' space and make reservations easier to get, even if not by a huge amount. If there are only 5 'over-30-dayers' during the Snowbird period that must now 'move on', that could translate to a one week stay for 20 other parties or two week stays for 10 other parties. I know Disney is thinking about 'spending per site', but I'm just thinking about availability for others to enjoy. We're thinking our next stay (9 or 11 nights sometime in Jan-Mar 2024) may be within the 'snowbird' period and frankly I was concerned about availability. Maybe now I don't need to be quite so worried, assuming that WDW is going to enforce this rule.
Honestly, if I had the money this would just make me shrug. 30 days at FtW, down to the Keys for 30 days, then back to FtW. No biggie.
The 28 day 'stay-away' period is a long one! I've seen 48 hrs to a week but never 4 weeks. But for those who can afford it, at least they didn't put a yearly cap on it like a lot of places (Natl Parks especially) do. At least, I don't THINK there's a yearly cap on staying at the Fort. Not that that would ever be anything I'd have to worry about. lol, I just wish it were!
I think it will 'free up' space and make reservations easier to get, even if not by a huge amount. If there are only 5 'over-30-dayers' during the Snowbird period that must now 'move on', that could translate to a one week stay for 20 other parties or two week stays for 10 other parties. I know Disney is thinking about 'spending per site', but I'm just thinking about availability for others to enjoy. We're thinking our next stay (9 or 11 nights sometime in Jan-Mar 2024) may be within the 'snowbird' period and frankly I was concerned about availability. Maybe now I don't need to be quite so worried, assuming that WDW is going to enforce this rule.
Honestly, if I had the money this would just make me shrug. 30 days at FtW, down to the Keys for 30 days, then back to FtW. No biggie.