mom2mickeyfan
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2009
- Messages
- 1,830
Thank you so much. That's very high praise.But no, photography is just a hobby I enjoy.
Just as good as the DVD of stock photos I purchased from Disney!
Thank you so much. That's very high praise.But no, photography is just a hobby I enjoy.
Just as good as the DVD of stock photos I purchased from Disney!
ONE HUNDRED FORTY NINE DOLLARS for a tent campsite? What? My family can tent camp (darn near RV camp at some places) for a week for that price. Holy cow.
ONE HUNDRED FORTY NINE DOLLARS for a tent campsite? What? My family can tent camp (darn near RV camp at some places) for a week for that price. Holy cow.
I think those aren't the basic tent camping ones, could be wrong. I think those are $50.
Yes, the basic campsite is $49 ... that is the price for a preferred spot.
I know I may sound like a stuck record to some, but this is where I think Disney has made a major miscalculation. ...
Disney was counting on people to see long lines and pass on the rides. They assumed this would translate into time spending money in gift shops, restaurants, etc. What they didn't count on was the perseverance of guests to go ahead and wait in the lines for the rides and then those people turning into dissatisfied guests deciding WDW isn't worth the cost if you can't go on as many rides.
We are going for 25 nights from 6th August this year. will be our 11th trip and the first time we wont be going to Disney. I just cant face paying a £1000 for tickets and get less than I did last year. We absolutely love Disney but we go at a busy time so the FP is an important part for us. I refuse to stay on site anymore when you can stay at Bonnet Creek in a 2 bedroom for $140 a night and have 5 pools, 2 lazy rivers and lots of entertainment for the kids thrown in. Just a no brainer compared to a tiny room at Disney or a very expensive DVC room. (Although I do just love SSR, its 4 times more expensive than Bonnet Creek). So we are going to spend a week at St Petes Beach and then have 2 and a bit weeks in Orlando actually taking things alot slower than usual. Will go to DC, SW and AQ. Will spend 1 night at a Universal hotel to get front of line access. The big difference at Universal is that even in the summer you can get everything done in 2 days riding all the rides multiple times. It will cost us £160 for 3 of us to have 2 days of front of line which I think is a bargain when you think how much it would cost to buy the express pass. You cant compare this to staying onsite at Disney to get FP+ as it really isn't comparing like with like. My husband doesn't even stay in the Universal room and goes back to Bonnet Creek and meets my son and I again the next day.
So I will be sad not to visit Disney but really hope they sort this out. Even if off site get the ability to pre book, all the spontaneity will have gone. I plan everything but even I dont want to have to decide what ride I ride at what time in 2 months time and I dont want to be stuck to my mobile phone on holiday. Bad enough having to tell my son to "put down the electrical device"!I will be sad that we wont be riding Seven Dwarfs but cant justify £1000 for that. We have so many great memories of Disney and we are so lucky to have been so many times on long visits. I really would just love to sit down and chat to all the people responsible just to see what they were thinking.
If this does come about, I see FP+ as the new BOG ADR. People will quickly figure out that the only way to get FP+ for the rides you want will be to get online at 60 days out and pre-book. People who don't pre-book will get less than scraps. There will simply be NO FP+ availability on the day of. If they hold back a certain percentage as some people have suggested, that opens a whole 'nother can of worms.
We are staying off-site in March. DD has never been to Disney, so this whole thing will be new to her. I figure there's enough to see without the FP+ hassle. If we can't ride something because of a 2 hour wait to ride a 5 minute ride, so be it. We're just happy to be going on vacation at Disney (so many people never get to go due to budget restraints). But I'm saving over $1,000 in lodging, so it's a win for me and my budget. Yeah, we'll have to pay for parking. I doubt the $60 will break us. lol
We do have our dining reservations. Thank goodness those don't require FP+. People would starve!![]()
ONE HUNDRED FORTY NINE DOLLARS for a tent campsite? What? My family can tent camp (darn near RV camp at some places) for a week for that price. Holy cow.
I know I may sound like a stuck record to some, but this is where I think Disney has made a major miscalculation. They are counting on people to ride less. What we are seeing is that people who go to WDW actually expect to ride the rides. Shocking I know!
I still hold the somewhat conspiratorial belief that "wait less in lines" doesn't mean what we think it does. It's code for "go on less rides" as opposed to "ride more rides with shorter waits."
For those determined to ride the rides, this is actually resulting in MORE time spent in line (I have informed you thusly). Disney was counting on people to see long lines and pass on the rides. They assumed this would translate into time spending money in gift shops, restaurants, etc. What they didn't count on was the perseverance of guests to go ahead and wait in the lines for the rides and then those people turning into dissatisfied guests deciding WDW isn't worth the cost if you can't go on as many rides.
And before someone chimes in with "you can still ride standby," I am talking about both FP and standby lines. You won't be able to ride as many rides if you have to wait longer in standby for each one. So we have people going home frustrated and unhappy because they only had time to ride a handful of rides. There have always been some people who experienced this. At the risk of sounding callous, those people were almost always to blame for their own misery because they didn't do a lick of research (I'm not talking about uber-planning... merely knowing that Harry Potter is not at WDW, etc.).
Now the playing field has been leveled. Even those "in the know" are experiencing the misery equally.
FP+ feels like an ultimatum... lower your expectations and ride less or don't go. I think they're too over-confident that their "base" will take whatever they dish out and say "thank you, may I have another."
And that is exactly what happened on Saturday night-got to MK right as the fireworks were ending, watched the 11:00 MSEP, then went and walked onto every ride-you could even see Ariel in her grotto with no wait! (So we found this out by accidentally walking into the grotto entrance instead of the ride entrance and thankfully they let us just walk out! It was 12:30 am, cold, and we were a little brain dead. . .) I realize that not everyone can stay that late, but if you can, it is great!
We leave in 9 days for Disney. DH and I definitely made the most of FP when it was the 2 of us and I don't think we'd be very happy with the changes if were just the 2 of us. But now we have our 15 month old, so we were preparing it to be a slower trip to begin with. Gone are the days when DH and I were able to run all over the park, eat whenever we wanted, etc. so scheduling with the FP+ around her nap times and meal times was nice for us.
So I am not completely worried about the trip and I'm waiting to withhold judgement (we're also used to going over spring break so the crowd will hopefully be lower this trip). I'm curious as to the FP+ experience of other families with very young children, has anyone read any of those?
Assuming that paying your "fair share" for the limited resource isn't enough; that it has to be used in a way that satisfies a particular standard...
Is it acceptable for a single person stay at the campground for a weekend, even though they are keeping that family from using it for their week-long vacation?
Would it have been ok for someone single/family to reserve the campground for a week to get the FP+ EMH and parking perk, use it as their "base" to hotel hop from Universal SW, Disney, etc as long as they stayed there...maybe one night? Would that be enough? Would it be worse?
Was that wrong, because a family couldn't book the yucky hotel room we didn't stay in that one night? Should we have packed up our 11 days of clothes and stuff and moved it twice to avoid taking the room we weren't using, away from a family who could have?
Who gets to make the call as to whether or not I am using something I paid for, in the way that "some of you" would think is ok or a "bad idea?"
You also said in your opinion it's cheating. If something is not wrong how is it cheating? That makes no sense to me.
There is already a thread debating the moral and ethical repercussions of reserving and paying for a campsite but not actually (gasp) sleeping at it:
Throwaway Rooms
So at first i was mad about the onsite perks til someone on this very thread mention a throw away room and then i thought hmmm okay then someone else mentioned campgrounds for 49 bucks and I did just that!! My magic bands are on their way and already made my fastpass + selections...genius!!