We just got back late Monday night. We were not particularly pleased with the WDW portion of our trip. Due to staying offsite at Bonnet Creek, we were not eligible for FP+ and due to having my 80 y/o mom with us, was not always able to get to the parks at rope drop.
First two issues - not having FP+ access due to staying offsite, and not being able to get there at rope drop, neither one is WDW's responsibility
Added to that we were not able to stay in the parks all day due to her physical problems, so for the most part, the few FP- that were available were not helpful due to having late return times.
Another nonWDW issue
Consequently we had alot of long stand by lines. We were able to get a decent return time for Soarin the one day we were able to make rope drop at Epcot though. We tried to get a DAC, but was refused. We had rented an ECV from an offsite vender for my mom, so they saw the ECV and thought that was all she needed. We tried to explain that she was a very brittle diabetic who had sudden and unexpected blood sugar drops,
Sugar drops could happen anywhere, even on the attraction, so what would you do for her on the attraction?
had problems with tight spaces, that she needed to avoid waits in the sun due to a couple of her medications, that due to her arthritis stiffness and back pain there were times she needed to get out of the ECV and walk but couldn't walk very far at a time and was unsteady on her feet, that she has had multiple eye surgeries and her eyes do not adjust quickly from bright light to dark, so she has trouble with dark queues, and that she had some mild senile dementia and would do better in a separate waiting area, as crowds cause her to become agitated and more confused. We didn't mind waiting our turn, but wanted to wait away from some of the crowds and wanted to avoid some of the convulated turns in the queues with her ECV.
Would it have been easier for her if she hadn't had to use her energy to control an ECV, and had a wheelchair all day instead? That would have alleviated the issue with tight spaces, trouble with dark queues, and the convoluted turns. She could stand up and push the chair herself when she needed to get up. Also, there is more sun exposure going from attraction to attraction than in the mostly covered queues.
We tried at both MK and DS but they wouldn't listen and just said she did not qualify for a DAC.
They were right, as she would have had to go through all the convoluted queues anyways, as most of the FP queues travel parallel to the SB ones.
OK - it wouldn't let me post because I didn't type anything outside of the quote box
