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- Aug 23, 1999
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We literally arrived home from a 15 day stay at WDW about 3 hrs ago. Chilling out a bit now, in recovery mode, so thought I would post a little bit about our trip.
We were at OKW in a one bedroom villa for the entire time. It had a roll in shower. Room # 2111. That room is almost a one mile walk to Hospitality House and the feature pool, but we like the location because it is very close to the Miller Road bus stop and also the ‘community pool’ by building 20. Most mornings, we walked up to Hospitality House and back to get coffee.
During the first week, it was just my DH, my youngest DD and I.
My older DD and her DH joined us the second week and traveled home with us.
Buses:
Parks:
GAC
We were at OKW in a one bedroom villa for the entire time. It had a roll in shower. Room # 2111. That room is almost a one mile walk to Hospitality House and the feature pool, but we like the location because it is very close to the Miller Road bus stop and also the ‘community pool’ by building 20. Most mornings, we walked up to Hospitality House and back to get coffee.
During the first week, it was just my DH, my youngest DD and I.
My older DD and her DH joined us the second week and traveled home with us.
Buses:
- Only saw one lift bus and we were not on it! First time ever that we have not ridden a lift bus several times (I got my heel caught once on the lift and so, don’t like the lift buses
).
- We had no trouble with the buses, but OKW is not typically a busy resort for buses, except for peak times. We also were careful not to travel at peak times.
- We had marked safe tiedown spots on DD’s wheelchair with neon green tape. Before I could point them out, one driver asked us if her chair had loops for tiedown. One started to attach the back tiedowns to a bar that goes across the back of the wheelchair for stabilization, which is not a safe place. All the driver’s liked the green tape and it made it much easier for me because I could just say “You can attach any place you see green tape.”
- We took DD’s backpack off each time for the bus because we normally take it off when using our own van - even though we are familiar with the van and the wheelchair, it’s much faster. So, I don’t know if we would have been asked to remove it or not.
- We went to several resorts and all had painted wheelchair size boxes on the ground in the stop. They also had signs that explained wheelchairs at the resorts would be loaded first with up to 5 members of their party (the same sign I had seen last year at OKW).
- At the parks, our bus dropped us off many times at stops other than ours, so I had a chance to see the bus lines for resorts other than OKW. All of the park stops have had the lines widened. Some of the stops have chains or pipes all the way from entry to the front door of the bus, with no exit once you are in line until you reach the front. Others have bars or chains with a chained opening in the front row where the back door of the bus will be. Others had ropes separating out the queue. The Studio even had chains going between the different bus queues to prevent people from going up to the front where guests with wheelchairs waited previously.
- Watching guests with strollers in line, I think one of the main reasons for widening the lines was to enable strollers to fit in line. Even some of the single strollers are as wide as my DD’s wheelchair and all the double strollers except double umbrellas were wider than my DD’s wheelchair. Some of the larger double strollers were a tight fit for even the widened bus lines.
Parks:
- We used the Undercover Tourist WDW app for iphone and found it quite helpful. We tried to avoid the ‘red’ parks, if possible, and were able to avoid much of the crowds and waits. It was also helpful to check menus at restaurants, although some of the children’s menus were not correct.
- DH and I each took a day to go to MK at opening without DD, so we could go on things like Peter Pan and Space Mountain that she can’t go on. Both of us found very uncrowded conditions (I went to morning EMH and DH did not). I was able to go on Peter Pan, Snow White, Winnie the Pooh, Haunted Mansion, Stitch’s Great Escape (research
) and Small World with Peter Pan, at 10 minutes, the longest wait.
- I also spent some time poking around on Tom Sawyer’s Island to see how accessible it was. I remembered taking DD there when she was little and all I can think is that we must have carried her wheelchair a lot because there is not much you can go on without running into some stairs. Back until she was about 8, we did sometimes go one on each side of her wheelchair and carry it - once went up a full fight of stairs to get into a museum. Looking back, that was a bit nuts.
- I also stayed longer one day at Animal Kingdom than DH and DD. I went on the Safari at about 3pm and ended up seeing more animals than i ever have before, including the male and female lion, walking around.
- We had a very long wait in the accessible line for the Safari and had to let a whole tram full of people go by us because the person ahead of us needed the
- DH went on Star Tours one early morning, but the rest of us didn’t. We had just finished lunch one time we were around there and the other 3 times we were in the area, it was temporarily closed for technical problems. DH said the main difference is that the movie is now 3D.
- Pirates was closed for much of one day and Splash Mountain was closed a good part of the morning on the day I was there for early EMH.
- One thing that was odd - we saw many people, including adults at Epcot in costumes. We didn’t think much about it at MK, but I have never seen it before at Epcot.
- Older DD, her DH and I stayed one evening for EMH at Epcot. We were able to go on Soarin’ with only about a 10 minute wait. We also stayed at MK one night until midnight.
- We were asked to remove DD’s backpack on almost all rides where she stayed in her wheelchair.
- Small World boat has 2 while lines, fairly well back from the front of the boat. Guests previously just pulled up to the front of the boat and locked brakes, which did leave room for 2 wheelchairs. Each time we road, we were to remove DD’s backpack and park the wheelchair between the while lines.
- Toy Story Mania now has QStraint wheelchair tiedowns and a seatbelt. The seatbelt was permanently attached, but the QStraint tiedowns were attached each time as part of the transformation of the car from seating to wheelchair spot.
- As we were waiting at Toy Story Mania, a CM told me they can only ‘process’ one special needs party every 7 minutes, which is why guests in that boarding area can sometimes back up very far. It’s hard to explain, but it sounded like they are only supposed to use the ride car that can be transformed for for wheelchair use in that area for all guests. Each time they transform it so someone can ride in their wheelchair, they are allowed to pull one ‘regular’ ride car pod to make up for the time it takes to transform the wheelchair car.
GAC
- We did not need to use DD’s GAC very often. She had a hard first week (seizure every day) and barely made 3-4 hours at the park those first days. So, she was not around that much to use it. Waits were low for many things and places where we waited a long time (accessible line for Small World, Accessible boarding area for Toy Story Mania and Safari) were points where there was no way for us to avoid a wait.
- Several times when we used the GAC, the CM looked at it and then asked, “Which of you is ------- [DD’s name]”. I have read comments recently on other websites where people were using a family member’s GAC when that family member was not present, so I guess they are trying to crack down on that.
- We went on Small World several times and each time saw people using GACs in the accessible line without a wheelchair when the wait in the regular line was much shorter than the accessible line. I don’t mean to say that people should not be in that line unless they have a wheelchair - only trying to point out that people with wheelchairs or mobility devices have to go into that line. Those who don’t may have a much shorter wait if they can use the regular line.
- One of the reasons we go in the fall is to go to this party. We arrived about 5:30 pm and got our wristbands right away.
- We ate (well, all except younger DD) before the party officially began at 7pm, so we were ready to party as it started.
- It was quite busy the first hour of the party as people who were not attending left. There were CMs with flashlights at many points doing random checks of guests for wristbands. They also were checking in the end of Main Street and the entrance to each land and did not let guests pass without wristbands.
- Visiting the Fairies was one of our anticipated high points, since younger DD and I were dressed as fairies. The new fairy meeting area is cute, but much smaller than before and there were only 2 fairies - Terrance and Tink. Terrance was OK. Tinkerbell was excellent.
- Our wait for the Fairies was only about 20 minutes (it only felt like an hour for DH and DSIL). Other character lines were very long, so we did not go to any others.
- Trick or Treat Candy areas were very busy until about 8:30, but much quieter after the first parade. Younger DD likes the trick or treat, so we got tons of candy.
- We went to the early parade and the handicapped viewing spot we were in was very busy. It was almost full more than 45 minutes before the parade when we arrived. The CM there was great - his name was Michael - and he somehow kept finding spots for people until right before the parade began without making anyone feel put out or crowded. As the parade was starting, he thanked us all for being such co-operative guests and said he could not do his job without us.
- Some of the costumes were truely awesome. We saw many families dressed in themes - several sets of Dalmation puppies and a family of Tinkerbell, Captain Hook, Peter Pan and (the non-matching) cowboy.
- We had very nice, respectful and gentle TSA agents both going and coming.
- We traveled on AirTran and had no problems, but something kind of strange on our return flight. We asked to preboard and asked for an aisle chair. The gate agent said the 4 of us could preboard together so that older DD and DSIL could help us. A gate person pushed the wheelchair down to the door of the plane, where a flight attendant asked several times “Do they have a certificate of medical need?” He also did not want anyone to board with DD, since the gate staff were putting her on and off the aisle chair. DH said he needed to go with her and the flight attendant did finally allow that, but would not let any of the rest of us board until the rest of the passengers were coming down to the plane. That actually made boarding slower since we had wheelchair pieces, etc to get on the plane. Then during the flight, he must have come and asked us at least 6 times if everything was all right.
- On arriving, we actually waited 45 minutes and saw the whole bus waiting area clear of people twice before an accessible bus arrived for us. We expected that we might be left off first because of our long wait, but no such luck. The driver announced there would be 4 stops and ours was the last stop. The other 3 stops had one or 2 people at each stop. I don’t know why it was routed that way, other than the driver may not have wanted to listen to other passengers complain about the time it took to unload the wheelchair.
- When our bus arrived this morning, we could see that it was pretty full from the faces in the window. I got on the bus to wait at the top of the lift while DH waited at the bottom for DD to get loaded onto the lift. As I walked to the back of the bus, I could see there were no seats, so I yelled that down to the driver and my DH on the ground. The driver said there should be seats and he came on the bus, walked to the back and then said “I will get 4 seats for your group and tell the other people waiting they won’t fit.” DH said we would need at least one seat across from DD since she can’t really be alone and the driver said he would work something out. One very nice family right in front of the wheelchair spot made room for us. DH ended up standing for the trip to the airport.