I was told I couldn’t ride Peter Pan because I would have to take my wheelchair to the ride vehicle. When I asked why it was different from any other ride the CM told me it was a safety issue because if the ride got stuck they have to use ladders to get people down so you have to be capable of using a ladder. Let’s pretend I can’t use a ladder (I can) and let’s pretend there aren’t people not in wheelchairs who wouldn’t stand a chance using a ladder. Does anyone have insight on why this ride is different from every other ride that is in the air or even the sky liner? My BS alarm was going off but I didn’t care enough to argue.
What you were told is true and it is listed as “Must be ambulatory”.
The moving walkway is not supposed to be stopped, except in emergency.
Although some people have reported it was stopped for them, the official answer is that it is not supposed to be stopped and most people are given the same information you were given.
The reason they don’t want it stopped is the ride inside also stops if the moving walkway does. That leaves a large number of people suspended inside the ride with a very minimal restraint could lead to falls if guests panic and try to get out.
If a guest can’t evacuate in an emergency by themselves or with help of a companion, they need to wait for evacuation by the Fire Department. What I’ve specifically heard about Peter Pan is that evacuation in general of that attraction is very challenging and that all guests would need evacuation with ladders brought to the ride vehicles. Most could get down a held ladder, but someone who can’t would need to be carried down by Rescue Personnel
Other rides that go in the air aren’t actually suspended above the ground as individual ride vehicles - for example, Dumbo, Magic Carpets and TricerapTop Spin are all suspended together and the CMs operating the ride could view all ride vehicles. Guests are suspended on Soarin, but again, as a group that CMs can see. I believe there is a manual way to lower the attraction rows to the ground if it malfunctions. The Skyway is different because guests are in an enclosed vehicle until they are evacuated if there is an issue.
Those are the only things I can think of where guests are actually suspended.
Peter Pan at MK also has a very short time and distance for loading and unloading, so not a lot of time for a non- ambulatory person to transfer. The last time we rode was when my daughter was little enough to easily park her wheelchair about 10 feet away and carry her. When we got off, my husband almost ran out of space on the moving walkway, which would have led to an emergency stop.
Some people in the past have been able to request to ride Peter Pan the last ride of the night. All the pirate ships were empty
except for the one they were on, so there was not a concern about other ships full of guests