As large as The Dream Scooter is, I don't know if it would really fit on the ships. Especially in the corridors. I know that using a Pride Go-Go was a tight fit.
And my advice for the various ports with an
ECV is if at all possible to walk up or down the gangway holding the handrails and ask one of the crew to (with control towards Turtle) walk alongside the ECV and drive it.
Not knowing which Pride Go-Go Cheshire Figment has, I chose the largest one for a size comparison. It is 40.25 in long and 21.125 in wide, considerably smaller than the Dream.
Some people have posted in the past that they planned to keep their ECV in their room, but could not even get it inside. I don't know what kind of storage facilities the ship has for
ECVs, if they even have any, and whether or not they are first come, first serve. That was one of the big reasons I suggested getting the measurements and contacting the Special Services Department for the Cruise Line.
With the front wheel turned, the Dream does meet the 48 inches criteria, but there are some things where 48 inches total may fit better than 48 inches with the wheel turned. As you can see on the
pictures on this thread, it does fit on the resort/park bus lifts, but is a tight fit.
Even if ScooterOrlando has made the scooter slightly smaller, it is still very much on the edge of meeting the definition of 'common wheelchair' that the ADA provides for. It appears that most of the modifications were probably things like removing the bumpers over the tires, which take off a small amount. Since your DH has power wheelchair experience, he will probably do better than someone without that experience. He should practice for a bit because he will need to 'relearn' what his 'space' is. When my DD got her new power wheelchair, she had to relearn a bit because her old one was rear wheel drive and her newer front wheel drive one turns much shaper (almost within it's own footprint), where the old one did not. That meant she sometimes turned too late with the new wheelchair because that's the point she would have turned with her old one.
Cheshire,
We acually
are kind of concerned about the size of the Dream scooter, DH is using it mostly for our 2 days at WDW before the cruise. He can walk with a cane, but distances wear him out and cause pain if he cannot sit often.
We wouldn't even bring it on the cruise, but are worried about the distances involved at the ports.
We have one excursion booked at Nassau, the "Sea and See Tour" (Seaworld Explorer semi submarine and city tour by bus). It says its a 10 minute walk to the pickup point, where we were planning to leave the
ECV at when he boards the boat/bus. Now a 10 min walk can be very different for someone who walks a normal pace compared to someone with difficulty. Does anyone have an estimate as to how many blocks this would be an equivalent to? (counting the distance from the aft of deck 7 where our cabin is of course).
I dont imagine there are benches along the dock to rest at.
We also would like to spend a bit of time at the shops/market in Nassau, never havng been there it would be something we've never seen. Having the EVC for that would probably be a nesessity also. Although,,, I seem to remember someone posting that there are no curb cuts on sidewalks, can anyone confirm this? If getting around the streets on an EVC would be impossible that would be another reason to not bother bringing it.
Thanks for all the help!
People have posted in the past that there are no curb cuts and that the only place on any of the Disney cruises that was really accessible was
CastAway Cay.
I don't know how helpful this will be, but here is a
link to an article on allearsnet.com about the walking tour of Nassau from the Disney Wonder in Dec. 2007 (with pictures, which makes it look like they did a lot of walking on the streets).
The wdwinfo.com part of the DIS site also has an extensive set of information about the
Disney Cruise line,
including this page of picture links.
When I did a cruise I did take a See and Sea tour with a semi-sub. I did not use my ECV (it could not get on the bus and Nassau does
not have any ADA or equal). It was a walk on rough ground and also once on the boat I had to navigate a flight of stairs. I think that none of the tours that
DCL arranges for are accessible (unless they have changed in the last two years) becuase the tour companies are under no legal obligation to be accessible and they do enough business to not care.
Kathy - any comment on DCL tours?
Like I said, we would be using the scooter to get on and off the ship (and get to excursions), not to manuver around the ship and thru hallways, restaurants etc.
We are using DCL transfers and were assured that this scooter has been on the DCL busses many times. (and therefore on the ship itself)
We have been told, and have read on other posts, that the scooter is ADA compliant and fits on all standard lifts. The only difference being that once you drive onto the lift, you have to turn the front wheel sideways as it is longer than most scooters.
Apparently this company has modified The Dream so that it adheres to standard specs. The Dream that is sold retail lists its specs and being slightly larger than the one scootorlando rents out.
Honestly, this is really stressing me out, DH didn't want to rent a scooter at all and it took finding this "Harley style" scooter to convince him that it wouldnt ruin his fun to have a scooter. Long story, but he was in a power wheelchair for years and recently had "miracle surgeries" to get him walking again. He still does physical therapy to strengthen and stretch muscles. He's a young guy and wanted this to be his celebration trip. It will be our "once in a lifetime" vacation.
To tell him that he needs a walker or a manual chair or just to stay on the ship would break his heart.
This is a picture of the DME bus lift.
It is the same as the DCL bus - the main difference is the outside decoration/theming. The lift is fairly similar in size to the lifts on the resort/park buses. The biggest difference is how high the lift goes up.
Because of the size of the Dream scooter and that it doesn't come apart for transport, you will need to make sure that DCL Transportation knows you need one of the accessible buses. Not all are accessible; that is just an inconvenience for us when we use DME to get to our resort, because we just wait a bit longer. Not having an accessible bus could mean you miss your boat, that's why I mentioned the bus situation.
Good luck on your trip.