finedice
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2007
- Messages
- 753
Hi All! I've been only moderately checking in - but checking in since just before Covid Yuck! We had our last trip in the last week of Feb 2020 - so yeah - just prior to closing...
Anyway, we have an upcoming family wedding on the mid- eastern Florida coast in late November and are weighing the merits of a stay and play at WDW for a week after the wedding weekend. This means we have to fly from northern New England to attend. Of course, what other excuse would a small family need to extend the trip with a week at WDW, when it just happens to align with work and school breaks?
Suffice to say that we are really torn on even trying to make this happen as we are definitely die-hards that have learned to love the entire resort and how to take our time enjoying it while hitting all of our favorites multiple times on every trip. We play early in the parks - maximizing the best times to hit attractions efficiently with minimal waits, as well as an understanding of when to say the wait is too long - and then opt to do something else more enjoyable than waiting in line for awhile. We have been learning and adjusting from the advice found here for 15 years now and feel we have become as expert as a family could be in planning and enjoying a Disney stay as anyone outside of Florida - or at least within reasonable driving distance.
The lack of FP+ is the biggest hurdle for us to get over as we consider a visit over Thanksgiving week. We are also foodies, so the full dining experience potentially NOT being unavailable is huge too. We know which restaurants we love and which ones we will settle for. We also know which food experiences to avoid (but I won't say which of your favorites we would avoid - cuz, well, you wouldn't agree
).
AM EMH was always part of our strategy - using it, coupled with FP+ to our advantage to hit all of the major headliners with nearly no wait, and then hopping to a more leisurely park after lunch or a swim or whatever offered relaxation and entertainment at the moment was the way we avoided the stress so many experience.
While we enjoyed a few shows during the day to break things up, there are some we would never miss if they were replaced or weren't happening. The night stuff is another story - those will be missed.
We loved finding Meet & Greets we hadn't experienced before (which were the rare and newer ones), but wouldn't wait in line for those we had experienced - unless there was virtually no line - which always involved luck in just passing by.
We are bummed about the slow progress of construction on attractions we had hoped would be ready for this time. GoG and Tron, as well as EPCOT in general are downers - understandable, but still a bummer.
T-giving week is also pretty darned busy, so that adds to our trepidation.
We are from a "lower covid" state as well. We have worn our masks for a year (along with virtually everyone else in our region) - Wearing them won't deter us, but crowds without them might- of course, that all depends on vaccination progress between now and then as well.
So why SHOULD we book a trip? - What parts of a current era WDW stay will make it worth it to an experienced and veteran family that has to spend a lot on airfare, hotel and tickets? What are your best guesses of what might change between now and then? Convince us!
Anyway, we have an upcoming family wedding on the mid- eastern Florida coast in late November and are weighing the merits of a stay and play at WDW for a week after the wedding weekend. This means we have to fly from northern New England to attend. Of course, what other excuse would a small family need to extend the trip with a week at WDW, when it just happens to align with work and school breaks?
Suffice to say that we are really torn on even trying to make this happen as we are definitely die-hards that have learned to love the entire resort and how to take our time enjoying it while hitting all of our favorites multiple times on every trip. We play early in the parks - maximizing the best times to hit attractions efficiently with minimal waits, as well as an understanding of when to say the wait is too long - and then opt to do something else more enjoyable than waiting in line for awhile. We have been learning and adjusting from the advice found here for 15 years now and feel we have become as expert as a family could be in planning and enjoying a Disney stay as anyone outside of Florida - or at least within reasonable driving distance.
The lack of FP+ is the biggest hurdle for us to get over as we consider a visit over Thanksgiving week. We are also foodies, so the full dining experience potentially NOT being unavailable is huge too. We know which restaurants we love and which ones we will settle for. We also know which food experiences to avoid (but I won't say which of your favorites we would avoid - cuz, well, you wouldn't agree
). AM EMH was always part of our strategy - using it, coupled with FP+ to our advantage to hit all of the major headliners with nearly no wait, and then hopping to a more leisurely park after lunch or a swim or whatever offered relaxation and entertainment at the moment was the way we avoided the stress so many experience.
While we enjoyed a few shows during the day to break things up, there are some we would never miss if they were replaced or weren't happening. The night stuff is another story - those will be missed.
We loved finding Meet & Greets we hadn't experienced before (which were the rare and newer ones), but wouldn't wait in line for those we had experienced - unless there was virtually no line - which always involved luck in just passing by.
We are bummed about the slow progress of construction on attractions we had hoped would be ready for this time. GoG and Tron, as well as EPCOT in general are downers - understandable, but still a bummer.
T-giving week is also pretty darned busy, so that adds to our trepidation.
We are from a "lower covid" state as well. We have worn our masks for a year (along with virtually everyone else in our region) - Wearing them won't deter us, but crowds without them might- of course, that all depends on vaccination progress between now and then as well.
So why SHOULD we book a trip? - What parts of a current era WDW stay will make it worth it to an experienced and veteran family that has to spend a lot on airfare, hotel and tickets? What are your best guesses of what might change between now and then? Convince us!
