scdak
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- May 1, 2010
- Messages
- 1,388
I can't give you a lot more information about doing a solo trip using a ECV but I can tell you from personal experience using a walking boot recently on my trip there and from my best friend having had a nonwt bearing cast then walking boot - you won't want to walk the distance you would need to walk in Disney in a walking boot esp after having had the fracture/surgery. Even walking in the queues can be daunting because they dont seen so long when you are able bodied but they are LONG when you are clunking along with the boot! Use the ECV up to the point where they have you park it, there are a few attractions where they will move it but other times it will be right where you left it. They will move it by putting it in manual mode so you should take your key with you.
As far as being difficult to drive, not really, if I can do it anyone can do it
Keep it slow until you are familiar with it, remember they don't stop on a dime so stopping requires a little advanced planning - not that it matters to the people that walk right in front of you! I can say that in 14 days of using one in September I didn't hit a soul but came close a few times but not due to my stupidity! Others have suggested trying one out at a grocery store, Walmart etc but I didn't do that since I didn't plan on using one until a few days before my trip, plus the ones at the stores are much larger and I imagine not as easy to drive as the smaller ones at WDW or from an off site vendor.
Lastly, as your MD said, the detectors there should not be an issue but mentioning it to the CM won't hurt, at worst you would have a handheld wand run over your ankle region if the regular detector is set off as you go through it. I am sure that it was a hilarious sight for others to see my best friend being told to stand on one foot (had her non weight bearing cast on at the time) so she could have a wand used over her entire body at an airport - neither one of us would ever be called tiny by any means, and she wasn't allowed to touch anything as she stood there like a stork swaying to beat the band trying to keep from falling down - I was on the other side of security and I was laughing so hard it was making her laugh which increased the swaying!
As far as being difficult to drive, not really, if I can do it anyone can do it

Lastly, as your MD said, the detectors there should not be an issue but mentioning it to the CM won't hurt, at worst you would have a handheld wand run over your ankle region if the regular detector is set off as you go through it. I am sure that it was a hilarious sight for others to see my best friend being told to stand on one foot (had her non weight bearing cast on at the time) so she could have a wand used over her entire body at an airport - neither one of us would ever be called tiny by any means, and she wasn't allowed to touch anything as she stood there like a stork swaying to beat the band trying to keep from falling down - I was on the other side of security and I was laughing so hard it was making her laugh which increased the swaying!