Cool! I'm two for two today. Called to book tickets to La Nouba for our upcoming May trip. Got my pick of seats for Tuesday May 15. Then I called to see what was available at Cindy's. Got my choice of seatings. I chose Monday at 9am.
So my May trip is shaping up. Resort hop to Saratoga on Sunday (we're at Marriott the week before). Spend the day loafing at the resort and/or DTD. Do MK on Monday. Another pool day and La Nouba Tuesday. Wednesday I leave unplanned. I'm thinking about taking that ferry for a ride to OKW and POR. We haven't seen those resorts yet.
My dad's in a conference Th-Sat (reason we booked a SSR stay rather than offsite), so I'll be footloose and fancy free those days. What to do, what to do.
She was much loved and still missed. The matriarch to so many we lost count. Her greatest achievement was building a family that loved each other and actually wanted to be together. My parents had that fairy tale type of marriage. Disney was definitely up their alley. My dad is a bit of nutty professor/eccentric. He goes to the barber shop on Main Street twice a year just to get a mohawk haircut. People definitely notice him.
Disability is not something to be shelved in a closet anymore. It can be daunting traveling, but if you know what you need and talk to the right people, you can get pretty much anywhere. I'm planning a London trip for my dad and I this Summer. Me, my powerchair and a hotel on the Thames right across from Big Ben. (Thank you Marriott rewards points.)
I talked my dad into renting a
scooter for our last family Orlando trip. We had the adapted van to carry it and frankly with my 4.5 mph powerchair I found his "Old Man" walking speed painfully slooooooow. He gets one every trip now. Touring the world in a scooter is an E-ticket ride itself. (And it helps since 2 months after that trip he wound up with triple bypass surgery.) Dad says he loves best always having a seat for the parades and fireworks or just people watching.
Oh, and a little secret. There are some fun places to drag race. When no pedestrians are around, mind you. I just love the winding entrance queue to the new Nemo ride. On a slow day, from bright sun to darkness, around all those curves. It's like the Indy 500. Yeah, I'm bad.

Promise I haven't taken any pedestrians out... unless they were kids in Heelys, but that's a public service.