undertheradar
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 12, 2002
- Messages
- 4,958
caimakale said:When the CM wouldn't let my daughter on a ride, I turned around and walked away...no arguing, no comments about it. I knew she was doing her job and arguing is going to get me on the ride. It was the people in line behind me who were yelling...mostly because of how minor a difference it was.
As far as adding things to the shoes, how does it make a difference? 48" is 48" no matter which way you slice it. Compare two kids without shoes on. Kid one can be taller than kid two. But if kid two is wearing the right shoes, they may end up being taller than kid one. Don't you think disney takes these kinds of things into account? They do, otherwise you would be required to take your shoes off before getting on the ride. Adding a quarter inch in the shoes would be no different than (if it were possible) adding a quarter inch in the shins. There are many different body types out there and long legs are common in my family. Adding a quarter inch of stuff in shoes...or even a shoe insert for that matter, isn't going to make my kid fall out of a ride any easier than if they really were a quarter inch taller. Chances are when they really grow that extra quarter inch, it will be below the waist anyways. So the foot to hip measurement will be the same anyways. How is this a big deal? They are the proper height either way. 48" is 48".
Now I'm not saying run out and stuff your childrens shoes with stuff to make them taller, but don't call people foolish and other names for doing it. I would hope and agree that parents need to recognize if a child's body type is proper for a ride.
The real problem is that the ride restraint systems are designed for those heights as a minimum. When you stuff paper or whatever in shoes, you have not increased the the height of the trunk of the torso. You will see cms have children remove shoes and measure, it took place when we were there a month ago. Height is not the only factor, many of the restraints would not safely hold a smaller child. Take younger children on Soarin first and see how they react. Many are nervous about the feeling of falling and that would be a good test before Screamin. While it may not be much for older children and adults, smaller bodies "bounce" around more within the confines of the restraints. Wouldn't be a fun vacation if the young one is sore from the ride!