Amy&Dan
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2004
- Messages
- 15,958
We have gone camping with our kids since they were babies. The one thing we've always taught them if they become separated from us in the woods is to "hug a tree", which means that they are to STAY PUT. That way we can trace our own steps back and have a better chance of finding them, as they won't be wandering aimlessly trying to find us and becoming more lost.
At DLR, this same rule of remaining in place applies, with the addition that they can ask a mom with kids passing by to get a CM to help, and they can ONLY go with a CM to be taken to the lost child area.
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Very good advice and what I did when my kids were younger. I always stressed that the second they realized they were separated from us, to stop right there and then. And to look for a cm or a mom right near there to go up to. We did get separated from my 8 year old at Epcot once and she did stop. Dh and I immediately split up and I backtracked and he went forward in case she had gotten ahead of us. She didn't see a cm but she did see a mom with several kids and just as she was wondering maybe she should go tell the mommy she was lost, the lady came up and asked her if she was. She told my dd to wait there with her and they'd see if mom or dad came up and if we didn't her husband would go find a cm. I found her pretty quick but it was the longest three or four minutes of my life! Staying put was good advice, she admitted she was about to try to find on her own the ride we were heading to which could have just put her who knows where, it was our very first visit ever to Epcot, she had no idea which way to go!
When I worked at a daycare center, we always told the kids to stop and stay put if they got separated.