udsweetpea said:
I admit it, I cut off strollers. Personally, and I'll probably get flamed for this, but children who require a stroller are too young to experience Disney. Also, parents who do not apologize to adults when their children are misbehaving and hitting other people. If your kids usually take a nap during the day, keep that schedule going at Disney. If you don't and they're screaming at 9pm, don't wonder why.
The leashes annoy me as well. If you do use one, I do not want to see you pulling your children up off the ground using the leash. If your child needs a leash, they also don't need to be at Disney.
Wow. I'm not flaming you, but I have to tell you that I disagree with the "too young" thing. I agree that keeping kids' schedules and apologizing to other adults are important, but to make a sweeping generalization that children who require a stroller are too young to experience Disney? That doesn't make sense to me. First, a child is perfectly capable of enjoying WDW at a young age. I went when I was three, and I do remember some of my first trip - the pool, the Country Bears, Epcot, the Main Street Electrical Parade. My 3 yo nephew went last year and he still asks about going back, and recalls his dinner at Chef Mickey's "the place with the monorail and the napkin game". We were both in strollers during our first visits and no one can tell us we didn't appreciate it!

Second, sometimes leashes and strollers are used for children with special needs - physical, emotional, mental disabilities, etc. and I applaud parents who try to keep their children safe and give them the wonderful experience of WDW. I say *everyone* NEEDS more Disney! I don't think there's anyone who couldn't benefit from a few days away amidst the magic. Third, What about grand gatherings? weddings? families with multiple kids? Are they supposed to hire a babysitter to sit with their child in the hotel room while they enjoy WDW, and then go back and tell Jr. all about the castle and the train instead of letting them see it? I have to say, I really don't follow your train of thought - I don't see what harm the average stroller-using-aged child does in WDW. Teens and adults are usually the ones who are causing the trouble, either by themselves or by not supervising properly, not the little ones! Lastly, I don't see how any of your complaints, even the valid ones, constitutes reason enough to justify cutting off strollers. Would you really cut off a stroller deliberately, knowing that the pusher, the child or you could get hurt? I definitely don't understand that. Even if no one gets hurt, it builds bad will. After getting cut off twelve times, is it any wonder that on the fourth day in the parks, Big Bad Momma starts using the stroller as a battering ram? Others have driven them to madness. By being courteous, we "pay it forward" and make the world a better, happier, place.
As far as my tips for being courteous, I say just follow the rules and do as Boardwalker said - have some consideration. If you're nice to someone, hopefully they will be nice to someone else and it will spread. I also think that it's good to give others the benefit of the doubt, but don't hesitate to speak up if there's a real problem. When a drunk bus guest was cursing and screaming, I spoke up. I got an apology and a few other bus guests thanked me. They were having a horrible trip because of him. I think it is all about doing the right thing.