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I read your essay and found it very informative.. Thanks for sharing..![]()
Thanks, I wrote it in the spirit of trying to help both scooter users and the folks on foot.
I can see somewhere down the road where my sis may need one of those scooters so I know where you're coming from.. But I saw an incident in Dec. where a man in one of those motorized scooters hit a little girl and trapped her leg under the scooter.. She didn't step out in front of him - nor did she stop suddenly.. It was in Epcot and the man was looking out across the lake - rather than in front of him where he was driving.. I saw several incidents like this during our trip where the drivers were looking elsewhere and literally seconds before the accident I witnessed I mentioned to my son-in-law that sooner or later someone was going to get injured.. No sooner got the words out of my mouth when we heard this blood curdling scream..
I guess we all have to be more careful - those walking around and those using the scooters.. It's really no different than driving a car - the driver of the "car" has to keep their eyes on the "road" at all times.. If the driver would like to stop to look at something (and this goes for the walker as well), move over to the side and stop - out of the mainstream of traffic..
No one should be excluded from enjoying WDW - but no one should have to run the risk of being injured by incidents that can be avoided..![]()
You are right those of us on scooters need to be ever vigilent. I try to make the point that we are just pedestrians using wheels instead of legs, but when you add the extra weight of the scooter and the stopping distance required, well, it is different. You are also right, it is kind of like driving a car, the driver cannot enjoy the scenery, and at WDW we tend to forget that, both the scooter riders and folks on foot forget the need to watch where we are going.
I hope that folks who do read the essay will undersand that they need to be vigilent as well. We can run into people when we are just walking, the difference is that a scooter has the potential to harm more than a person running into another person. By the end of the day, I feel as if I have been on a freeway all day, just trying to avoid running into other folks, I am really emotionaly drained. Riding a scooter is a BIG responsibility. One I take seriously, and one I believe many do take very seriously. But like all other things, there are the few who do not take it seriously and those are the ones that everybody remembers. Most people do not remember the courteous folks, those with strollers who do not run into you, those just out having a good time, those riding scooters who are courteous, most folks remember the ones who are not courteous. It is just human nature to remember this way.
For every stroller that runs into a person, there are 10 who do not. For every scooter who runs into a person, there are 10 who do not. For every person who jumps in fornt of you, there are 10 who do not. For every person who smokes in line, ther are 10 who do not.
I am of the opinion that there are a lot more good folks in the world than discourteous folks. I guess my "rose colored glasses are showing again"

Later,
Andy