Originally posted by Bob NC
Just what is the big deal about going for a week and being upset that the MK closes a couple hours earlier than you want it to for a night or two? Is it the parade? Is it the 10 minute fireworks show?
This sounds like me boycotting the local mall because Sunglass Hut closes an hour before the other stores.
Hardly the same thing to me Bob, but I'll certainly respect your right to feel that way. And I have no desire to be the voice of park hour decent. I also have no intent on boycotting, but making my feelings known to Disney, as a "good client" should. But the occasional suggestion that those who complain about the low hours and lack timely hours posting are off base, in my opinion.
What it means to me is this: Between hotel, food, transportation costs, and park tickets, not to mention and not to factor in using what I consider precious time away from my business and my wife's job, we spend around three hundred bucks a day while in Disney. When I go in September and there's a couple thousand people in the park, I have more time than I know what to do with. When I go in June, prices for hotels are higher and the parks have twice as many or more people. I know this, and I alone make the decision to go in either June or September.
However, if when I go in June the hours that are listed hold up, they'll be similar to what they were last September. With crowds more than doubled, the value of my vacation will not only go down, but go down significantly. And if I choose to spend all my time in MK and the fireworks are what's really important to me (they aren't, by the way), then why should my vacation dollar buy less in June than it does in September? And if that's the way it is, I'll deal with it and act accordingly. But as a fairly decent client of Disney's spending several thousand dollars a year (a pile of money to me and probably most people), I'll certainly exercise my right to call and email those that make such decisions, and that includes posting here since I have a hunch some of this stuff might actually get to the brass at Disney.
Now, do you really want to compare that to lower hours at a quansit hut at your local shopping mall that you can visit 365 days a year? Hardly comparable. And if you do, would you shoot someone down for suggesting to the store manager they'd like the place open longer?
As some of you don't seem to cater to those that make their voice heard, I don't understand the problem with me voicing my opinion on what I'm spending a pile of jack and all my vacation time each year.
Pat