Much of Europe is also older - as far as their buildings and such. There are places like Mont St. Michel where I can't even imagine how you'd have anything for those in wheelchairs,
That is a major problem. Pretty much akin to what we US wheelchair users experience every time one of our AB (able-bodied) friends invites us over to their homes for dinner. Private Residences = the Last Frontier for Wheelies.
Even so, Europeans tend to make up for that lack of accessibility with an overabundance of "grunt power" help offered. It's not unheard of for a restaurant to send out a bunch of waiters or a group f some brawny patrons to carry a wheelchair user up the threshhold steps inside. Not something you'd see often in the US for fear of liability. No help offered = do it yourself or tough!
There are many sites that offer information for those who are in wheelchairs, I am sorry that
ABD isn't offered for those who are in them (I didn't actually know that).
Yes it is disappointing, but there are other places that offer packaged tours for wheelchair users. For instance Accessible Journeys (
www.disabilitytravel.com) offers group tours of Europe, Asia and South America to wheelchair users. This London Tour (
http://www.disabilitytravel.com/grps_europe/britain/travelers_london.htm) costs :
Group size
2 passengers: $5,695.00 per person
4 passengers: $3,995.00 per person
6 passengers: $3,595.00 per person
8 passengers: $3,395.00 per person
Tour cost includes:
Professional driver, accessible van with hydraulic lift, very accessible 4 star hotel, full English breakfast daily, 17.5% VAT (Value Added Tax), portage assistance with luggage, guiding daily by licensed BTA guide, local taxes, administration charges in USA and Britain.
It takes you to London, Stratford, Stonehenge, Leeds, Bath, Dover and Canterbury over 7 days.
I highly advise anyone considering a trip abroad in a wheelchair get
Rick Steve's Easy Access Europe guidebook. It's a very helpful guidebook listing everything from accessible London Tube stations to places you go for more info. The book covers travels to London, Paris, Bruges (Belgium), Amsterdam, Rhine Valley (Germany).
I never thought I could manage travel abroad, but then I went cruising the Caribbean and ventured off the ship. I've "st"rolled the hills of San Juan, Puerto Rico (including those 16th century Spanish forts), wandered the beach in St. Maartan and picnicked in Labadee, Haiti. And people can tell you the islands are the absolute worse for accessibility... remote and lack of resources means creative problem solving.