Hello ratpack!from Lexington, SC myself!!!
I was just going to post that we don't go in the summer because i can't do crowds & heat. I get so cranky just being outside here at home in the summer.
We go usually in December, however we are braving a post Labor Day weekend trip this year. We've been in April as well and that was a lovely time. We'll see in 2 weeks how I *really* feel about the heat/crowds in Disney world!![]()
Enjoy your trip! Maybe we will bump into each other sometime in Lexington. I am looking at putting together a SC DIS Meet in the near future so watch for it.So...what kind of family are you? When do you go, and why???
DM's a teacher and I'm (soon to be) a school secretary. 
We wanted to do something before he starts school again after Labor Day and we all decided Disney would do it. We are taking his girlfriend, who has never been to Disney World. Showing her the World should be fun. 

I have been in late October, March, and June. I must say the Late October trip was the most comfortable. That being said, 3 weird school days off between 2 weekends and FREE DINING are making us risk the hurricane possiblities of late September. DS teacher announced at back to school night that for every missed day at school there will be 2 days worth of work for each day off. NOT the most thrilling of prospects, but this will be the first time DH has gone with us. Plus DGD and DD and boyfriend are going too, and we are hoping for lots of pixiedust and no Hurricane "Humberto" raining on our parade. I am predicting hot weather and a grand sweaty old time.
. i hope these kids are a little older like middle school of High school.DS teacher announced at back to school night that for every missed day at school there will be 2 days worth of work for each day off.

That is ridiculous--I would call the principal, or superintendent, and find out if that policy is anywhere in writing. If not, I would challenge that teacher on it.
I was a high school administrator before I stopped working to be a mom and I can tell you that very few of these policies are enforcable. Honestly, I think some of these schools are getting out of control and trying to parent our kids for us.
Our son's school instituted a policy where kids were allowed 2 "personal days" a year...parents have to submit requests in writing to get these days excused. I found it to be ridiculous. My husband was leaving for a year in Iraq with the Army, and I had to ask the principal for his permission to take our son out for a week to spend time with the family. The principal "approved" the extra days...but if he hadn't, guess what? We'd still be going. What are they going to do at the end of the year, I wondered, if my 1st grader had 5 "unexcused" absences? Hold him back? When he's at the top of his class? It's silly. (We will face this issue again this year when Dad returns from Iraq...I guess we'll have to put in another form to ask permission from the principal so our son miss a day of school to see his father get off the plane, after not seeing him for 12 months!)
My husband and I are highly educated professionals who are fully responsible for our kids. No one is going to tell me if and when I can pull my kids out of school, but yes, they can try to! And honestly, a lot of the policies these schools institute are not legally enforcable. (Yes, high schools can withhold credit for excessive absences, but that's about it.)
Climbing off my soapbox now!
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