I had no idea the level of planning some people do for Disney. My first trip, I read the information Disney gave. Watched a few episodes of the Dis (who am I kidding, I watched a lot of episodes of the Dis) and made my ADRs, FP etc. In fact the entire trip was planned around getting a BOG ADR about 3 months out after I found out I couldn't go to Vegas because of work. I made my ADRs based on what interested me, not what was popular. I picked my FP based on what where the 3 most important rides for me that day, not how am I going to have this amazing FP game and get the most out of my vacation. I looked at park maps the day before I went into the parks. And ya know what, it was a fantastic trip. Loved every minute of it. Couldn't have been happier. I didn't experience everything, but I Drank Around the World, meet some lovely people and overall had a fantastic vacation.
You've watched episodes of the Dis; I never have. (I don't deal with podcasts; I like my info written)
You planned almost exactly *how people plan*. There is nearly no difference in how you planned vs how others plan. I'm not sure why you think people plan based on popular attractions etc? People plan for what they want to do. I think maybe you're reading something into uber-planners that might not be there?
The day I have a by the hour itinerary, let alone by the minute as some people do. That my friends, is the day travel stops being fun.
Can you recognize that such an itinerary IS fun for the people that do it?
Can you recognize that planning like that means you're living in the parks in your head, and THAT is fun? You're visualizing it, imagining it. I've never done a full hour-by-hour itinerary, but for the important days on certain vacations I have to, in order to communicate to my family what we need to be doing. Heck, DH is doing that right now because we just bought a house and we're in the last 2 days of moving out of our condo (I should be there, cleaning, but I opened this huge thread just as they left for the condo LOL), and he's coming up with hour by hour game plans to finish this all up.
Going with the flow meant that I got to see and experience unexpected things.
OK, but there's NOTHING that should be unexpected about a Disney trip. Characters are actors with schedules. Disney CMs tend to try to make things nice. There are maps showing everything.
Shucks.... Never really took much of that into account. Even in my planning days the most I did was try to get us in a park that would get us to dinner in time. Than again, we mostly ate at resort restaurants and would go to the room for a shower and pre dinner drinks so it didn't matter much.
I am a total fan of no planning. It works for us with the exception of ADR's, and that's only because Disney screwed that one up.
MG
You planned your trips long ago when you make eating and drinking your focus! So you planned it all out for YOUR intended trips. You're just as much of a planner than any other planner; your focuses are simply different.
I am so not a planner when it comes to vacation, but there's a difference in being a "non-planner" and being "uninformed".
The original post was about the uninformed and the disappointed-when-finally-informed.
WHere did you get this from his post?
It's from every one of his posts in this thread.
Sounds like he has fun trips. I can't drink more than two adult beverages in a day at Disney. I could have more once back at the villa/room for the evening, but then I can't get going early in the morning. Plus, DH doesn't drink so it gets sad and lonely LOL.
Because many parents just don't bother to read the information that comes home with their child, despite the fact that they signed a paper giving permission for their child to go. If they can't be bothered to read a paper that impacts the child they birthed/raised/are responsible for, they surely won't read a form letter from Disney.
I would STRONGLY recommend finding some way to get the info directly to the parents.
My son dances, and the teachers give info to the kids. So often the info doesn't get given to the parents. Since I'm a parent who is there (it's at the YMCA so I'm there working out or taking my own classes) I'm there when his class ends and can snag whatever paper he walks out with. Many parents pick up outside the building, or the kids are driving themselves. Those are the parents that seem to never know the info, because the kids aren't giving them the papers. I know 100% that the kids are being given the papers; I see them walking out with it. Not sure what happens to it in the next 5 minutes, though! A dear friend, who is very good with paperwork, has two teen girls that just never give her the papers. Unfortunately for the girls, I'm here to tell their mom that they were given info.
The lady at the kiosk is wrong. I literally got fast passes to the hardest rides after using my first three. People cancel literally every min. You just need the patience to keep clicking the times back and forth waiting for a time to pop up to grab. This was this past weekend also which is a holiday.
I think the CM was at the line, not the kiosk.
I just made dinner reservations at WL for November. Guess I should have stayed up all night at the 180 mark. I thought since WL is half empty we'd we able to eat there at a decent time. With small kids who normally go to bed at 6:30-7:00, eating at 6:30 is problematic. We didn't really want to drag them to a park late in the day to eat. I am a planner but I think it's overboard when a half empty hotel is full at opening 6 months ahead it's a problem. Learning .....
What does one have to do with the other?
Are you the one who posted about thinking you need to get a 1K/night room to be within an hour of MK? Please rethink what you think is necessary...