bbjunkie
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- May 3, 2015
- Messages
- 559
When would a normal person plan to book a dinner? I can't get Hamilton tickets until January; my last attempt at Jimmy Buffett tickets were sold out six months before the show. I can't get into the Rainbow Room for New Year's Eve for three years. Things that are in demand tend to have a long wait.
And even if WDW shortened the window, it wouldn't help. There will always be someone who doesn't book early enough, no matter what the timeframe is. If it were 90 days, people would still consider that too far out. Like a PP said some people are frustrated that can't get same day or 24-hour reservations. And if they got rid of ADRs all together, you'd have lines outside restaurants starting at 9am.
The simple facts are that -- if you believe the TEA report -- more than 120,000 people move through the four park gates every day. That's the average. Those 120,000 people want to do the same things you do -- they want to see shows, ride rides, eat stuff. So when you're at Disney, that's the unfortunate way you have to think of it. There are too many people too assume casualness. So if there are specific things that anyone wants to do, it's not a reasonable expectation to think that those specific things are going to be available without some effort -- the competition to be entertained is too great.
That said, you can usually find a non-character meal with little advance notice. You can usually find a FP for anything other than the Mine Train (or the new Frozen ride) on the day of or the day before. And 90+ minute waits may suck, but they were the norm on a lot of rides when I was a kid, and still are at the amusement parks I've been to lately.
I wish I could like this more than once!!!