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| When is off season? |
By off season, do you mean summer, as in July, August? In the disgusting heat and humidity? Yeah... no thanks. You can have it. |
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Summer is NOT offseason. Look for times when the offer 30% off. That's a good bet. We've never waked more than 30 minutes for anything and usually less than 10 for most.
I was a skeptic, but it was such an easy, fun vacation that we went back again. |
| We have never been. I did not go to WDW until I was in college. We don't plan on going. |
When you have two working parents (not to mention school schedules), not every family can make off season work. So, perhaps you can stop dripping sarcasm and realize it's not always about being "smart enough." |
Yes, this is our problem. It's a challenge even to make our current vacations (and sick days, and medical appts., and snow days, and reg. days off school when we have to work, etc.) all fit together like a puzzle. I study it and stretch it and finagle things every which way to make our current system even work. So, there's no way another vacation is fitting in there. |
Summer is the main season, except for the week between Christmas and New Years and the week of Easter. The lowest attendance times are September (after Labor Day), October, early November (before Thanksgiving), and early December (before Christmas and after Thanksgiving). |
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Oh please don't skip Disney World. It's such an amazing vacation (if you really plan it).
People who don't like it usually go during peak times and don't use the online planning tools that make it possible to spend very little time in line. There is nothing else like Disney. It's not about the rides - it's the atmosphere. My 7 year old son has been three times and he talks about how much he loves it all the time. Luckily my husband and I like it too. Also - each set of grandparents wanted to go with him so that's shy we've gone so much recently. It's pure joy for these kids (but ONLY if the parents aren't totally stressed and by the way - that really is possible) |
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WDW is awesome, and you don't need to plan anything. That is a myth. I showed up, got my fast passes that morning, which were fine, and the lines sucked but were much better very early and very late.
great trip. |
| Never been. No interest in going. Kid is 7. Might change my mind if he begs, but it's never been on his radar either. |
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We took our 3 and 5 year olds to the Magic Kingdom, we did the Cinderella castle dinner and skipped all the bigger roller coasters and scary rides. It was magical for them because they still at that age...but if we go back in a few years we could do more rides and attractions that don't keep a little one's interest. DH thought he would hate it but ended up having a really good time because the kids did. Part of it was the really fun waterslide pool at the hotel and cooperative weather. You can do it as part of a beach week vacation or go to the Everglades or something if Orlando is not your cup of tea (it's not mine.)
The other vacations OP mentioned sound awesome too. Sounds like what you need is more vacation time is all. |
Had a similar experience. Booked dinner and the only fast passes we used were free ones people handed us that they weren't going to get to. We arrived at noon and left after fireworks and did plenty of rides. Only crummy part was the exhaust at the auto race ride, and the line to leave the park via the ferry at the end of the night. |
You need a job with more weeks of vacation off. |
Did you end up in therapy?
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