Anonymous wrote:OP here. Some folks actually enjoy the planning but it isn't for everyone. Definitely stay home if you can't put time into planning. Lots more places to spend your money. Lots of sour faces and kids getting yelled at in the parks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Some folks actually enjoy the planning but it isn't for everyone. Definitely stay home if you can't put time into planning. Lots more places to spend your money. Lots of sour faces and kids getting yelled at in the parks.
Why should I "stay home" if I don't enjoy planning? How about I go on a spontaneous beach vacation with my family and our neighbors' kids, like we did last summer? It was a blast.
Nah, just find out when the lowest crowd times are and go then. There are times when the parks are pretty empty. (The weeks after Labor Day is pretty great.)
Anonymous wrote:Disney Cruises are great, but there is no better place to experience Disney magic then what Walt Disney himself envisioned.
Anonymous wrote:PSA: do a disney cruise instead. See the characters at meet and greets and broadway style shows each night while spending your days on the beach in the Caribbean (or Alaska or Europe). After two disney cruises, we'll never bother with the hassle of WDW again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My family goes to WDW probably 3x a year on average. We just love it. However, I can understand folks hating it who go down without doing research because it's theme parks. I see families fighting and getting all upset over the missed details of planning this type of vacation. Buy a guidebook, listen to podcasts, get an authorized Disney travel agent... But don't go blindly!
Never been interested in going there. America's national parks are great though.
Anonymous wrote:PSA: do a disney cruise instead. See the characters at meet and greets and broadway style shows each night while spending your days on the beach in the Caribbean (or Alaska or Europe). After two disney cruises, we'll never bother with the hassle of WDW again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My family goes to WDW probably 3x a year on average. We just love it. However, I can understand folks hating it who go down without doing research because it's theme parks. I see families fighting and getting all upset over the missed details of planning this type of vacation. Buy a guidebook, listen to podcasts, get an authorized Disney travel agent... But don't go blindly!
Never been interested in going there. America's national parks are great though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The OP is dead on about planning Disney.
I haven't been in over 20 years, but if I am going to spend at least a grand (and this is assuming I go alone), I could comparison shop hotels on and off Disney property like crazy, make notes, price out the parks (whether it is a park hopper or something else), figure out the time of year it is the least crowded, and numerous other things, so I could enjoy my time there.
This goes for all vacations, not just Disney.
Also, why do people take their kids to Disney at a age they will not remember it? First time I went, I was 10 (my brother was 8), second time was late into my teenage years. We were able to enjoy all the rides because we were tall enough, and whatever Disney characters we ran into at the time, we ran into. I know, things have changed a lot, but I really think there are a lot of lazy people out there that want things handed to them and that is not the case. Travel agents can help (if you can afford it) as well, as a PP said.
So a great time is only worthy to be had if you can remember it? I do a lot of things with my toddlers now because they enjoy it NOW. I guess I'll just stop though, since they won't remember it anyway.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Lol at grand Floridian being called a "decent" place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Some folks actually enjoy the planning but it isn't for everyone. Definitely stay home if you can't put time into planning. Lots more places to spend your money. Lots of sour faces and kids getting yelled at in the parks.
Why should I "stay home" if I don't enjoy planning? How about I go on a spontaneous beach vacation with my family and our neighbors' kids, like we did last summer? It was a blast.
Anonymous wrote:PSA: do a disney cruise instead. See the characters at meet and greets and broadway style shows each night while spending your days on the beach in the Caribbean (or Alaska or Europe). After two disney cruises, we'll never bother with the hassle of WDW again.