Fatigue issues On Jul 14, 11:47 pm, "JD" <jjda...@> wrote:
> We will soon be going to WDW for a week. DH was in a motorcycle accident
> in May and has pretty much recovered, however still tires fairly quickly.
> My sister-in-law's DH also tires quickly due to his fight with cancer in the
> last couple of years. Both men are physically in pretty good shape, that
> is you wouldn't really know to look at them and they don't require wheel
> chairs or handicapped status. What I'm wondering is how PO'd people will
> get if the guys sit while the rest of us go thru the lines and then join us
> when it's time to get on. Anyone have similar experience?
> Thanks,
> JD
I wouldn't worry so much about what other people think - I'd worry
about the logistics of your proposal. Other than a few rides in
Fantasyland, I can't really think of any queues where someone sitting
outside the line can see the front of the line, to know when you're
there.
Just in the MK alone...
* Space Mountain is entirely indoors
* Splash Mountain weaves all over the place, before finally going
indoors, upstairs, around a bunch of turns
* Thunder Mountain winds up the hill, going indoors for the inner
queue before sloping back down
* Buzz Lightyear starts outside, but quickly goes inside
* Monster's Inc is entirely inside
* Pirates is entirely inside.
<etc>
Are you thinking of just calling them as you approach the front, and
having them say "Excuse me" a couple thousand times as they try to go
through the queue in a hurry to catch up with you? The way you
described it, it sounds like you're thinking they can just watch to
see when you're about to board, and walk directly from outside the
queue to the boarding location without going through the queue. I
don't see how that's possible in any but a very small number of
queues.
Paul Lalli |