[nabs-l] canes and water park rides
Sarah Meeks
coastergirl92 at gmail.com
Mon Apr 1 23:56:17 UTC 2013
My best amusement park experience has always been Six Flags. They are very accommodating. There you are more accommodating now that I have a dog.
Sent from my iPhone
On Apr 1, 2013, at 11:22 AM, Kaiti Shelton <crazy4clarinet104 at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Yay for Disney! they were by far my best park experience. I went
> twice as a little kid. The first time I went I was five or six and my
> parents also had a baby in a stroller, so the practice for both me and
> my sister was to hold onto our brother's stroller to keep with our
> parents and not get lost. My parents just gave me verbal direction
> and were with me the entire time, so there really wasn't a major need
> for a cane. When I went again as an older kid though, I did have a
> folding cane and the Disney staff was very good about either showing
> me tricks to keep it with me or holding it and then giving it back to
> me when I got off, even on water rides like Splash Mountain and the
> Pirates of the Caribbean rides which start in one place and end at
> another. If you have a folding cane you can secure it folded with the
> loop and then put your wrist through the cane and the strap and just
> let it hang as you hold onto something. It won't flop around as much
> as the telescopic cane. Also, the holster idea sounds good, although
> some park personelle at other amusement parks get worried about it
> coming lose. Either way, you shouldn't have any problems with getting
> the ride people to bring you your cane at the ride exit.
>
> By the way, Universal Studios was excellent about working with the
> cane too. I went there in the same vacation that I went to Disney for
> the second time and they were very accomodating.
>
> On 4/1/13, Kirt Manwaring <kirt.crazydude at gmail.com> wrote:
>> Sophie,
>> I'm one of those random oddballs who would probably go alone if I
>> was traveling, and there was a really cool theme park near by. I know
>> it's not for everyone, but occasionally doing those kinds of "social"
>> things by myself is fun for me; both to keep my confidence up and to
>> meet people that I otherwise wouldn't get to know.
>> Anyways, I've taken my straight cane to theme parks no problem, but
>> I'll confess I haven't tried a water park with it yet. A collapsible
>> or folding cane seems more reasonable to me there. On rollercoasters
>> or big rides like that, I've almost always just given my straight cane
>> to the ride attendant and picked it up when the ride is done, but
>> those rides usually start and end at the same place. Waterslides and
>> things are different though, obviously.
>> Basically, I've been reading this thread to see what useful bits I
>> could glean from it, as I'll probably be going to a few water parks
>> myself over the summer. Maybe this will finally give me the
>> motivation I need to buy another collapsible or NFB folding cane. (I
>> actually liked mine for the year or so it lasted, but I used it
>> sparingly and certainly not as my primary cane.) Thanks, all, for the
>> help and suggewstions.
>> Best,
>> Kirt
>>
>> On 3/31/13, justin williams <justin.williams2 at gmail.com> wrote:
>>> I would where a belt around my bathing suit, and
>>> Use a folding cane with a holster.
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: nabs-l [mailto:nabs-l-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Cindy
>>> Bennett
>>> Sent: Sunday, March 31, 2013 4:25 PM
>>> To: National Asociation of Blind Students
>>> Subject: [nabs-l] canes and water park rides
>>>
>>> Hi everyone,
>>>
>>> This summer, I am going to a water park. When I go to theme parks, I
>>> typically store my cane somewhere outside the ride area or on the exit
>>> side of a roller coaster platform. However, many water rides are such
>>> that you get on the ride in a different location, often quite a walk
>>> away, from the place where you get off of the ride. My cane is too
>>> long to fit in many inner tubes, and I doubt that it would be a safe
>>> thing to bring along especially if it came loose.
>>>
>>> I am wondering if a telescoping cane would be the best for this,
>>> because I know that many water rides have shoe holders. It would just
>>> be annoying, because I would have to rely on someone to guide me back
>>> to these shoe holders that are often at the entrance of the ride.
>>>
>>> So what are your suggestions for storing a cane during water rides?
>>>
>>> Thanks.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> Cindy Bennett
>>> Secretary: National Association of Blind Students
>>> Legislative Coordinator: National Federation of the Blind of Washington
>>>
>>> B.A. Psychology, UNC Wilmington
>>> clb5590 at gmail.com
>>>
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>>
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>
>
> --
> Kaiti
>
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