disneydreamer781
Just a little bit of pixie dust...
- Joined
- May 24, 2016
I can't tell if you're being serious or not. I'm hoping not.
Either way isn't good.
I can't tell if you're being serious or not. I'm hoping not.
I think this is a great choice. Easily "readable" for the thousands of guests including all who are visiting from all around the world. Sure beats "no swimming".
Image of new signs going in at WDW as of today.
Since the lake is man made, it likely wouldn't qualify as a wetland. Regardless, there would be plenty of support if they decided to do this, but I don't think it will happen.
Edit: Just saw that you mentioned Bay Lake, and not the Seven Seas Lagoon. The lagoon is man made. Not sure about Bay Lake to the east.
Is this a temporary fence? I mean until something better themed comes along? I noticed in some online pics they are already running rope through the posts without painting/staining or anything. Not sure what to say here.
Pic from Orlando Sentinel
Where were these posted?
This is why they are putting up signs and fences.Couldn't they have at least put the fence just inside the water line to allow wading and getting wet sand for sand castles?
I think this is a great choice. Easily "readable" for the thousands of guests including all who are visiting from all around the world. Sure beats "no swimming".
At AK Lodge, with camera surveillance on all the savannas, a guest who is observed dropping food into the savanna, from a balcony or elsewhere, becomes an ex-guest. Setting up similar surveillance, and with similar consequences, for the bungalows - though getting a camera in the right spot may be problematic - seems a step in the right direction.
No different from the idiots who get out of their car at Yellowstone to get a picture with a bear. Some people just don't have the chip in their brain that relays common sense.
Walt Disney World should be doing what millions of the guests expected they have been doing since the 1970s; trapping and removing the alligators.
Yes, this simple act would have saved one boy's life and millions of dollars in revenue from families who no longer trust the company they've grown to love and admire since the 1970s.
The two things that come out of this situation are that Disney knew of the risks and chose to keep them from us, and the resorts have scores of alligators right under the noses of customers paying a small fortune for the privilege of staying at a vacation property that should be perfectly safe.