is there a chance that the Magical Express will come back?

jloucks

Well-Known Member
I will admit that many of the positions regarding the DME here just confuse me. Yes it was a nice feature, especially for families with multiple younger kids with car seats. But seriously people travel all over the county (the world for that matter) and have done so throughout history. Somehow families manage to go on vacation hundreds of other places, and all without a DME variant.

Hell DME was only introduced in 2005, so for well over 30 years families managed to get to/from WDW without it, and have been doing it for years now after its closing down.

So sure it was a neat feature, but let’s not hype it up as being indispensable to families with kids, or that people can’t/wont go to WDW because it doesn’t have an option that most other tourist destinations also don’t have
I mean, you could say the same about airlines. You don't have to have them to get to WDW/DL (or anywhere in the U.S.), but it sure is nice, and it makes it more likely you will go. We drove from Texas, twice, to the parks. I can tell you, flying is better. Same with the DME, you can rent a car or ride a taxi, but DME is/was better.

I don't think anybody said DME is the only possible indispensable way to go. It is simply a factor, one of many, in the decision-making process.
 

Goofyernmost

Well-Known Member
Kids grow out of strollers & diapers way before they do car seats. In Texas, kid seats are the law until 8!! ...or 5 feet tall.

I mean, nowadays. There were no car seats when I was a kid. Or seatbelts. I kid you not, I used to ride on the dash of our old Chrysler. ...and in the bed of the pickup. Fun rando side story. I have been pulled over by the po po very rarely since my 20's. One of the few times was for having a pickup bed full of kids. Now, in my defense, I was in a state park going 10 (ten) miles an hour on a 10 speed limit road in a giant dodge dually. I was trying to give the kids and their friends a memorable experience. The park ranger didn't see it that way. Apparently, I could have driven, ever so slowly, off into a ditch. :rolleyes:
If people followed that stupid height rule my mother would have had to use a car seat when I was a baby until she passed at 87 years old. She never got taller then 4'10". I don't know of anyone that ever got stopped for anything if the kids head was high enough to easily look out the window, Which by 6 years old they would have been which is why they came up with boaster seats for kids too short to have the seat belt fit properly. Both of my children did have car seats when they were younger but that would have been the measurement to not take a plane to places until they grew taller, by 6 they were tall enough.
 

DisneyHead123

Well-Known Member
The suggestion is to use the car seat in the plane. Airlines don't charge for items like car seats
I think that only applies to infant seats. Laws keep changing so that older and older kids need car seats in cars, and those types of seats I believe are not allowed on airline seats. They would need to be checked.
 

Goofyernmost

Well-Known Member
I think that only applies to infant seats. Laws keep changing so that older and older kids need car seats in cars, and those types of seats I believe are not allowed on airline seats. They would need to be checked.
Probably the full size kid seat might be an issue, but the booster seat would not be a problem and the kid could carry it on themselves. Planes only have lap belts and the booster seats fit those like a glove and it also makes them tall enough to safely use a car lap and shoulder belt.
 

NelleBelle

Well-Known Member
This is how big our son’s car seat was when we took it on the plane. Best flight ever so. R he slept the whole 5-hr flight to MCO from Seattle. No one had to hold a lap child. When my boys were older and we flew, we just took the boosters and either gate checked or if they were just the seat portion, put them overhead.
disney .5 marathon 002.jpeg
 

DisneyHead123

Well-Known Member
Probably the full size kid seat might be an issue, but the booster seat would not be a problem and the kid could carry it on themselves. Planes only have lap belts and the booster seats fit those like a glove and it also makes them tall enough to safely use a car lap and shoulder belt.
I Googled it and can’t find a clear answer. It seems like they could potentially be a problem? But I’ve never tried flying with one so not sure.
 

Goofyernmost

Well-Known Member
I Googled it and can’t find a clear answer. It seems like they could potentially be a problem? But I’ve never tried flying with one so not sure.
Inconvenient, I agree, but every passenger is allowed a carry on and a booster seat is a natural carry on, so even if they didn't allow it to be used in the seat, it is a perfect under the seat item. Might even be carried in a backpack but that would be to just have it be easier for the kids to carry and can't see any problem with it just out in the open either.
 

Phonedave

Well-Known Member
I don't get how so many parents are cool with just loading their kids up and trusting an untested, uncertified, non-commercial rando stranger to drive them around via Lyft/Uber when there are (or were) way safer options.

This. For me it is not even a parents thing (my kids are all older now). It is me. I kind of like the anonymity that goes with bus service. I say hi to the driver and that's it. I have had my share of Uber drivers that just won't stop with the talking. Some were also a little sketchy.

I have taken my fair share of taxis as well. Taxi drivers seem to be better at "reading a room" or car. They can tell it has been a long trip with multiple delays and all you want to do is get to your final destination without discussing why I am here, what I plan to do, or if I am excided about the trip.
 

Phonedave

Well-Known Member
Here's what I don't understand. For 34 years people with children managed to get to WDW from MCO, on their own why is it so difficult now. If you come in on a plane, don't you have to have car seats for the kids just like the ones that a car needs. I know they once did, or at least were allowed to be brought on for seating of the kids.

When WDW first opened, cars did not have seat belts, let alone car seats. That is how they did it.
 

Phonedave

Well-Known Member
If people followed that stupid height rule my mother would have had to use a car seat when I was a baby until she passed at 87 years old. She never got taller then 4'10". I don't know of anyone that ever got stopped for anything if the kids head was high enough to easily look out the window, Which by 6 years old they would have been which is why they came up with boaster seats for kids too short to have the seat belt fit properly. Both of my children did have car seats when they were younger but that would have been the measurement to not take a plane to places until they grew taller, by 6 they were tall enough.

It's 8 years OR 5 foot. Not AND
 

lewisc

Well-Known Member
When WDW first opened, cars did not have seat belts, let alone car seats. That is how they did it.
Law pased in 1966 required seat belts in all cars sold starting in 1968.

Car seats weren't a big thing. Many people, probably most, weren't using seat belts when WDW opened.
 
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CaptainAmerica

Well-Known Member
My son's carseat has a reinforced steel frame and it is heavy... I can't imagine how people with 3 kids travel with carseats. I assume you'd have to buy some kind of device just to transport them to the airport, and then pay a baggage fee for each one.
You can check or carry on as many car seats as you need for free.

It's still a royal pain in the butt and I don't recommend it if you can avoid it.
 

Goofyernmost

Well-Known Member
When WDW first opened, cars did not have seat belts, let alone car seats. That is how they did it.
WDW opened in 1971, I had a 1960 Plymouth with seat belts. I didn't use them back then like many people didn't but they were there. In the 70's and 80's they had car seats, used them with my kids. They had the infant ones and the toddler ones. The only reason why they added the last link was because they added shoulder straps to back seats and younger kids were sometime to small in stature so the shoulder belt might cause more damage then it prevented. Previous to that they were just lap belts. The front seats had the shoulder belts well before the rear seats did. Kids in the seventies were still require to not be in the front seats until they reached a certain height.
 

Goofyernmost

Well-Known Member
You can check or carry on as many car seats as you need for free.

It's still a royal pain in the butt and I don't recommend it if you can avoid it.
Everything about raising children is a royal pain, but we decide to have them and because we made that decision we have to perform all the royal pains that come with small children. That may mean if you want to go to WDW with them you have to tote that barge and lift that bale. I loved my kids but I will honestly tell you that I couldn't wait until they grew enough to be able to talk and tell us if they had a problem, could use a bathroom reliable, generally be way less dependent on us for their every need. That is why we decided that we were not gong to Disney until they could, walk talk and enjoy the place on around the same level as their mother and I. We decided on 6 years old, and for us it was perfect,

Babies are fun to hold and rock and play with, but they do come with some pretty nasty stuff that has to be delt with by parents not the least of which is crying when we had no way of knowing why. (you thought I was going to say diapers, didn't you?) As a warning that period of time is somewhere between 5 and 13 years old. After that the royal pain returns in different ways. They go from worshiping you to thinking you are the dumbest person they ever met and it happens in a flash and stays that way until they go off on their own and find out what life really is like If you can get them to go.
 

DisneyHead123

Well-Known Member
Inconvenient, I agree, but every passenger is allowed a carry on and a booster seat is a natural carry on, so even if they didn't allow it to be used in the seat, it is a perfect under the seat item. Might even be carried in a backpack but that would be to just have it be easier for the kids to carry and can't see any problem with it just out in the open either.
I’m feel like “booster seats” these days don’t fit in a backpack. They’re huge! Like this is a seat for a 4-10 year old. (Off topic but… also very very difficult to recycle and cannot be donated, which is frustrating. I wish they had better car seat recycling options.)
 

lewisc

Well-Known Member
I’m feel like “booster seats” these days don’t fit in a backpack. They’re huge! Like this is a seat for a 4-10 year old. (Off topic but… also very very difficult to recycle and cannot be donated, which is frustrating. I wish they had better car seat recycling options.)
The booster seat you offered can be installed backless, depending on size and weight of the kids

Some parents bring a bubblebum booster. Inflatable. Gives the kid enough extra height enabling safe use of cars seat belt.
 

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Goofyernmost

Well-Known Member
I’m feel like “booster seats” these days don’t fit in a backpack. They’re huge! Like this is a seat for a 4-10 year old. (Off topic but… also very very difficult to recycle and cannot be donated, which is frustrating. I wish they had better car seat recycling options.)
They may call that a booster seat, but it isn't. It is a full fledge car seat for older children. It is more expensive is difficult to handle and just a total rip off and frustration for older kids. When people say "Think about the children" they have to start remembering that mental growth is as important and connected to physical growth. Kids also have a much longer memory than people think. I know that I remember sitting on the front step and getting my picture taken in my new cowboy outfit when I was 4 years old just a mere 71 years ago. I remember it vividly. Kids don't quickly forget feeling embarrassed and inappropriately defined by age and size requirements.
 

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