Life is absurd.you sound absurd.
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You're getting all worked up over a small fraction of a small fraction of a small fraction of guests and even THOSE guests will be accommodated with free ice in their hotel and in the parks.
- The vast majority of Disney rooms have freezer compartments.
- The vast majority of park guests are not staying in a Disney hotel in the first place.
- The vast majority of guests don't need to travel with ice anyways.
You're being silly.
Every hotel on the planet has an ice machine, so this whole digression about whether or not you can freeze your ice pack is irrelevant.
How is that relevant? Walt Disney World is in Florida.USA does not equal the whole planet. Guest accessible ice machines are not common outside of the USA.
How is that relevant? Walt Disney World is in Florida.
I was being flippant. "Every "x" in the world..." is a figure of speech.How was your previous comment about every hotel on the planet having an ice machine relevant then?
But the hotel DOES offer it, so your lack of expectation doesn't leave you worse off.I thought the point was about guest expectations when they arrive at a hotel. As a Brit I had no expectation of a hotel having an ice machine or a freezer as neither is common over here.
Okay, but what if they were trying to keep the number of checked bags to a minimum, and after buying souvenirs find that their checked bags exceed the weight limit because they brought useless ice packs?I was being flippant. "Every "x" in the world..." is a figure of speech.
But the hotel DOES offer it, so your lack of expectation doesn't leave you worse off.
Being a Brit, you don't plan on your hotel offering ice, so you bring ice packs. Your hotel fridge doesn't have a freezer compartment, so you think there's a problem. Upon arriving at your US-based hotel, you learn that you do, in fact, have access to ice, so your perceived problem of nowhere to freeze your ice packs is mitigated because you have free access to an alternative source of keeping things cold.
Now this is REALLY getting ridiculous.Okay, but what if they were trying to keep the number of checked bags to a minimum, and after buying souvenirs find that their checked bags exceed the weight limit because they brought useless ice packs?
I know I'm hitting hard on this, but it's a simple matter to update text on a web-page to make it clear to everyone. I don't give a hoot about the ice policy itself, just that Disney lacks the foresight to word their rules/exemptions pages well enough so that guests are properly informed.
Yup. And it's a five minute fix on a web-page rather than leaving a percentage of people being annoyed.Now this is REALLY getting ridiculous.
You're worried about:
International guests...
Who are ALSO diabetic...
Who are ALSO staying on property...
Who are ALSO staying in a room with no freezer...
Who have ALSO never been to a US hotel before...
Who ALSO have suitcases that are within a pound of their airline's weigh limit
Who ALSO don't bother to Google things that might be a medical necessity for them
There are probably three people a year who meet all of those criteria. And to be clear, the worst case scenario for those people is that they have to dispose of one or two ice packs at the airport, leaving them in the hole about $3. Give me a break.
You're the only one who's annoyed.Yup. And it's a five minute fix on a web-page rather than leaving a percentage of people being annoyed.
Being a Brit, you don't plan on your hotel offering ice, so you bring ice packs. Your hotel fridge doesn't have a freezer compartment, so you think there's a problem. Upon arriving at your US-based hotel, you learn that you do, in fact, have access to ice, so your perceived problem of nowhere to freeze your ice packs is mitigated because you have free access to an alternative source of keeping things cold.
Normal human interaction:
Guest: I need to keep my insulin cold. I brought ice packs but my room doesn't have a freezer.
Cast member: I'm sorry for the inconvenience. Complimentary ice can be found down the hall and in every QS restaurant.
Guest: Okay, thank you.
Crazy person interaction:
Guest: I need to keep my insulin cold. I brought ice packs but my room doesn't have a freezer.
Cast member: I'm sorry for the inconvenience. Complimentary ice can be found down the hall and in every QS restaurant.
Guest:
I'm not sure if its the same but when I had a little one I would bring ice packs to the park. The rooms at POP didn't have a refrigerator unless requested for medical needs. We used to have to check our ice pack into the luggage area each night and they would hold it in a freezer for us. We would take it out from the luggage area each morning. It wasn't too bad. Is it still the same way?If it was for food storage, not medical I would not assume any hotel had a freezer unless specifically asked, I am often surprised when there is a fridge (not a minibar) let alone one with freezing). I would not pack freeze packs without written assurance I could freeze them. My assumption is there are no ice or freezer facilities in any hotel room.
For medical or baby I would definitely be asking questions before booking at any hotel.
If its a medical need the hotel should try to provide a freezer.
I'm not sure if its the same but when I had a little one I would bring ice packs to the park. The rooms at POP didn't have a refrigerator unless requested for medical needs. We used to have to check our ice pack into the luggage area each night and they would hold it in a freezer for us. We would take it out from the luggage area each morning. It wasn't too bad. Is it still the same way?
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