We were just used to COE and state parks, so this place was kind of a shock to us.Overnight camp is fun for kids of all ages who want to sleep away from home. If you don't mind crowds, lines, and cramped camping it's ok. Yes drinks and food in the park is ridiculously expensive but is to be expected. Save the money or spend it on a nice beach trip somewhere. We have a 6 year old and 6 month old, we hated every minute and would never waste money like that again. Sometimes you have to switch to another tram midway and play the game all over again. Yes their is transportation to and from the parks but you will wait in long hot lines just as long as some of the rides to get on a tram. Sites aren't worth 100 dollars a night, you are forced into using a golf cart or their transportation inside the campground or out. I guess I'm the odd man out but we did not think it was anything special at all.
"Without challenge, adventure is impossible". Made me stop and be thankful for being born in this country.ΔΆ016 Fleetwood Flair 31 B Class A w/bunks He commented on how nice it was to be about to come to the USA for a family vacation and not have to bring their bodyguards with them. In chatting with him in the cashier's line, he said his family came up from Columbia twice a year to WDW and rented one of the cabins. He also purchased a couple of bottles of wine so his total was well over $100usd.
I watched one guy buy a six pack of beer at the Trading Post and he paid right at $40 for it. Beer at the campground trading post is about $6.50 a bottle so I take enough with me from home. One night we attended the Luau at the Kingdom and my daughter, 38 years of age, had a beer with was priced at $8.10 tax included, LOL for that single bottle of brew. Water, cold by the bottle is expensive, $2.50 each. I enjoy both of those rules and glad they enforce them. They are really strict about chewing gum, (not sold on property) and smoking. We have never had them say anything about being snacks or water bottles into the Parks. LOL Our last trip I was told there were just slightly over 70,000 employees working that day at WDW, that works out to be a payroll of over $6 Million a day so that money have to come from somewhere and have enough remaining for Disney to make a profit, which is why they are there. Compared to what I have spent on aircraft, boats, sonw machines, river boats for Alaska, RVs, etc., WDW is not even in the top ten categories of expenditures. We buy a Florida resident yearly pass for our extended family members living here in Florida. Yes it is expensive but we feel it is worth the cost. Well staffed, clean all the time, most of the sites have plenty of privacy due to the vegetation and lots to do in the campground. It is the campground which we compare all others to and so far it is still the finest campground.
Try to get us to the Christmas Party every year with our pre-teen grandsons plus we spend roughly 30 to 40 nights a year at the WDW Fort. We got back from a week's stay at the Fort about two weeks ago.
We found that once we made it to a park, we really did all we wanted to do and didn't go back and forth to the campsite since it was too much trouble. We used the park transportation, which was great however, it often took us much longer than we expected to get from place to place, especially since you do a lot of walking just to get to the gate. They very quickly quit asking for all the junk and saved their money for bigger things. This way, when they begged for a $5 lollipop, we could tell them they could have it but out of their money. We gave our kids a budget for the week we were there of their "own" money for souvenirs and snacks. The park apps often have menus for the various restaurants so you can easily find a place in your budget. We sometimes shared snacks and meals, just to stretch it out a little. Sometimes, we made it back to the motorhome for dinner, meaning we only ate one meal in the park. We thought the food was usually decent, though expensive. We ate breakfast in the motorhome and bought food at the cheaper places in the park. Our family saved money by carrying snacks and refillable water bottles and by being very strategic about food. I think we could have skipped Disney World, and they would have had fun in the campground. We really enjoyed our stay at FW a few years ago.