Enter Valhalla
TS Member
Phantasialand’s way or the highway!I had assumed you'd ask, was more just sharing frustration that the barmen are so inflexible and the menu so poorly designed!
Phantasialand’s way or the highway!I had assumed you'd ask, was more just sharing frustration that the barmen are so inflexible and the menu so poorly designed!
To be precise, there's a difference between "not liking it" and "if I eat this I'll vomit all over your shiny polished floor".I think some European countries do just have a different cultural attitude to these things to us.
Whereas the UK is quite accommodating and willing to mould to people’s differences, I think some countries are a bit more “if you don’t like it, tough luck” in their general attitude.
In the UK, if you have a disability or dietary need, the onus is on the service provider to meet your needs. In Germany it feels more as though the onus is on you to go along with the norm as best you can. Can't eat anything off our menu? Go somewhere different. Can't stand in a queue? Don't ride then. Your problem not ours.
I live in Germany, albeit without much in the way of specific dietary or health requirements, and can confirm that this is the case.
For all of it's many faults, the UK is, in comparison ,a hugely progressive society when it comes to meeting diverse needs. And while the standard of living in Germany is altogether higher on a collective level, it is ultimately a fundamentally more conservative society. Still, things are undoubtedly changing as they did in the UK, just not as rapidly as a more progressive person might hope. And probably even more slowly at Phantasialand.
I am still somewhat annoyed by the sheer lack of compassion and adherence to arbitrary rules though.
Sorry, I’m confused. You were trying to use the fastrack lane for FLY when you didn’t have fastrack. Of course you weren’t allowed to do so if you didn’t have fastrack, regardless of if there was a queue or not.I am still somewhat annoyed by the sheer lack of compassion and adherence to arbitrary rules though. I think I regaled at the time how we were forced to use the lengthy FLY queue rather than the short FastTrack despite both being empty up to the merge point. In fairness that could have been individual discretion and could easily happen at any park (eg Nemesis which I believe is comparable) so perhaps I should get over it![]()
I am still somewhat annoyed by the sheer lack of compassion and adherence to arbitrary rules though. I think I regaled at the time how we were forced to use the lengthy FLY queue rather than the short FastTrack despite both being empty up to the merge point. In fairness that could have been individual discretion and could easily happen at any park (eg Nemesis which I believe is comparable) so perhaps I should get over it![]()
Arbitrary rules are usually less arbitrary if you think about it for two seconds. Like if people are walking into the main entrance why are you allowed to skip that and get ahead of them. So maybe you say it's quiet so everyone should use the fast track entrance but then it's getting busier and the line goes past the split, now someone has to manage when to send people back to the main entrance and sort people out at the split point and in the mean time people with fast track are blocked by other people getting stuck in the fast track queue. Alternatively, no one can use fast track queue unless they have fast track, simple.
But I can sympathise that queue is sooooo long. I remember walking through it at opening the first day, the lot of us from the hotel stomping through passages, across bridges, around in a circle, up the stairs, down the stairs, up more stairs, down even more stairs. I'd like to know how long it actually takes, it'd really benefit from a shortcut at the point where you cross over/under the earlier queue line.
