For the past
week, Lyle and I have been in San Diego for a mini holiday. One of the best
things we did after our arrival was to pick up a little booklet titled,
Accessible San Diego.
The booklet outlines services for seniors,
veterans, locals and travellers with disabilities.
It is an impressive publication. Inside the pages
we found which tourist attractions offer discounts to persons with disabilities
or their guides, and even which restaurants offer large print or Braille menus.
Lyle found the website for the San Diego Centre for the Blind:
Although
Lyle and I didn‘t have enough time to investigate all the tips given in Accessible
San Diego, I can comment on a few. We were given two for one admission to
the Midway Museum (aircraft carrier) and to the San Diego Zoo. We enjoyed the
wide promenades at San Diego State University and along the waterfront of Seaport
Village. When we walked at SeaWorld I encountered no curbs anywhere. Unfortunately
the seating for the shows at SeaWorld was not set up for the visually impaired.
Possibly the handicapped seating is further back because spectators sitting in
the front rows end up frequently get soaked when Shamu, the dolphins or other
sea creatures cause a wet splash.
I think that
I enjoyed our visit to the San Diego Air and Space Museum as much as
anything. Lyle is a pilot, so whenever
there is an air museum in the vicinity of our travels, we go! In San Diego, as
I approached the entry with my white cane, Rob, one of the gate attendants,
asked if I would like to touch the exhibits. Would I! He handed me a pair of white gloves to wear. With the white gloves to protect both my
hands and the aircraft, Rob encouraged me to touch everything I could reach –
the props, wings, fuselage, and even in some cases, the engines. It was a great tactile experience. Now that
is the way for someone with little or no sight to enjoy an exhibition.
The picture
below shows me touching the wooden prop of a Spad VII aircraft from the WWI
era. Of course, I am wearing my little
white gloves.
Wow how interesting for you. Now back in the real world with cold, freezing rain, and snow.
ReplyDeleteDorothy