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The Intersection of Travel and Disability

lkarl

Advice Line: Lessons with Kristy Durso Part Six

November 7, 2025 by lkarl

Lesson 6: Empathy trumps all

How can destinations improve everyday visitor experiences to be more inclusive for guests with different accessibility needs?

Start by shifting perspective.

The most effective thing a destination can do is see the world through someone else’s eyes. Accessibility training isn’t just about regulations or checklists—it’s about understanding what different people need to feel welcome, safe and valued.

I’ve built a complete training program covering nine different areas of accessibility, not just disability. Because accessibility isn’t one-size-fits-all. It looks different for someone with a mobility device, for someone who is neurodivergent, or for a family traveling with sensory needs.

Neurodivergence is a great place to start.

It’s approachable and impactful. Something as simple as a sunflower lanyard signals to staff that someone might need extra time, clearer communication, or a little more patience.

Or work with organizations like Kulture City. They provide training and sensory tools like backpacks with noise-canceling headphones and fidgets. These tools help staff better support guests in museums, zoos and event spaces.

Traverse City is a great example.

After I spoke at the Pure Michigan conference, their tourism director approached me and said, “This feels like so much. Where do I begin?” I told him to start small.

They created a sensory room in time for the National Cherry Festival, and it was used constantly. Guests came in overwhelmed and left in tears of gratitude. That one room changed everything. Now, the city is Kulture City certified and asking, “What can we do next?”

That’s the ripple effect we want to see.

And this isn’t just for big cities. Rural destinations actually have a huge opportunity to lead. Smaller crowds, slower pace and simpler experiences make them ideal for travelers with mobility challenges, sensory sensitivities, or neurodivergence. Some of my best travel experiences have been in small towns that brought creativity, not big budgets, to the table. A $40 ramp, a few grab bars, or textured guide bumps for white cane users can transform access. 

And while training is foundational, destinations can do even more with affordable, creative tools that don’t require massive infrastructure:

  • Hero Door Openers: Install in minutes, with no hardwiring needed. They are perfect for historic buildings and cost a fraction of the cost of retrofits.
  • FreedomTrax: Converts a manual wheelchair into a powered, all-terrain vehicle. I use one. It gave me freedom I never imagined.
  • Rio Mobility: Allows wheelchair users to explore bike trails alongside their families.
  • Aira: Live interpreters for blind or low-vision guests, accessed via phone or tablet.

The key isn’t changing your destination. It’s changing the access.

Whether you’re a national park or a rural town, there are scalable solutions for nearly every barrier.

You don’t have to offer every accommodation—you just have to ask the right question:

“How can we help you do what you came here to do?”

That one shift turns limitations into service. It moves us from rules to relationships. And it doesn’t just build accessibility—it builds trust, loyalty and return visits.

Because people don’t remember perfect. They remember prepared.

Check back next month for Part Seven! Noble Studios conducted a thorough interview with Kristy Durso going over the many facets of creating a destination that is truly for everyone. This series is pulled directly from the interview. Check out the archives for the rest of the series. Click here for the full interview. 

Kristy Durso is sitting in her wheelchair on the beach, smiling over her shoulder with the beautiful turquoise ocean in the background.

Featured public speaker, accessibilities advocate, entrepreneur, Army veteran, and military wife Kristy Durso is Travelability’s Ambassedor and owns and operates Incredible Memories Travel, a full-service travel agency that assists everyone, including those with accessibility needs. She has three children, one who has autoimmune issues and food allergies, another on the spectrum, and another with cognitive and intellectual disabilities. 

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Advice Line, Digital Accessibility, Disability Advocates, Disability Awareness, Expert Q&A

Can I Get Your Autograph? A Look at the Influencers Coming to the 2025 TravelAbility Summit

October 6, 2025 by lkarl

Taylor Leigh Aguilar

@BlindEagleProductions

Filmmaker

Colorado-based production company founded by Taylor Leigh Aguilar. Film with a new kind of vision.

Total followers across platforms: 2,054

Jennifer Allen

@WondersWithinReach 

Writer and Content Creator

Disability mom ✈️ Wheelchair travel

Sharing our journey to help others in theirs

💜 Jesus, adoption, and inclusion

Total followers across platforms: 25,000

Chelsea Bear

@RealChelseaBear

Digital creator

✨ sharing Cerebral Palsy through my lens

Total followers across platforms: 700,000

Rosie Dunn

@RosieRoaming

Wheelchair Travel Tips

✈️ navigating life & travel on wheels

🗺️ 20 countries, 39 states & counting

Total followers across platforms: 3,900

Kristy Durso

@KristyGoes

Entrepreneur

Keynote speaker, mom to 3 kids, military wife, wheelchair user, travel lover, disability advocate/consultant, owner Incredible Memories Travel

Total followers across platforms: 2,000

Anthony Ferraro

@asfvision

Blind Filmmaker and Paralympian

🎥 A Shot in the Dark

🥋 Para Judo 🛹Skateboard

🎙 Pod @fourbadeyes

🎶 Musician 🎤 Speaker

Total followers across platforms: 3,200,000

Suellen Henneberry

 @SueEllenHenneberry

Athlete

Spartan Race, Adaptive Amputee

Total followers across platforms: 400

John Morris

@WheelchairTravel

Blogger

Follow along as I travel the world with one hand, a passport and my power wheelchair. World’s largest accessible travel website. ♿️ ✈️ 🌎

Total followers across platforms: 50,000

Candy Harrington

EmergingHorizons.com

Travel Publication for Wheelchair-Users and Slow Walkers

Total followers across platforms: 20,000

Jessica Ping

@TheRollingExplorer

Public Figure

👑 Loud Disabled Feminist

📍Chicago

🎶 @jessicajordanping

🎙️ @accessdeniedpod

☕️ #AccessibiliTEA

Total followers across platforms: 209,000

Mandy Salas

@ImMandySalas

Motivational Speaker

Resilience Advocate, Quadriplegic Mom, Upcoming Author

Sharing my story of determination, grit, and mental strength to inspire others 🌟 🌱 💪

Total followers across platforms: 5,000

Amy Tarpein

@ElijahsBabyBucketList

Writer and Content Creator

✈️Travel Writer 🎗Lissencephaly Family

Sharing our journey to encourage others

and share Elijah’s joy with the world!

Total followers across platforms: 400,000

Ian Ruder

@NewMobilityMagazine 

Editor-In-Chief

I work to ensure the the voice of people with mobility-related disabilities is authentically represented in all of our content

Total followers across platforms: 305,000

Houston Vandergriff

A smiling man with glasses wearing an orange jacket holds a black camera while standing on a city street. Behind him is a blurred urban scene with historic brick buildings, parked cars, and a typical downtown streetscape.

@DownsAndTowns

Travel Photographer

ART. ADVENTURE. ADVOCACY.

Photographer with Down syndrome traveling the world | Nikon Creator | GAMUT Talent

Total followers across platforms: 700,000

Katie Vandergriff

 Katie Vandergriff in a close-up portrait with short, layered dark brown hair with highlights, wearing silver hoop earrings and smiling warmly at the camera.

@DownsAndTowns

Disability Mom, Public Speaker, and Advocate

Alice Diehl

Alice Diehl wearing a silver crown and a purple sash reading 'Wheelchair Queen,' seated in an ornate chair against a purple backdrop, wearing a white sequined top.

Artist

Advocate

Actor @kelloinclusive @allhearttalent

Ms. Wheelchair Oregon 2025 2nd runner up 🏆@ms_wheelchair_america comp

Total followers across platforms: 2,900

Julie Jones

Julie Jones standing behind a man in a wheelchair who is wearing a red and blue baseball-style shirt; Julie wears a purple top with a red scarf and has her hand on his shoulder, both smiling at the camera

@TWLMag and @HaveWheelchairWillTravel

Writer and Content Creator

✈️ Travelling with a wheelchair. 📸. Sharing accessible tips and 🏖. Family travel ideas

Total followers across platforms: 19,500

Phoenyx Powell

Phoenyx Powell seated on an airplane seat, wearing a black leather jacket with blonde highlights in dark hair, looking off to the side.

@PhoenyxTravels

Blogger

Travel doesn’t have to be perfect — just possible.

Solo + accessible travel tips from lived experience

Total followers across platforms: 900

Tiffany Rose

Tiffany Rose is seated in a manual wheelchair at an outdoor event under tents, wearing a gray jacket and baseball cap with floral-patterned pants, as volunteers work around her in rainy conditions.

@TiffsChariot

Travel Service

Help create positive disability awareness and showing off travel accessibility for ALL

Blogger | Friedreich’s Ataxia Fighter | Wheelchair Adventurer♿️

Total followers across platforms: 7,600

📈Combined Total Reach of all Creators: 5,653,200

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Amputees, Blind and Low Vision Travel, Conferences & Events, Disability Advocates, Disability Awareness, Family Travel, Hidden Disabilities, Mobility, Neurodiversity, Tourism, Travel, TravelAbility Summit, Vision

Practical Hacks from the Accessibility Playbook: How to Communicate with and to People with Disabilities

October 2, 2025 by lkarl

Disability language isn’t one-size-fits-all — learn how to honor individual preferences and communicate with respect.

Part of what makes communicating about disabilities challenging is that people with disabilities are not a homogenous group. A good practice is to ask how someone prefers to describe themselves and, if you inadvertently offend someone with your language, apologize and ask them to share with you their preferred language. There are generally two ways to approach this: person-first or identity-first. Neither is right or wrong; we should simply honor an individual’s preference.

Person-first language: Person-first language emphasizes the person first — their individuality,

their complexity, their humanness and their equality. 

Example: Use “a person with epilepsy” instead of “an epileptic” and “people with disabilities” instead of “the disabled”. 

Identity-first language: Identity-first language emphasizes that the disability plays a role in who the person is and reinforces disability as a positive cultural identifier. 

Example: Use “disabled person” instead of “person with disabilities” and “autistic person” instead of “a person with autism.”

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Accessibility Playbook

Accessibility and the Great Outdoors: Empowering All to Explore Natural Beauty

October 2, 2025 by lkarl

With less than a week until the 7th annual TravelAbility Summit in one of the most beautiful outdoor spaces on the planet, it seemed fitting to share this summit throwback on welcoming all into the great outdoors.


National Park Service Accessibility: From Compliance to Experience

Presenter: Jeremy Buzzell – National Park Service (NPS)
Mission: Make NPS more accessible not just by ADA standards, but by improving real visitor experiences.


🔹 00:30 | What is the NPS & Jeremy’s Role

  • 400+ park units (only ~60 are “National Parks”)
  • Jeremy is part of PAVE: Park Accessibility for Visitors and Employees
  • Offers training and guidance—not authority or funding

🔹 02:50 | From Civil Rights to Tourism Mindset

  • Shift from a “compliance lens” to visitor experience lens
  • Adopts Sage Inclusion’s three pillars:
    • Information
    • Facilities
    • Customer service

🔹 06:15 | Pillar 1: Accessible Information

  • Focused on improving trip planning
  • Moves away from vague terms like “accessible bathroom”
  • Example: detailed vs. generic descriptions of facilities

Tools & Resources:

  • 10:05 | Campground Information Standards
  • 11:02 | National Accessibility Website with map and direct park links
  • 13:20 | Examples of upgraded park website descriptions

🔹 16:00 | Trail Info & Adaptive Hiking

  • “Accessible hiking” = modifying trail
  • “Adaptive hiking” = user brings gear, needs detailed info
  • Trail data includes slope, surface, grade, etc., but also needs location-specific clarity

🔹 20:00 | Pillar 2: Customer Service

  • Common barrier: staff reactions, not terrain
  • Emphasizes:
    • 21:45 | Understanding nontraditional mobility devices
    • 23:15 | Handling service animals appropriately
    • 24:30 | Accommodating neurodiverse visitors

🔹 26:30 | Pillar 3: Facilities

  • No separate “accessibility budget” — it must be integrated
  • Look at entry-to-exit experiences, not isolated fixes
  • Follow where money is already going, then improve accessibility there

🔹 28:00 | Final Message: Focus on Success

Promote what’s working. Help users say:
“I want to kayak — where can I go?”
…Not: “Is Yellowstone accessible?”

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Parks and Public spaces, Travel Industry People, Video of the Month

Accessible Experience: Lincoln Caverns

October 2, 2025 by lkarl

By Jennifer Allen

Jennifer Allen and her 3 children, including a child using a wheelchair, explore an illuminated cave featuring dramatic stalactites and stalagmites along a railed pathway. The golden-hued limestone formations create a striking backdrop as they blend with the natural geological features.

A journey towards the center of the earth typically requires a lot of stairs. Thankfully, there are now a small handful of exceptions around the globe. One of those is in a small town in central Pennsylvania. For the first time, I was able to take my three children into a cave – something that I wasn’t sure we would ever be able to do.

While the main entrance to Lincoln Caverns is not wheelchair accessible, Lincoln Caverns has created accessible tours through the original entrance, along the highway. From this entrance, we were able to wheel through tunnels towards the heart of the cavern. I don’t know how much of the cavern we weren’t able to see, but I was really impressed by how much we were able to experience. We didn’t feel like we missed out on anything. Our guide showed us all the features of the cave and we followed his lead as we wandered and explored.

For your own convenience, it’s best to call ahead for the accessible tour, since you do need a personal escort.

Luray Caverns in Virginia also offers tours on wide, paved, well lit paths with a barrier free entrance. Due to some moderate grades, they don’t list themselves as wheelchair accessible.

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Accessible Experience of the Month, Family Travel, Museums & Attractions

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