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The Intersection of Travel and Disability

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Rosie Roaming: Learn Through Real Travels of Disabled Content Creators

January 12, 2026 by lkarl

By Rosie Dunn

Rosie Dunn smiling and holding up a U.S. passport, wearing a black tank top and gold necklace against a pink background.

Rosie Dunn is a content creator and travel writer who shares online about her travels and experiences as a full-time manual wheelchair user of over 20 years. Rosie has been to 39 states and 20 countries. Her passions include inclusive and stylish design, hotel and resort accessibility, connecting with other disabled women, exploring new places, travel photography, and disability representation. She has earned a B.A. from The University of Notre Dame and a MSc in Disability Studies from University College Dublin. Rosie is currently pursuing a Doctorate in Occupational Therapy at Belmont University in her hometown of Nashville, TN. She will be doing her doctoral capstone in inclusive design. 

@RosieRoaming

Wheelchair Travel Tips

✈️ navigating life & travel on wheels

🗺️ 20 countries, 39 states & counting

My Best & Worst Experiences In Europe So Far

I’ve traveled to 16 countries in Europe in my wheelchair- here are some of my best and worst experiences so far. There are so many great things to see in Europe, so picking “bests” can be subjective. Also, my bad experiences don’t mean the cities aren’t necessarily worth visiting if you’re a wheelchair user!

Worst “Shower Chair”: Hotel Zermama

Reclined lounge-style chair placed inside a hotel shower stall, positioned away from the controls and illustrating an inappropriate and unsafe substitute for a proper shower chair.

My mom and I stayed at Hotel Zermama in Zermatt, Switzerland. We enjoyed our stay, except for their shower accommodations. As a “shower chair”, the hotel provided me with what was clearly a lounge chair. It was in no way appropriate for me to use as a shower chair – it was reclined and the only orientation that it could fit in the shower was facing away from the controls and soaps. When I got to the hotel and saw the monstrosity that they put in my shower, I hopped in to take photos to send to my friends and share with my followers, because it looked absolutely ridiculous. When I was transferring back into my wheelchair, the “shower chair” tipped over and I fell to the ground. Thankfully, I was not injured. I have been using a shower chair for over a decade and this is the first time I’ve ever fallen in the shower. Later that night, I had to take a shower, and had no other choice but to use the shower chair. I did not fall, but I had to have my mom’s assistance with showering because I couldn’t reach anything or transfer safely without her help. This is nowhere near the first time I have encountered an inadequate shower setup when traveling, but it is the most ridiculous.  

Simple shower chairs with a back are easily available for purchase for $60 on Amazon. I do not see an excuse for every hotel to have at least 2 of these for their guests to use. I am a paying customer and should be able to safely take a shower at a hotel! I am tired of poor design and a lack of consideration preventing me from showering independently when I travel. I shouldn’t have to have the help of my mom when a design change (or $60 purchase for a hotel) could completely prevent this outcome and give me some dignity back. Thankfully, I am comfortable with my mom helping me (although it is incredibly frustrating to need her help)- but if I was traveling with anyone else, or alone, I wouldn’t be able to shower safely…

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Learn how to work with Rosie Here

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Hotels, Mobility, Tourism, Travel

ADAPTS Transfer Sling: Faster, Safer, Emergency Evacuations

January 9, 2026 by lkarl

Two people demonstrate an evacuation assistance device, supporting a seated woman at an accessibility and safety exhibit.

Imagine an emergency that requires an evacuation. The general feeling of panic and uncertainty. The rush to get to safety. Now imagine your wheelchair is stowed…somewhere else. People with disabilities have enough obstacles to overcome while traveling. Safety during an evacuation shouldn’t be one of them.

ADAPTS to the Rescue

ADAPTS reduces the risk of injury and speeds evacuation. Use it to transfer the passenger from a wheelchair to their seat, leaving it on the seat. Then, during an emergency evacuation, ADAPTS can be carried by two crew members or by the passengers immediately behind and across the aisle from the disabled passenger.

Our dream is that ADAPTS will someday be readily available on every airline, cruise line, passenger train and bus—just like life vests, oxygen masks and other safety equipment.

Not Just for Evacuations

Because it’s portable, compact and lightweight, ADAPTS can be used for everyday transfers around the home and anywhere!

Check out some of the ways others are using ADAPTS here.

The ADAPTS Story

Yellow adaptive evacuation seat secured in an airplane aisle seat, designed for passenger mobility assistance.

The seed that would become ADAPTS was first planted in Robin Wearley’s mind in 2005, as she sat in the window seat during a flight home to San Francisco. Filling the other two seats were an elderly man and his wife, who was brought onto the plane in a wheelchair. At the conclusion of the flight, Robin and her two seatmates were required to remain in their seats until all other passengers had deplaned and a wheelchair could be brought on board.

As they wheeled the elderly woman off the plane, a flight attendant thanked Robin for being patient, adding that he hoped it hadn’t been too much of an inconvenience. It wasn’t, but it got Robin thinking—what if the outcome of the flight had been different? What if they didn’t have the luxury of time? How would that woman—or her husband and Robin, who couldn’t move until she did—have gotten safely off the plane?

A dozen years later, after more flights and several conversations with a travel-savvy friend who happens to be a triple amputee, Robin’s idea began to take root. She grabbed her yoga mat and some rope, and fashioned the first prototype of the ADAPTS sling. Convinced she was onto something, she cut up a Slip-n-Slide® and refined her design. She created a third prototype from light cotton muslin, before turning the design over to a seamstress, who created the pattern and instructions for mass production. 

  • $199
  • ADAPTS is made of the material used for life-vests and is water-resistant and flame-retardant to comply with FAA safety standards.
  • ADAPTS weighs 1.15 pounds. It measures 11″ x 11″ x 2″ when folded into a tote. Industrial tested to hold at least 450 pounds!
  • Hand wash or wipe with a soapy sponge and air dry.
  • When unfolded it fits the seat on an airplane or a chair and attaches at the top.
  • There are six handles, two on each side, one at the top, and one at the bottom so that two to six rescuers can move a person swiftly to first responders. 

Want to know more? Check out these videos! 

Watch ADAPTS InnovatAble Pitch below!

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Innovation of the Month, Mobility, Transportation

Trailblazing Accessibility: North Alabama Takes Center Stage on PBS with Travels with Darley

January 9, 2026 by lkarl

TRAVELS WITH DARLEY returns to PBS this January with two fresh episodes that put North Alabama firmly on the map, not just as a classic American road trip, but as a destination increasingly thinking about access, inclusion, and meaningful experiences for travelers of all abilities.

Season 13 of the Emmy-nominated series blends what host Darley Newman does best – culture, history, food, and adventure – with a growing focus on how destinations can welcome more people to the table. The result is a pair of episodes that feel both aspirational and practical.

An Accessible Road Trip Rooted in Story

In the first episode, Darley begins in Huntsville, where science and space exploration set the tone, before heading west toward Muscle Shoals, home to legendary recording studios that shaped American music. Along the way, she stops at Scottsboro’s Unclaimed Baggage Center, explores the natural wonder of Cathedral Caverns State Park, and reflects on the legacy of Jesse Owens at the Jesse Owens Memorial Park and Museum.

The second episode, Travels with Darley: Accessible North Alabama, shifts the spotlight to inclusive travel, highlighting experiences designed with access.

Working alongside local experts, Newman explores how adaptive and accessible experiences are taking shape across the region. Viewers are introduced to Wheel the World experiences in Decatur, Paralympic cycling events in Huntsville, and sensory-friendly attractions that make it easier for families and individuals with disabilities to participate fully.

Outdoor access is a recurring theme, with visits to Noccalula Falls and Little River Canyon showing how nature-based experiences can be made more inclusive. The episode also includes a stop at Ivy Green, the birthplace of Helen Keller in Tuscumbia, tying accessibility to a deeper historical context that feels especially fitting.

“Making travel more accessible is beneficial to us all,” Newman says in the episode, a sentiment that clearly reflects Visit North Alabama’s approach. 

Both episodes go behind the scenes to introduce viewers to the people who preserve North Alabama’s history and shape its future. From the Scottsboro Boys Museum to Will’s Creek Vineyard, where guests are welcomed by Mr. Mittens, a well known mascot, the series highlights entrepreneurs and storytellers who give the region its character.

An Example Worth Watching

Once again, North Alabama is setting the precedent. For destinations, travel professionals, and travelers, these episodes offer more than inspiration. They provide a clear example of how accessible experiences can be woven naturally into destination storytelling without losing the sense of adventure. This is what it looks like when an entire ecosystem is built on true welcome: adaptive outdoor recreation, cultural sites that acknowledge disability history, events that welcome disabled athletes, experiences designed for families, seniors, and travelers with sensory needs. Accessibility here isn’t hidden in fine print: it’s part of the destination’s identity.

For other destinations watching, the takeaway is clear: inclusive travel doesn’t require reinventing everything at once. It requires collaboration, listening, and a willingness to show the work you’re already doing. When accessibility is integrated into destination storytelling, it benefits travelers and strengthens the destination brand.

On Alabama Public Television, the North Alabama episodes air throughout January, with additional encore broadcasts and a primetime marathon later in the month. Viewers nationwide can check local PBS listings for air times.

Check out a preview here.

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Destinations, Lived Experience, Parks and Public spaces, Travel

Hosting Para Events – Learning from Visit Fort Wayne’s Success

January 9, 2026 by lkarl

By Jennifer Allen from an interview with Jazmin Zavala

Women’s sitting volleyball teams compete at a para sporting event, with athletes reaching for the ball at the net while teammates and officials watch from the sidelines.
Photo Credit Visit Fort Wayne

Destinations don’t suddenly “get” accessibility when a major para event comes to town. The places that step confidently into hosting roles are usually the ones that have already been doing the work to position themselves as welcoming destinations.

That’s why I wasn’t surprised when I learned that Fort Wayne hosted a World ParaVolley event.

Last summer, we visited Fort Wayne through a partnership focused on advancing accessibility and inclusion. We were blown away by the ease of navigating the city, woodland trails, attractions, and even the water. Almost everything was designed with clear intention to welcome all, and when we stumbled upon something that hadn’t been done before, like running the bases in a wheelchair after the ballgame, we were met with enthusiasm to adapt and welcome.

Long before international athletes arrived, Fort Wayne had already built a reputation as a city that understands accessibility as infrastructure, not accommodation.

From adaptive sports to inclusive community partnerships, accessibility here isn’t treated as a checklist: it’s part of the culture. That mindset showed up clearly in how Visit Fort Wayne approached preparing for the first-ever Sitting Volleyball World Cup in the U.S.

Why Fort Wayne Took on a World ParaVolley Event

As one of the fastest-growing metro areas in the Great Lakes region and Indiana’s second-largest city, Fort Wayne has intentionally positioned sport as a pathway to inclusion. Home to Turnstone, a U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Training Site, the city already had deep roots in adaptive athletics and a history of welcoming para athletes.

According to Jazmin Zavala, Visit Fort Wayne’s Sports Sales Manager, hosting a World ParaVolley event wasn’t just about filling a calendar date. It was a strategic decision aligned with the LA28 Paralympic pathway, designed to elevate adaptive sport on a global stage while welcoming elite international athletes to the city for the first time.

Rather than asking if Fort Wayne could host a para event, the question was how to do it well: in a way that reflected the dignity, professionalism, and scale of any major international competition.

Preparing a City, Not Just a Venue

What stands out most about Fort Wayne’s approach is the way preparation extended far beyond the volleyball court.

In just six months, Visit Fort Wayne and Turnstone delivered the first-ever Sitting Volleyball World Cup hosted in the United States. Zavala shared that, “more than 1,000 volunteers and 100 regional partners came together, demonstrating the community’s capacity to host complex international competitions.”

One of the most impactful steps was education. Ahead of the event, Visit Fort Wayne hosted a media day with immersive demonstrations, giving local media and partners firsthand experience with adaptive sport and disability access. Even more notably, over 150 hotel and hospitality staff completed comprehensive accessibility training.

These staff members didn’t just attend a session, they continued on to serve as “Accessibility Ambassadors” throughout the two-week event. This initiative shifted accessibility from something reactive (“call us if there’s a problem”) to something proactive and visible.

Lessons for Destinations Looking to Host Para Events

When asked what advice they would give to other destinations interested in hosting para events, Visit Fort Wayne emphasized three core principles: intention, collaboration, and anticipation.

First, intention matters. “Recognizing the diversity within the disability community and planning accordingly is critical to a successful para-event.” That means recognizing the diversity within the disability community and understanding that access needs are not one-size-fits-all.

Second, collaboration is essential. “Early coordination with venues, hotels, and hospitality partners ensures athletes’ needs are anticipated rather than reacted to.”

Finally, anticipation is everything. The most successful para events don’t wait for problems to arise. They plan ahead, ask better questions, and remain flexible. As Visit Fort Wayne noted, “Adaptive sporting events mirror able-bodied competitions, with success driven by flexibility, knowledge, and a willingness to adapt.”

Women’s sitting volleyball teams compete at a para sporting event, with athletes reaching for the ball at the net while teammates and officials watch from the sidelines.
Photo Credit Visit Fort Wayne

Quick Takeaways for Hosting Para Events:

  • Start with intention, not logistics. Hosting para events works best when accessibility is treated as a core value, not a last-minute accommodation.
  • Build partnerships early. Close coordination with adaptive sports organizations, venues, hotels, and transportation partners ensures access needs are anticipated, not reacted to.
  • Invest in training, not just infrastructure. Accessibility training for hospitality and frontline staff builds confidence, consistency, and trust for athletes and attendees.
  • Designate accessibility champions. Empowering staff as visible “Accessibility Ambassadors” signals commitment and provides clear points of contact during events.
  • Plan for diversity within disability. The disability community is not monolithic. Flexibility and a willingness to adapt are just as important as technical compliance.
  • Think beyond the event itself. The systems, relationships, and knowledge built for para events elevate accessibility for all future visitors.

A Model Worth Paying Attention To

What Fort Wayne demonstrates so clearly is that accessibility isn’t a hurdle to hosting major events: it’s an asset. When destinations invest in training, partnerships, and inclusive planning, they don’t just prepare for one tournament. They raise the bar for every future visitor.

For more on the value and logistics of hosting an adaptive sports event, check out these takeaways from TravelAbility’s 2025 Summit.

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Adaptive Sports, Destinations, Disability Advocates, Editorial

The 2025 TravelAbility Impact Report

January 9, 2026 by lkarl

The 2025 TravelAbility Impact Report highlights a year of growth and digital innovation in accessible tourism. By launching the world’s first accessibility influencer database and pioneering a dedicated film festival, TravelAbility continues to bridge the accessibility gap between the travel industry and the disability community.

7TH Annual Travelability Summit: Attendance Update:

  • Total Attendance: 189 (2025) vs. 208 (2024).
  • Influencer Attendance: 20 (2025) vs. 10 (2024) — +100% increase.
  • Destination Ally Club: Expanded to 24 members, including new partners – Visit Orlando, Visit Williamsburg, and Experience Grand Rapids.
  • Accessibility Playbook: Adoption by DMOs grew 25%, with 30 organizations now utilizing the guide.

The Influencer Project

Established the first global database of accessibility creators, identifying 555 influencers across more than 11 disability categories. These creators command a combined follower audience of 164 million across major social platforms (FB, IG, TT, YT, LI).

Research & Content Initiatives

  • Film Festival: Debuted the first-ever TravelAbility Film Festival in Oregon, showcasing 14 finalists.
  • Research Projects:
    • Longwoods America: Follow-up study on travelers requiring accessibility services.
    • Creator Study: Surveyed 425 content creators to refine authentic storytelling.
    • Rethinking Accessibility: Identified new features from 143 venues to enhance accessibility web pages.
    • Meeting Planner Study: Conducted in partnership with USAE News.

Media and Representation:

From: Conde Nast Traveler,

  • “Beyond Barriers: 25 people making the world more accessible for 2025“.

From: Travel Weekly :

  • The Need for Detailed ADA Compliance in Travel
  • Why World Cup Cities Should Prioritize Accessibility.
  • How Hotels Can Best Help Disabled Travelers.

From: Leisure Group Travel:

  • Accessible Travel Is A Game Changer

Podcasts:  Traveling Tribes:

  • Jake Steinman – Founder of Travel Ability – Traveling Tribes | Podcast on Spotify

On the Road: Travelability was represented at the following in 2025:

  • Washington DC: Met with AARP/ National Park Service/,US Travel
  • NYC: TravMedia Summit-NYC
  • Savannah, GA: Destinations International CEO Summit
  • Los Angeles, CA: Visit CA Marketing Outlook Forum
  • Los Angeles: Abilities Expo
  • Anaheim, CA: CSUN Disability Tech
  • Austin, TX: DI Marcom Summit
  • Portland, OR: Travel Oregon Governor’s Conference J.S.
  • Ottawa, ON: NTA Travel Exchange;  K.Durso
  • Chicago, IL. DI Annual convention
  • Morgantown, WV: Governor’s Conference (J.Allen)
  • Portland, OR: DI Partner Summit
  • Gulf Shores, AL: Alabama Governor’s Conference (K.Durso)

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Editorial, TravelAbility Summit

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