Wheelchair Travel Newsletter: Taylor Swift, Accessible Budapest and Save the Date for a Group Trip

How The Eras Tour presented a big accessibility barrier and a new travel guide to the Hungarian capital city.
Taylor Swift singing in the rain while wearing a green dress and playing a guitar.
“Expectation is the dirtiest word in a traveler’s vocabulary.” — John Early, from his book Tales of the Modern Nomad: Monks, Mushrooms & Other Misadventures

Hello everybody!

Taylor Swift brought The Eras Tour to Boston last weekend and fans loved it — by all accounts, the tour has been a massive success, with rave reviews pouring in even from the pop star’s skeptics. Saturday night’s performance at Foxy Foxborough, the New England Patriots’ football stadium, received extra attention after a heavy rainstorm left more than 50,000 fans soaking wet.

Taylor Swift singing in the rain while wearing a green dress and playing a guitar.
Photo courtesy Taylor Swift/Twitter.

With resale tickets commanding a thousand dollars or more each, Swift’s decision to perform in the rain might have cost some wheelchair users a lot of money and a once-in-a-lifetime concert experience. Exposing power wheelchairs to an hours-long torrential downpour is generally regarded as a bad idea and, while I didn’t have tickets and don’t consider myself a “Swiftie,” I do wonder… Should the show have been rescheduled?

John seated at a restaurant table with his friend.

I stayed (mostly) indoors and out of the rain last weekend (more power to the Swifties who braved the elements!), but was excited to share a couple of meals with my friend Michele, who was visiting from London. It had been nearly a year since we last met up — on a weekend trip to Budapest, Hungary. In honor of that fun trip, I’ve published a new accessible travel guide to the Hungarian capital city, which you can read more about below.

Wheelchair Travel Group Trip
Early next week, look out for an email that will contain details on the 2023 Wheelchair Travel Group Trip to Portugal led by yours truly! I’m excited to once again share this incredible destination with readers like you, and I hope you’ll consider joining our group from August 22 to 31, 2023. Keep an eye out for details and an invitation to reserve your spot next week!

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The Wheelchair Travel website and this newsletter are only possible thanks to the generous support of paid subscribers. If you haven’t done so already, please consider upgrading to a paid subscription — with an upgraded membership, you can unlock premium benefits and support my work to make the world more accessible.

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Among the benefits offered to paid subscribers is access to exclusive content and events, and there is an exciting event just around the corner — an “Ask Me Anything” with a former flight attendant (and current current flight attendants who, understandably, can’t reveal their identities). A firm date and details on how to submit questions will be sent in next week’s newsletter.

Later tonight, I’m flying down to the Sunshine State for a long weekend with family! Wish me luck, that my wheelchair is returned in one piece and that I survive the heat & humidity!

All the best,
John Morris

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Latest Accessible Travel Articles

Close-up of young woman in manual wheelchair.

Top 9 Wheelchair Accessories for Disabled Travelers

Whether you use a manual or powered wheelchair, this list of accessories and attachments will help you get more out of your mobility device — including a gimmicky product that might just keep you dry.

Read the article


The City of Budapest was formed in 1873 with the unification of the towns of Buda, Óbuda and Pest, recognized then as the co-capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Today, Budapest is the capital city of Hungary and is among the European Union’s 10 largest cities by population. The Danube River cuts the city in half, with the hilly and historic Buda to the west, and the largely flat, high-action Pest to the east.

John seated in his wheelchair at a table with his friend.

I traveled there last year with my friend Michele, and we had a great time in a city that is truly ascending. Commitments have been made to improve accessibility for residents and visitors with disabilities, but it’s already manageable for the majority of us — read about my trip, where I stayed, how I got around, what I ate and more in the brand-new Budapest Wheelchair Accessible Travel Guide.


From the Archives (In Case You Missed It)

These popular articles appeared in a previous newsletter — if you haven’t taken a look yet, give them a read!

Fans in the stands at Wrigley Field.

Baseball Team Says Disabled Fans Are Not Entitled to the “Best Seats in the House”

An attorney for a Major League Baseball team presented a morally bankrupt argument — that disabled people should have no expectation of equal access.

Read the article

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That’s all for now, friends! See you next week in the Premium Newsletter, or next month in the standard issue!

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