What should access information actually say? (Episode 5)
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What makes access information genuinely useful? This episode unpacks the difference between vague promises and practical details that help people travel with confidence.
The Blindly Wheeling PodcastBlindly Wheeling is a warm, thoughtful and often humorous podcast exploring accessibility, inclusive tourism, travel, visitor experience and the realities of navigating the world as a disabled person.
Hosted by Paul Ralph, the series blends lived experience, storytelling and practical insight to explore what genuinely welcoming places look and feel like. These are not dry policy discussions or technical compliance checklists. Instead, the conversations focus on the human side of accessibility: confidence, trust, independence, belonging and the simple joy of trying somewhere new.
Across the series, listeners are taken behind the scenes of hotels, museums, visitor attractions, transport systems, public spaces and destinations. Along the way, the podcast explores the moments that shape experiences for disabled people, from outstanding hospitality and thoughtful design to the occasional absurdity of inaccessible toilets, confusing signage and lifts that appear to have retired before their owners did.
The tone is practical, conversational and grounded in real life. Some episodes challenge assumptions. Others celebrate organisations getting things right. Many reflect on the emotional side of accessibility and why welcome matters just as much as physical access.