Sprinkles&Stones
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- May 19, 2020
- Messages
- 1,993
Flying from San Antonio to Tucson after a conference. The worst turbulence EVER, to the point that the stranger next to me grabbed my hand to hold and I did not mind. The turbulence forced us to turn around and land in Dallas and all passengers were taken off the tarmack by bus to a hotel that was still under construction. They put all of us in a wing off to ourselves, and none of the rooms had DOORS!!!! I buddied up with a lady so we weren't alone in the room. No one slept anyway. They herded us back on the bus in the morning and we got to Tucson finally.
I also had trips flying around Alaska where I could see the treetops through the cracks in the floor (small planes), helicopter flights landing on glaciers where I rediscovered how to pray, AlaskaAir passengers with flu stretched out in the aisle, drunk passengers going "full nut-nut." One trip to Adak NAF in the Aleutian Islands was so bad with weather (and several otters were being transported by Fish & Wildlife and those otters were PISSED) that when I got back to the office in Anchorage, I informed my supervisor that that had been my last trip out there![]()
once i shared a flight with quite a few nuns
i thought it was a miricle it didnt crash
they was always a nun on those old airport type movies
Haha! Maybe all those nuns added good luck to your flight!
we needed it !
flights in and out of wellington are never pleasent with all the wind
actually i used to enjoy flying before moving to Wellington (before 9-11 when you just parked the car and hopped on the flight with a couple of minutes to spair)
@azstonie that is so crazy! Why no doors? That would be hard to top. I’m afraid of flying (even though I do it frequently) and that turbulence sounds terrifying. Omg angry otters too. Wild.
my worst mainly involves being ill. We were in Guatemala traveling from Tikkal
to Antigua and I was already so uncomfortable with a yeast infection (sorry TMI) and we sat on the tarmac in the heat forever before taking off. It was a small plane. I started vomiting and that continued for the duration of the trip, from plane to bus ride (puking out the window - fun times). Blech.
@azstonie that is so crazy! Why no doors? That would be hard to top. I’m afraid of flying (even though I do it frequently) and that turbulence sounds terrifying. Omg angry otters too. Wild.
my worst mainly involves being ill. We were in Guatemala traveling from Tikkal
to Antigua and I was already so uncomfortable with a yeast infection (sorry TMI) and we sat on the tarmac in the heat forever before taking off. It was a small plane. I started vomiting and that continued for the duration of the trip, from plane to bus ride (puking out the window - fun times). Blech.
This is a few years ago now (2014). Flying out of Gatwick (UK) to South Africa via Dubai durning December to visit family. First our initial flight gets delayed, but still on track to make the change over. Once we board the NATS system (air traffic control) goes down across the UK, we must have spent 2 hours on the runway - and we didn’t even get offered water. They also couldn’t let us off the plane due to rules about luggage and passenger boarding. We finally take off, 9 hour first leg. But we arrive missing our connecting flight by 36 mins.
The airline in question does everything they can but the next flight is only the next morning. However if it’s under 12 hours you wait you don’t get a hotel you only get a food voucher - lucky us, and a rough night sleeping in the airport.
Next morning we are off, finally. Now travelling approximately 36 hours with very little sleep. Yet, upon arrival we find out our luggage is lost. This luggage contains all our family Christmas presents. Might be on the next flight. It wasn’t. Another 24 hours and endless calls to the airline and airport services we had to go pick our luggage up ourselves.
This experience was only beaten by the ash cloud of 2010 where we had to rebook our flights to reach our own wedding 4 times in the same week. Also cancelled all flowers, photographer, and some entertainment as we thought we wouldn’t make it. Only to land with 48 hours to go and having to reboot it all. We are still married though so there’s the silver lining
9/11!
I was on my way to Vancouver Airport to collect a hired car to tour the Canadian Rockies after visiting my folks, to find the airport eerily quiet which transpired to be the result of planes being diverted elsewhere after the first plane had hit the World Trade Centre.
A week later after we finished our tour in the Rockies, having followed closely the nuclear fallout of 9/11 on TV, air travel was still in chaos, and our return flight from Calgary was delayed. Good job my then husband and I had sufficient funds to book ourselves into a nearby hotel for the night, to return to the airport the next day to wait for the next available flight.
We got back to central London eventually more than a day later after 03:00 in the morning, due to lack of tube/underground and fast train services from Heathrow into central London where I had a base at the time. There was a massive queue for taxis, and we eventually arrived at my flat some 2 to 3 hours later.
We just hugged each other for ages once indoors, and were truly thankful to be alive and back at home unscathed.
I dislike air travel since then due to tightened security measures. Much as I appreciate their necessity, they have taken some of the joys of air travel away from me.
DK![]()
Don’t remember the exact year but over 10 years ago now I was taking a red eye - not even an hour into the flight an elderly man who was in the first row (I was in the third row) died. Apparently he was very ill and was traveling back to his home country with one of his kids. The plane had to turn back to NY and the man’s body was laid out on the front floor the entire time. When we landed, we had to wait for police and first responders to come and take the body. By that time it was after 3am and the next flight out wasn’t until 7am. I was lucky I was at the front of the plane so I had first dibs at being rebooked but really I just felt so terrible for the man and his family.
Don’t remember the exact year but over 10 years ago now I was taking a red eye - not even an hour into the flight an elderly man who was in the first row (I was in the third row) died. Apparently he was very ill and was traveling back to his home country with one of his kids. The plane had to turn back to NY and the man’s body was laid out on the front floor the entire time. When we landed, we had to wait for police and first responders to come and take the body. By that time it was after 3am and the next flight out wasn’t until 7am. I was lucky I was at the front of the plane so I had first dibs at being rebooked but really I just felt so terrible for the man and his family.
I’m a nervous flyer. I fly anyway but I constantly watch the stewardess or stewards for any reactions meaning the plane is in trouble. I also want to sit with my son David..not with my husband. Somehow I feel better because I’m looking after him…It distracts me a little. We were flying to California to see my middle son who was interning for the summer. We were seated over the wing..I heard a funny sound..I turned to my husband who was across the aisle to ask him if he heard it. He rolled his eyes and said that it was fine. I heard it again…This time it was louder..My husband was getting annoyed with me..The pilot finally came on to say there was a problem with one of the engines. Now smoke was coming out of the plane. I grabbed my son’s hand and thought we were goners. My husband laughed and said it didn’t look good. We were able to land in Nevada. People were upset that they were going to miss events. The pilot refused to fly the plane even after the crew said they could fix it so we could be on our way. They were yelling at him to fly the plane after it was fixed. Out of character I stood up and yelled at everyone that they should feel lucky we didn’t crash! I turned to my husband and told him we needed to rent a car because I wasn’t getting back in any plane.Everyone started laughing so it broke the ice. When we got there I had multiple cocktails which I don’t usually do. It was the first and last time my middle son saw his mom feeling tipsy. My son and husband were hysterical. I kept saying I was so happy to be there. They still bring it up and start laughing.
My dad always told me to sit near the wing...that it was the safest place to be in a plane. If I am recalling that correctly.
And LOL I would have felt the same way! No thank you. Let's drive to where we need to be.![]()
Seven years ago, arrived in London in the middle of a snowstorm to find out that our hotel burned down. Finally got relocated to another hotel. Same trip, rent a van In Paris and crash it in the parking garage, backing out, but we keep going. A few days later, Arrive back in Paris (after a wonderful trip to Normandy and Mont Saint-Michel)in the middle of the night but run out of gas—in the middle of the red light district.
Don’t remember the exact year but over 10 years ago now I was taking a red eye - not even an hour into the flight an elderly man who was in the first row (I was in the third row) died. Apparently he was very ill and was traveling back to his home country with one of his kids. The plane had to turn back to NY and the man’s body was laid out on the front floor the entire time. When we landed, we had to wait for police and first responders to come and take the body. By that time it was after 3am and the next flight out wasn’t until 7am. I was lucky I was at the front of the plane so I had first dibs at being rebooked but really I just felt so terrible for the man and his family.
My first overseas trip at age 26, to London, alone for the first 2 weeks (meeting up later with a Friend). There was a stop over in the Middle East and I went to the local markets while waiting for the next flight connection. At the markets I went to the Public toilets, weird as with a hole in the floor, and as I’m apt to do, took a drink of water from the bathroom tap. Here in Australia, back before bottled water, you always drank from a tap, no problem.
In this case.
A Big Mistake.
Flying the second leg into London I was staying in backpacker accommodation with various day trips organized until my friend arrived, when I became very very unwell and by day 3, apparently ringing my parents back in Australia totally incoherent, freaking my parents out and resulting in my Dad frantically contacting consulate officials and me being taken to hospital with cholera.
Nice.
I lost over a stone in weight in like 10 days and fortunately was able to recuperate at a the lovely home of an Australian Government official before meeting up with my friend.
I have never drunk water from a tap anywhere, ever again.