Oh shit I am guessing a smoke is out of the question..
The layovers are 1.50 and 2.10
Well in precisely three weeks from now, I will know how the first leg went.
Oh shit I am guessing a smoke is out of the question..
The layovers are 1.50 and 2.10
Well in precisely three weeks from now, I will know how the first leg went.
arsenal (March 16th, 2018)
I've never been consistent in my choice of airlines when flying to Thailand from London. One year I may choose to stay on the aircraft from London to Bangkok (Thai, Eva etc) and then the next year I may choose to break the journey (Emirates), which is useful if you have a screaming baby all the way from London to Dubai. I do find Dubai airport a real chore. One year I changed in Mumbai when flying JET - NEVER again!! Ghastly.
I am at an age now, in my prime, where I want to get on the plane and stay on the plane until I reach BKK. I usually get stuck into the pre-meal beers, have a couple of red wines with the meal, a brandy with the coffee, another beer or two to help me totally relax and dream of the pleasures that await. I begin to re-draft a novel to pass the time and, having failed to edit beyond five pages, I fall asleep for about four hours.
The only reason that I sought to jump ship in Dubai (you know, that gay-friendly country where the car park at the airport is awash with abandoned cars, the drivers having 'legged it' before they get nicked for sliding into debt) is to escape the token screaming baby (each flight is duty-bound to supply at least one).
Also on the radar of horrors is the 'last to board the plane' out of breath female backpacker (I like the aisle seat) who curls into the shape of an Easter egg on the seat beside me, her legs tucked under her fanny. She then seeks to wrap herself in a rug while sporting a 'nil by mouth - do not disturb' warning around her neck, announcing the fact that she's taken something marginally more potent than ketamine to while away the remaining hours. She surfaces as breakfast is placed on the trays of those who do not sport 'bugger off' signs. She blinks, smiles, looks around her, uncurls her legs and attempt to crawl across my tray, her bloody earphones still attached to the socket and her seat belt still around her waist with the gripping force of a hungry anaconda!
"Hi, sorry, may I, sorry, eh, I just need to, eh...."
"Look, I don't care if you pole vault me, just get into the bloody aisle without upsetting my breakfast or catching my neck in your earphone wires and you may want to unbuckle your seat belt if you want to make it to the 'lavvie'. "
"Ah, yeah, thanks, sorry, I just need to......"
And now .. I understand from my techie sister that I can buy earphones (with a universal adapter) that will cut out baby bawl and surrounding noise. Brilliant!!
From now on, I am not changing planes: it's just too bloody stressful.
searcher (March 16th, 2018)
Yes. Changing planes at Mumbai airport ranks as one of my worst ever travelling experiences.
You’d probably find they were all very nice really, if you’d got to know them.Originally Posted by gerefan2
On that flight, Arsenal, there was a medical emergency: a lady with asthma. I will never forget it. There are some doctors who, for fear of being sued inflating Lady Fandermere with the wrong kind of wind, will sit quite still and not respond to a medical emergency. On this flight? Not a bloody chance. Do you know that a doctor on a JET Airways flight who responds to a call for assistance is richly rewarded by JET?
When the lights came up and people awoke to a call for medical assistance, there must have been about fifty seat belts speedily unbuckled before a stampede of - I presume - doctors rushing to the back of the aircraft. What a scrum! The only thing that was missing was the Haka!!
I hated Mumbai airport with its primeval toilets and hostile cops, sporting machine guns.
The lady, thankfully, survived and left the plane at Mumbai - with a pair of dentures attached to her nose.
I too had flown with JET via Mumbai to Bangkok, and the change over was not very nice with police or Amy with machine guns right up near your faces. Not a very pleasant experience.
I've flown with Jet - the flight was ok - I don't remember the airport being especially unpleasant (I'd probably consumed enough complimentary booze on the flight to make anything seem acceptable) but I do remember the army with the machine guns. On your way back, they do not even let you enter the airport building until you have shown them your flight confirmation.
My worst ever experience was LHR to BKK via VIE with Austrian. The seats seemed tiny, the food was awful, the entertainment system was broken on one of the flights, and on the other sector we were seated right next to the shithouse with the associated smells. Spent a fortnight dreading the return, and it was just as unpleasant
I actually contemplated going Jet-air to mumbai and bangkok, back with Ethihad. Nice price, 540 euro, until I got to checkout, and all of a sudden the price went up to 850 euro, yeah right, fuck that
Again, I Always went direct, but since my Lao boyfriend didn't at first want to go, and now cannot go due to work, I just booked my ticket three days ago, otherwise, I'm sure booking Thai ex BRU in december, would have cost me a mere 600 euro, but now, that ticket cost around 800.
Turkish offers very nice price for London-Bangkok in April: $521 round-trip via Istanbul, 16 hours including layover .
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Nice - but given that the thread was about flying from EDINBURGH or DUBLIN, I await MiniMee's appearance to ask why you would depart from London