TonyHancock
Senior Member
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2010
- Posts
- 5,645
[FONT=&]Well this was interesting, actually interesting isn't the correct word, annoying is better, I thought to myself. There appeared to be automated gates of some sort for boarding. I opted to avoid them, I’m never keen on new fangled technology attacking me.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]“Beep” came the noise from the machine as the lady at the gate waved my boarding pass in its general direction.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]“It looks like you have a seat reassignment Mr Hancock” the lady said, but showed no facial expression. :shock:
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]If this was British Airways or Qantas I would be fully expecting a seat in First Class but I had no idea what to expect with Etihad, could it be that they knew who I was, or was I about to lose the seat, Griselda had probably not selected carefully, so that a Falcon could take it?
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]The lady handed me a new boarding pass, smiled, and said “You have a seat in First Class.”
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Now this was more like it, although clearly “The Residence” to myself would have been more acceptable.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]The stewardess escorting me to my “First Class Suite” had obviously been to a different training school to the one British Airways use because she was able to take me directly to the correct place without taking me on a tour of the entire aeroplane.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]My first thought, upon entering my suite, was just how small it was. Well, small when compared to, for example, a standard room at The Hilton South Wharf.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]As I settled in I placed my luggage under the bench in front of my seat which, in comparison to my sofa at home, was quite small. The 24” TV was also quite small when compared to the 58” TV Griselda had installed in my home office. The in suite fridge, or chiller as the stewardess referred to it as, was also much smaller than my kitchen fridge freezer.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Shortly before take-off the chef popped in to see me, fortunately he didn’t have a pony tail so it was a delight to go through my dietary requirements for the flight, and in particular a dry martini shortly after take-off. I opted for the fillet steak again, but this time it was to be cooked to my liking – rare to medium rare. (I daren't ask for blue) Now this was different, I’d never been asked how I like my steak cooked on my forty Qantas First Class flights. Actually for that matter I hadn’t met the chef on those flights either although I knew he was called Fred Perry and had a pony tail.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]The Dry Martini was good, but not up to the standard set by Lucilla in the Concorde Room at Heathrow.
The steak, however, was outstanding and cooked as close to perfection as it could have been. I expected the traditional grey slab of meat, but this was actually red in places.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]One thing Etihad does have to sort out is the wine service. The stewardess delivered an appropriately sized glass, significantly bigger than the ones in my home, but only poured a tiny drop into it after showing me the bottle for what seemed an eternity. Eventually we came to a compromise and she poured more in. My own preference is not to see the bottle at all but have a pint delivered just before the meal.
The glass is about the right size....it just needs filling to the brim.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]After a bit of faffing I was able to call Griselda and ask her about being able to watch the TV shows she had recorded on my little television on the TV screen in my suite. Fortunately, Griselda redeemed herself by including something called a HDMI cable in my hand luggage and the stewardess was able to do the rest.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Having read an article in the The Daily Telegraph, not the dreadful New South Wales one, about Sir Kenneth Branagh’s latest role in The West End. I know he is a bit of a leftie luvvie but I have always approved of his Henry V, and am contemplating going to see his Archie Rice in The West End. (Assuming Griselda can snag The Royal Box for free at The Garrick.) I decided to rewatch Sir Larry’s Archie Rice in the 1960 film version of The Entertainer and Sir Ken will have his work cut out. I’m digressing again………….
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]“I think you are very attractive but we barely know each other” I found myself saying, in a rather gallant manner, to the charming stewardess. :shock:
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]She looked at me quizzically, lost for words, whilst pointing at the long bench opposite me.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]“Oh I see, realising my faux pas, you just want to make the up the bed” I said, almost relieved and making a mental not for Griselda to book me in for a hearing test.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]“Yes Mr Hancock” she replied with the sort of expression that suggested she thought I might be deranged.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]I declined the offer, preferring to remain awake for the remainder of the flight. I had decided to try and get a full night’s sleep when I arrived, in the early evening, in London. I thought about taking a shower but quite frankly couldn’t be bothered.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]I closed the door to my suite and settled back to The Entertainer.
Griselda had supplied me with a new fangled typewriter with a TV Screen...but I couldn't get the TV working at all.
Time flew by, sadly, and after a few episodes of Ripper Street, we were on our final descent into London Heathrow. All that remained was to bid the chef and delightful stewardess farewell.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]So my first foray into Etihad First Class was over, and despite the suite being smaller than a hotel room, fitted with a TV and fridge, sorry, chiller smaller than the ones in my home, it was an acceptable way to fly.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Once I reached my hotel I organised a telegram to Griselda to advise her to organise a free upgrade to First Class on the way back. These peeps at Etihad seemed to at least know who I was.
TTFN
[/FONT]
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]“Beep” came the noise from the machine as the lady at the gate waved my boarding pass in its general direction.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]“It looks like you have a seat reassignment Mr Hancock” the lady said, but showed no facial expression. :shock:
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]If this was British Airways or Qantas I would be fully expecting a seat in First Class but I had no idea what to expect with Etihad, could it be that they knew who I was, or was I about to lose the seat, Griselda had probably not selected carefully, so that a Falcon could take it?
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]The lady handed me a new boarding pass, smiled, and said “You have a seat in First Class.”
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Now this was more like it, although clearly “The Residence” to myself would have been more acceptable.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]The stewardess escorting me to my “First Class Suite” had obviously been to a different training school to the one British Airways use because she was able to take me directly to the correct place without taking me on a tour of the entire aeroplane.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]My first thought, upon entering my suite, was just how small it was. Well, small when compared to, for example, a standard room at The Hilton South Wharf.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]As I settled in I placed my luggage under the bench in front of my seat which, in comparison to my sofa at home, was quite small. The 24” TV was also quite small when compared to the 58” TV Griselda had installed in my home office. The in suite fridge, or chiller as the stewardess referred to it as, was also much smaller than my kitchen fridge freezer.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Shortly before take-off the chef popped in to see me, fortunately he didn’t have a pony tail so it was a delight to go through my dietary requirements for the flight, and in particular a dry martini shortly after take-off. I opted for the fillet steak again, but this time it was to be cooked to my liking – rare to medium rare. (I daren't ask for blue) Now this was different, I’d never been asked how I like my steak cooked on my forty Qantas First Class flights. Actually for that matter I hadn’t met the chef on those flights either although I knew he was called Fred Perry and had a pony tail.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]The Dry Martini was good, but not up to the standard set by Lucilla in the Concorde Room at Heathrow.
The steak, however, was outstanding and cooked as close to perfection as it could have been. I expected the traditional grey slab of meat, but this was actually red in places.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]One thing Etihad does have to sort out is the wine service. The stewardess delivered an appropriately sized glass, significantly bigger than the ones in my home, but only poured a tiny drop into it after showing me the bottle for what seemed an eternity. Eventually we came to a compromise and she poured more in. My own preference is not to see the bottle at all but have a pint delivered just before the meal.
The glass is about the right size....it just needs filling to the brim.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]After a bit of faffing I was able to call Griselda and ask her about being able to watch the TV shows she had recorded on my little television on the TV screen in my suite. Fortunately, Griselda redeemed herself by including something called a HDMI cable in my hand luggage and the stewardess was able to do the rest.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Having read an article in the The Daily Telegraph, not the dreadful New South Wales one, about Sir Kenneth Branagh’s latest role in The West End. I know he is a bit of a leftie luvvie but I have always approved of his Henry V, and am contemplating going to see his Archie Rice in The West End. (Assuming Griselda can snag The Royal Box for free at The Garrick.) I decided to rewatch Sir Larry’s Archie Rice in the 1960 film version of The Entertainer and Sir Ken will have his work cut out. I’m digressing again………….
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]“I think you are very attractive but we barely know each other” I found myself saying, in a rather gallant manner, to the charming stewardess. :shock:
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]She looked at me quizzically, lost for words, whilst pointing at the long bench opposite me.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]“Oh I see, realising my faux pas, you just want to make the up the bed” I said, almost relieved and making a mental not for Griselda to book me in for a hearing test.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]“Yes Mr Hancock” she replied with the sort of expression that suggested she thought I might be deranged.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]I declined the offer, preferring to remain awake for the remainder of the flight. I had decided to try and get a full night’s sleep when I arrived, in the early evening, in London. I thought about taking a shower but quite frankly couldn’t be bothered.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]I closed the door to my suite and settled back to The Entertainer.
Griselda had supplied me with a new fangled typewriter with a TV Screen...but I couldn't get the TV working at all.
Time flew by, sadly, and after a few episodes of Ripper Street, we were on our final descent into London Heathrow. All that remained was to bid the chef and delightful stewardess farewell.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]So my first foray into Etihad First Class was over, and despite the suite being smaller than a hotel room, fitted with a TV and fridge, sorry, chiller smaller than the ones in my home, it was an acceptable way to fly.
[/FONT]
[FONT=&]Once I reached my hotel I organised a telegram to Griselda to advise her to organise a free upgrade to First Class on the way back. These peeps at Etihad seemed to at least know who I was.
TTFN
[/FONT]