Skyring
Established Member
- Joined
- Oct 18, 2005
- Posts
- 2,216
- Qantas
- LT Silver
Episode 1: Planning begins with some worrying.
I would have to deplane in Sydney, of course, but that meant a trip through security and an hour browsing the airside shops, perhaps having a flat white and a pie.
Sadly, the international flights out of Canberra vanished with the pandemic. There had also been a Singapore Airlines flight linking three capital cities — Singapore, Canberra, and Wellington — that had been very convenient for me.
Apart from a few Facebook updates, I made no trip reports. In fact, I had been absent from my “home” travel forum (more on that later) for over five years until returning a couple of weeks ago.
The trip had been a quick “there and back” for a weekend in Mainz for the annual BookCrossing.com convention in mid-April. This has been a staple of my life since 2005 and has sparked any number of round-the-world trips to meet up with a bunch of book-loving mates.
I’m tall enough — and a side sleeper to boot — that sleep is all but impossible in an economy seat. Even if I do manage to nod off through sheer exhaustion, there are constant noises and interruptions. I was once jolted awake by the unexpected arrival in my lap of the hand of the gentleman beside me. I’m sure it was quite innocent — his wife was on his other side — but I spent the rest of the flight warily awake.
A sleepless night flight and then I may have more hours in some intervening airport before the flight to Australia.
Finding a place to rest for a long layover can be difficult, especially on the fly with a strange airport to navigate. There’s a dedicated website — SleepinginAirports — that can be a great resource. Still, stretching out in a corner can be a chancy exercise, especially if you wake to find all your stuff gone or you have slumbered past boarding time.
Even in my glory days of first-class lounge access sleeping in some relaxation room could be difficult. It’s rare that an actual flat bed is provided, let alone privacy.
I managed to curl up — I think the seat had a footrest — for an hour or so. When I awoke the strangers around me had been replaced by a fresh batch and I had just enough time for a shave and a coffee before navigating the huge airport for my Canberra-via-Sydney flight.
A non-stop long-haul trip and I arrive at my destination with my batteries drained and my phone on its last flickering charge bar. Finding my Uber or AirBnB can be a challenge!
Perhaps more importantly, if I’m travelling alone and I’m sleep-deprived, this is exactly the time when I can make expensive mistakes. Walk out into the street, looking the wrong way, and get wiped out by a bus.
Go to the wrong terminal for the right flight. Or vice versa.
So, how to get a reasonable amount of recharge on a long trip?
The advantages here are obvious:
The cons are sometimes equally glaring:
And, while I’ve never had a bad experience at one of these places, standards can vary. Always worth reading the recent reviews.
I have immediate access to my carryon bag, there are charging ports available, the food and drink is good, and I arrive more or less refreshed.
Any intermediate stops have the benefit of lounge time, with a shower and good coffee.
This is not to say that sleep is guaranteed. A noisy business cabin, with lights and interruptions, can wreak havoc on a nap.
And I have to say that a good Business — or First — product can have so many bits and pieces to sample and explore that sleep becomes something to cram in between all the luxuries.
I’ve taken an Emirates First flight from Sydney to a Middle-Eastern destination with a twelve-hour layover at their fabulous First lounge in Dubai and what with the inflight shower, the Dom, the caviar, the wide screen and the attractions of the lounge, by the time I hauled myself up to the First cabin for my onward flight, all I wanted to do was endure the takeoff and ascent, drop my seat to horizontal, and shut my eyes, scorning all offers of food and drink, no matter how glorious!
The downside is that good stopover flights aren’t so easily found and booked on a single ticket, and you have to leave the airport — with all the hassles of immigration, security, public transit and converting currency — to get to your hotel.
Then again, airport hotels generally charge a premium and, much as I love airports, they are not usually located in the scenic or historic areas of town.
A nice break would be two or three nights, with a chance to explore the city and make sure I was fully refreshed before pressing on.
With only six weeks to go, I had to do something. A direct business-class flight was out of my price range and although I had well over half a million Qantas frequent flyer points, there was no apparent reward availability, at least not for my dates.
At this point I turned to the travel forum I hadn’t looked into much for five years.
This one!
Over the years this has been a mine of fabulous information for all sorts of travel to and from (and even within) Australia.
The members have amassed an unbelievable amount of travel experience. You want a city, someone has been there and knows the best pub. Someone else is an expert on the booking procedure for the shuttles around LAX. Another knows how to maximise point earnings on round-the-world trips.
Over the years, this site has saved me tens of thousands of dollars in travel.
Or, looking at it another way, cost me about the same amount.
Still, it’s been fun and I could have worse hobbies/addictions.
If ever there was a place to find out the best way of getting to and from Edinburgh without going bankrupt or sober, this was it.
Skyring
***
This article was originally posted on Medium.com (free link), where I earn a few bucks from member reads.
Kelpies at large. (Image by Steven Straiton and Wikimedia CC BY 2.0)
The last stamp
My passport makes for sad reading. The last time it saw any serious action — apart from a couple of Trans-Tasman trips, and you don’t even get stamps for those — was 2019 with a weekend in Mainz.Meine letzte große Reise. (Image by author)
Those were the days! Qatar Airways had an international flight out of Canberra to Doha. Admittedly, it stopped at Sydney there and back. Still, it was one seat on one aircraft all the way to Doha and more importantly, the passport control and customs facilities were in Canberra, avoiding that inconvenient transit bus and the horrid scrum at dawn in Sydney when a host of flights from across the globe arrive just after curfew lifts.
Qatar B777 in CBR (image by author)
I would have to deplane in Sydney, of course, but that meant a trip through security and an hour browsing the airside shops, perhaps having a flat white and a pie.
Sadly, the international flights out of Canberra vanished with the pandemic. There had also been a Singapore Airlines flight linking three capital cities — Singapore, Canberra, and Wellington — that had been very convenient for me.
Apart from a few Facebook updates, I made no trip reports. In fact, I had been absent from my “home” travel forum (more on that later) for over five years until returning a couple of weeks ago.
The trip had been a quick “there and back” for a weekend in Mainz for the annual BookCrossing.com convention in mid-April. This has been a staple of my life since 2005 and has sparked any number of round-the-world trips to meet up with a bunch of book-loving mates.
The problem with long-haul
Yes, I’m getting old. I’m in the fourth year of my eighth decade and a flight to Europe or North America basically entails 24 hours of “airside” until I’m spat out onto a taxi rank somewhere in a radically different time zone on the other side of the planet.I’m tall enough — and a side sleeper to boot — that sleep is all but impossible in an economy seat. Even if I do manage to nod off through sheer exhaustion, there are constant noises and interruptions. I was once jolted awake by the unexpected arrival in my lap of the hand of the gentleman beside me. I’m sure it was quite innocent — his wife was on his other side — but I spent the rest of the flight warily awake.
Transit and lounges
A few hours in an airport between the legs of a long flight rarely does much to adjust my fatigue level. Worst of all is when my flight begins in the evening after a long day of packing up, dealing with trains and taxis and security goons, and then waiting around for boarding time.A sleepless night flight and then I may have more hours in some intervening airport before the flight to Australia.
Finding a place to rest for a long layover can be difficult, especially on the fly with a strange airport to navigate. There’s a dedicated website — SleepinginAirports — that can be a great resource. Still, stretching out in a corner can be a chancy exercise, especially if you wake to find all your stuff gone or you have slumbered past boarding time.
Even in my glory days of first-class lounge access sleeping in some relaxation room could be difficult. It’s rare that an actual flat bed is provided, let alone privacy.
My accommodation in Doha (image by author)
The photo above shows me (via a mirrored ceiling) in some Doha pay-per-access business lounge. It was okay, with snacks and drinks and comfy chairs and free wifi, but I had several hours there and no secure area to snooze in.
I managed to curl up — I think the seat had a footrest — for an hour or so. When I awoke the strangers around me had been replaced by a fresh batch and I had just enough time for a shave and a coffee before navigating the huge airport for my Canberra-via-Sydney flight.
A non-stop long-haul trip and I arrive at my destination with my batteries drained and my phone on its last flickering charge bar. Finding my Uber or AirBnB can be a challenge!
Perhaps more importantly, if I’m travelling alone and I’m sleep-deprived, this is exactly the time when I can make expensive mistakes. Walk out into the street, looking the wrong way, and get wiped out by a bus.
Go to the wrong terminal for the right flight. Or vice versa.
So, how to get a reasonable amount of recharge on a long trip?
Transit hotels
I’ve had good experiences with transit hotels. I’ve used the excellent Ambassador at Changi a few times now, as well as the pod Yotels at Heathrow and Gatwick.The advantages here are obvious:
- An actual bed with a pillow and blankets
- A door you can lock
- Powerpoints and a desk for charging devices
- A bathroom
- A wake-up service
The cons are sometimes equally glaring:
- high prices
- hard to find in odd corners
- inconsistencies in booking
And, while I’ve never had a bad experience at one of these places, standards can vary. Always worth reading the recent reviews.
Business flying
With business class flights, fatigue and sleeplessness aren’t so much of a problem. Crank the seat down to horizontal, tuck everything away, put on the eyeshades, and grab some sleep.I have immediate access to my carryon bag, there are charging ports available, the food and drink is good, and I arrive more or less refreshed.
Any intermediate stops have the benefit of lounge time, with a shower and good coffee.
This is not to say that sleep is guaranteed. A noisy business cabin, with lights and interruptions, can wreak havoc on a nap.
And I have to say that a good Business — or First — product can have so many bits and pieces to sample and explore that sleep becomes something to cram in between all the luxuries.
I’ve taken an Emirates First flight from Sydney to a Middle-Eastern destination with a twelve-hour layover at their fabulous First lounge in Dubai and what with the inflight shower, the Dom, the caviar, the wide screen and the attractions of the lounge, by the time I hauled myself up to the First cabin for my onward flight, all I wanted to do was endure the takeoff and ascent, drop my seat to horizontal, and shut my eyes, scorning all offers of food and drink, no matter how glorious!
Make mine a stopover
If I had all the time in the world, I’d do what the smart travellers do. Break the flight down into daylight legs and stop over between each flight. All but the longest sectors are bearable if properly bookended by a good sleep.The downside is that good stopover flights aren’t so easily found and booked on a single ticket, and you have to leave the airport — with all the hassles of immigration, security, public transit and converting currency — to get to your hotel.
Then again, airport hotels generally charge a premium and, much as I love airports, they are not usually located in the scenic or historic areas of town.
A nice break would be two or three nights, with a chance to explore the city and make sure I was fully refreshed before pressing on.
Now, about that home travel forum
I booked the convention months ahead, found a nice AirBnB, and lollygagged about my flights, trying to work out what options I had that would suit my time and budget.With only six weeks to go, I had to do something. A direct business-class flight was out of my price range and although I had well over half a million Qantas frequent flyer points, there was no apparent reward availability, at least not for my dates.
At this point I turned to the travel forum I hadn’t looked into much for five years.
This one!
Over the years this has been a mine of fabulous information for all sorts of travel to and from (and even within) Australia.
The members have amassed an unbelievable amount of travel experience. You want a city, someone has been there and knows the best pub. Someone else is an expert on the booking procedure for the shuttles around LAX. Another knows how to maximise point earnings on round-the-world trips.
Over the years, this site has saved me tens of thousands of dollars in travel.
Or, looking at it another way, cost me about the same amount.
Still, it’s been fun and I could have worse hobbies/addictions.
If ever there was a place to find out the best way of getting to and from Edinburgh without going bankrupt or sober, this was it.
Skyring
***
This article was originally posted on Medium.com (free link), where I earn a few bucks from member reads.