bertair
Member
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2011
- Posts
- 120
Now that I am recently retired and not flying so much these days, I have found time to clean out some of my old suitcases, briefcases etc.
Opening an old brief case that has seen better days, I am finding old boarding passes, tickets (yes, the old tear out kind) in flight mags and timetables.
I flew almost 99% QF everywhere I went, for work and on holidays.
One QF timetable in booklet form from March 2001, makes for interesting reading (if a time table could be interesting I suppose).
Anyway, the point is, it looks like the Qantas Kangaroo flew to 150 destinations around the world back then, either branded on its own or on the likes of Qantas Link, Sunstate, etc.
Now sadly, Qantas would only be flying to a fraction of those destinations, with more to be dropped in the near future.
This timetable had a message from Qantas CEO of the time, Geoff Dixon whose smiling face in the photo adorning the book, announced non stop services between Sydney and Johannesburg, plus a code share with South African Airways.
Further he announced new codeshare arrangements with China Eastern Airlines, Alaska Airlines, increased Qantas services to LA from Melbourne and Sydney.
Services between Coffs Harbour and Brisbane were introduced by Sunstate, with increased flights between the Eastern Seaboard Capitals on Qantas tin.
Larger and more comfortable aircraft were on order.
It certainly looked a rosy future for Qantas back under Geoff Dixon in those days.
Flying Qantas in the early 2000s was one of the best experiences you could have and made long distance work travel well worthwhile, thanks to quiet lounges, impeccable Business Class service with a First Class attitude.
Where has it gone so wrong ???
Opening an old brief case that has seen better days, I am finding old boarding passes, tickets (yes, the old tear out kind) in flight mags and timetables.
I flew almost 99% QF everywhere I went, for work and on holidays.
One QF timetable in booklet form from March 2001, makes for interesting reading (if a time table could be interesting I suppose).
Anyway, the point is, it looks like the Qantas Kangaroo flew to 150 destinations around the world back then, either branded on its own or on the likes of Qantas Link, Sunstate, etc.
Now sadly, Qantas would only be flying to a fraction of those destinations, with more to be dropped in the near future.
This timetable had a message from Qantas CEO of the time, Geoff Dixon whose smiling face in the photo adorning the book, announced non stop services between Sydney and Johannesburg, plus a code share with South African Airways.
Further he announced new codeshare arrangements with China Eastern Airlines, Alaska Airlines, increased Qantas services to LA from Melbourne and Sydney.
Services between Coffs Harbour and Brisbane were introduced by Sunstate, with increased flights between the Eastern Seaboard Capitals on Qantas tin.
Larger and more comfortable aircraft were on order.
It certainly looked a rosy future for Qantas back under Geoff Dixon in those days.
Flying Qantas in the early 2000s was one of the best experiences you could have and made long distance work travel well worthwhile, thanks to quiet lounges, impeccable Business Class service with a First Class attitude.
Where has it gone so wrong ???