The Third Law Part 11 – Easyjet living

I’m on an EasyJet flight from Luton Aipowt to Berlin. Sat quite comfortably on a front row aisle seat having forked out £20 for speedy boarding. Worth every penny. In fact had I forked out £12.50 in advance I could have been sat in the ServisAir Executive lounge before hand. As it is I spent most of the waiting time eating lunch and doing emails and still left enough juice on my laptop battery for the whole flight ahead of me.

We were 20 minutes late taking off. 5 persons had made last minute decisions not to travel which meant that 5 bags had to be retrieved from the hold. You wonder whether one of them had a premonition. The real reason is almost certainly mundane. Bad back suddenly got worse, phobia about flying returned, straightforward family argument (again!), etc etc etc. I stuck in three etc’s there but in reality I couldn’t think of any more reasons on the spur of the moment, which was almost certainly the way they decide not to travel – on the spur of the moment that is – it’s unlikely that they had taken a lot of time to think about this or they would probably not have bothered checking their bags in. I will never know their fate and tb quite h not in the least way concerned.

Whilst in “departures” at the airport I purchased a copy of the Daily Telegraph for £1.20. This was only to avail myself of the free bottle of water offer. The water itself was £1.75 had I not bought the paper. The offer would not have worked the other way round. ie free Telegraph with every bottle of water.

Now we have taken off and I am quite happily tapping away on my laptop, a few (ninety) isolated minutes away from the cares of the world. Isolated but in full control of all my senses. Quite often when I catch a plane I will have a beer or a gin and tonic to while away the time, relax, but today I’m driving when I get to Berlin so the water is it. My final destination is Dresden.

The sense of being cut off is great. I have a bit of a sore throat but that isn’t going to stop my enjoyment of the situation. The background noise of the plane in flight is also quite calming. You can hear a few things going on in the background, overhead lockers being opened and shut, items of clothing being stowed or retrieved, but it is largely quiet.

I’m glad it’s not a long flight. Los Angeles or Joburg. I have a totally different strategy for surviving long haul trips. This involves drinking copious amounts of alcohol early on and then falling asleep for the rest of the flight. Works every time except for the one occasion I was coming back from Tokyo where due to dehydration I developed a humungous hangover about 30 minutes into the flight. Nightmare.

I’ve got a few long haul flight stories. Once I was travelling in economy from Seattle to Heathrow. I had met a dutch journalist who was in first class (long story) and therefore able to avail himself of the BA First Class lounge before the flight. We boarded the plane five minutes before the doors closed and therefore just before take-off. He turned left to his palatial accommodation and I to my humble economy seat. At least my frequent flyer status had secured me an aisle seat near the front.

As I approached my place the face of a somewhat large woman in the seat next to mine dropped with visible dismay. She had been eyeing my aisle seat and with only a minute or two to go to take off thought she was home and dry.

As I settled in to my well rehearsed pre-flight survival drill (ear plugs in, cotton eyeshades on) she told me she hoped she wouldn’t disturb me too much by going to the toilet too many times during the flight. I wished her luck and proceeded to fall asleep waking up, again in a manner well drilled into my body clock, just before the breakfast was being served. She had had to climb over the rest of her family in the opposite direction. I forgot to mention we were sat in the centre row of 5 seats. Ho hum.

My other in flight sleeping story worthy of mention was from a Virgin Atlantic flight to Los Angeles. This time I was in Upper Class and my reclining leather seat was close to the cocktail bar. If you haven’t flown Upper Class you need to. The Virgin Club Lounge is a great place to spend a few hours before departure – worth turning up far too early for. You can have a pleasant lunch, haircut, massage, shave and so on.

Anyway after my pleasant lunch in the lounge, then second pleasant lunch on board I polished off my last glass of red wine/champagne/port/brandy/G&T/beer (I don’t know, I can’t remember) and fell into a deep and relaxing sleep. I woke up halfway to LA gasping for a cup of tea. Strolling over to the bar I sat at one of the bar stools at one end. The other stools quickly filled up including the comedian Billy Connolly taking up the last one at the far end of the row.

Seeing she had customers the stewardess came over and asked us what our pleasure might be. She didn’t look too pleased when I asked for a cup of tea – after all it involved some effort unlike pouring a glass of champagne. Unfortunately for her every other person sat at that bar gave the same order, including Billy Connolly who added that she had told him earlier that he wasn’t allowed a cup of team and that he would have her know that he “was a personal friend of Richard Branson”. We all laughed and tucked into our fresh cups of tea.

Those days of long haul business travel are over. Berlin is a pleasant enough distance though. The weather at the other end doesn’t seem to be that much better than in the UK mind you. It won’t matter because I will mostly be sat in a hotel meeting room talking shop and availing myself (hopefully) of the free wifi.

I trust the wifi will be free because otherwise the hotel website tells me it is knocking on E20 a day. It reminds me of the time I chose to stay at the Hyatt Regency Churchill Hotel in London. I wouldn’t normally stay in such a hotel on business (or pleasure for that matter) but this one was half price on Lastminute.com. What swayed me was the free wifi.

Of course when I got there not only was the wifi not free but it cost £25 a day – I would get TV packages bundled in.

The irony was that this hotel was a customer of the company I work for and we provided the internet connectivity. I had no magic button to press. Thereafter I got myself a data SIM that I am able to use wherever I go.

We interrupt this service to bring you news that a cabin steward has just entered the flight deck. The process for doing this was to have a second steward stand guard facing the passengers whilst the first guy opened the door and went in. I didn’t see whether the door had been opened from the flight deck. Interesting.

Anyway back to the hotel story. Not only did I not use the wifi because it was too expensive but everything else was too expensive as well. Most of the other residents appeared to be rich Arab Sheiks. I could easily spot the other Latminute.comers. I ended up nipping out for a couple of pints in a pub called the Five Barrels and then popping “down the Edgeware Road” for a kebab. Breakfast next day was at Pontis Italian restaurant off Oxford Street. It was cheaper than the hotel but tb quite h it was not good. I was served by an Eastern European waitress who did not understand the concept of a full English. Anyway I ate the food and went on my way (where to has been lost in the mists of time). I think I wrote something after that occasion which I will link to if I can find it/

That previous comment about mists could have been “lost in the London fog”. Unfortunately since the clean air act London doesn‘t get its pea-soupers any more. My dad has a story to tell there – fog was so thick he couldn’t find his way home from an Inns of Court dinner. I dare say the port also had something to do with it.

For reference, at this point of the post, I have written just under 1,500 words in around an hour. I can’t be exactly sure of the editing time as I can’t find the statistics tab that used to tell me this kind of thing. You see in January I upgraded to Office 2010 when I got my new laptop. I can’t find half the things I used to use. I’m sure the software is a big advance of previous versions but its user interface is very different to my old Office 2003.

Never mind. That’s progress. Probably the same in loads of situations. Like when you get a new bedside alarm clock having just taken years to work out how to use the old one. I’m sure there are many other analogies – just pick your own (that’s PYO – same as in strawberries and other soft fruit).

Third Law Part 10

Third Law Part 1

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