Last week was the first  time I had ever flown out of Lethbridge. Normally, when I fly anywhere, I drive  up to Calgary, scramble for cheap three-day parking, and hop on a plane. A  discount AirMiles promotion allowed me to hop on at Lethbridge, dash through the  terminal at Calgary, then glide into Vancouver with the great of ease - for next  to nothing, to  boot. 
Well, not exactly next to nothing: The taxes and insurance and over-priced burgers brought the total price back to reality.
Well, not exactly next to nothing: The taxes and insurance and over-priced burgers brought the total price back to reality.
When I first saw the  plane on the tarmac, I felt like I was Indiana Jones heading to Egypt on one of  those 1940's-era aircraft. I know I don't look like him, fight like him, or even  have his bank account, but for one fleeting moment I felt like a raider of the  lost ark – Noah's ark, that is. Noah's long-lost ark of the airways, to be  precise. 
Talk about ancient.  There was a seat on either side of the aisle, with twenty seats altogether. No  television, no soft drinks. Not even any boring airline magazines. I don't even  think there was a bathroom at back. I was too afraid to check it out, in case I  tipped the plane. 
I also got the  impression we were in trouble when I saw both pilots busy reading a map of  Alberta. It looked like they were trying to find the shortest and safest route  from Lethbridge to Calgary. I started looking for the shortest and safest route  to the ground, straight  down.
Cheap is fun, so long  as I can concentrate on saving time (no extra road trip to Calgary) and money  (some AirMiles gone, but bank account safe – well, until I had to buy that  burger in Calgary). Even the rush of leaving from a small "county" airport is  kind of cool. These mammoth-size airport malls leave much to be desired when it  comes to a personal, warm environment. There is something to be said for the  individual touch of a municipal  airport.
Coming back to Alberta  was almost as exciting. I discovered to my chagrin that, by the time I was to  arrive in Calgary (after a fifteen minute delay in Vancouver for a host of  unrelated reasons), I might miss my connecting flight to Lethbridge. In other  words, I was going to miss getting back on that twenty-seater "Bill Haley"  special - you know, shake, rattle, and  roll.
A few brief words to  the steward allowed me to move up to the executive class for the remainder of  the trip – and I enjoyed the brief fling of the pampered rich. The rationale?  Closer to the front for a quicker departure, I would have a head start for the  100 metre dash to the other departure gate. Sitting in a easy chair at 16,000  feet made me almost forget the taxes, insurance and over-priced burgers. It  almost made me forget Harrison Ford. It probably would have made him forget the  holy grail if he had the chance to sit where I sat. After all, why ride a camel  when you can ride a  La-Z-Boy?
Bumpy rides and near  misses aside, I was so impressed with the service I got from Air Canada. I find  that both hard and easy to say: hard, because I am more of a WestJet kind of  guy; and easy, because in an era where crummy service rules the day, I was  pampered like a little kid on a plane without his mommy for the first time. In  fact, I was offered coffee twice: Once when I was a commoner and once when I was  an executive.
That's almost incentive  enough to take another trip and look for my own temple of gloom.  
 
 
1 comment:
HAHA, that made me chuckle...good 'ol CMA. I'll have to fill you in this next week on the inside jokes about them....both good and bad lol.
Post a Comment