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Annoying people in the airport/plane

154 replies

PolkaDotMankini · 08/04/2023 09:14

I bloody hate early flights. I don't have the patience to deal with people that early in the morning. This morning's experience included:

  • People walking really slowly in groups through the airport, so no one else could get round them, stopping dead every so often to consult with each other about where to get breakfast
  • The people sitting behind me on the plane talking the entire way, including through the safety briefing
  • The person playing crappy music on their phone speaker
  • The person whistling on the plane. Whistling FFS

Only an hour-long flight and I can get off now, thank goodness.

OP posts:
Mangogirl12 · 14/04/2023 02:01

The whole point of reclining seats is that they are.....supposed to be reclined. That's the whole point. Book a seat at the front of the plane if a normal seat function bothers you so irrationally.

thecatsthecats · 14/04/2023 07:29

arabellasdress · 12/04/2023 19:42

Any hints? Which country?

It's I eastern Europe, but doesn't apply to all of Eastern Europe. Flown to most of the countries there, and only had these sorts of issues with one, repeatedly.

Most recently in the news regarding a famous arrest.

Another weird thing - they hate the cold there. I had never seen a thermostat set to 40 before, but there you go.

Flopsythebunny · 14/04/2023 08:53

limitedperiodonly · 08/04/2023 17:19

Last week we had the people moaning because special assistance took me and wheelchair through passport control, queue jumping.

@Redminionpenguin let them moan. Never apologise for needing special assistance at the airport. You are helping everyone get on board and off and away on time rather than them having to wait for you or your luggage having to be unloaded if you don't make it, meaning the plane might miss its slot.

Like you, my mum did not want to be seen as "weak" or jumping the queue. But she was in her 80s and though she was able-bodied and fitter than many younger people, I correctly suspected the gate at Gatwick for the Florence flight was going to be a very, very long walk and didn't want to make her rush for the plane.

She really bent my ear about it when she found out at the airport I'd booked Special Assistance. She said angrily that she didn't need it. She wasn't an invalid. But we had a comfortable, unrushed ride to the gate with the other couple in the buggy and boarded with everyone else through the extended corridor. She quietly agreed that it was a good idea. I didn't make much of it but I always like to be told when I have had a good idea.

The way back was even better. Florence is a much smaller airport than Gatwick, so we could easily walk to the gate. But we still had special assistance booked for our flight. The ground flight attendant singled us out and told us we should wait till the end.

I trusted her but it was worrying seeing everyone else go and get on the shuttle bus to the plane. Though I was reassuring my mum it would be fine, I was starting to panic they'd forgotten us.

The Italian BA ground woman came over and said: "Let's go, ladies. Let me carry your hand luggage, Madam," to my mum.

We walked down the ramp to find a battered little Fiat in airport security colours waiting for us. The BA woman helped us into the back and sat in the front passenger seat and buckled up. "Andiamo!" she commanded the driver and he slapped a magnetic flashing light to the roof like Starsky and Hutch and speeded across the tarmac to the plane.

We went up the steps of the plane and took our seats like royalty.

The special assistance at the other end at Gatwick was pretty good too but has to pale in comparison. The buggy driver took us to the head of the queue for passport control. My mum whispered: "Shall I tip him?" That was a massive thing for my mum, who was not familiar with tips. I said if she wanted. She did. £1. He said there was no need, but if you insist...

If we need things we should ask and receive.

I had special assistance booked on a flight from Paris to Shanghai a few years ago. My flight to Paris was running late but there was a guy waiting there with a wheelchair for me. He ran through the airport pushing me, arrived at the boarding gate where everyone was queuing to board and made them all step aside so he could get me to the front. I could feel the daggers aimed at my back.
Once in Shanghai there was someone waiting, again with a wheelchair but with 2 assistants also. The assistants were there to retrieve and carry my luggage and get me through immigration and customs.
All very different from my experiences at UK airports

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PolkaDotMankini · 16/04/2023 15:38

People tutting at others who need special assistance is horrible. I'm sure they'd rather be able to trudge through the airport.

I've got a couple of others to add from this weekend:

  • The man who continue to occupy the middle seat when there was an empty seat next to him. Move over so we both get a bit more room!
  • The woman who laid down across all the middle seats, putting her head in my colleague's lap. WTF?!
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