Traveling home has never been trickier! The hosts share personal tales of trips planned without a clear route back. They dive into the challenges of airline alliances and the allure of fifth freedom flights. There's a humorous chat about the scarce arrival lounges and how procrastination leads to incomplete bookings. Also discussed are 'unicorn' destinations that are harder to access nowadays. Finally, they explore the quirks of accommodating dining experiences and urge listeners to stay tuned for more travel insights!
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insights INSIGHT
Harder to Plan Trip Home
Planning the way home from trips is harder than going out due to more constraints and fewer options.
Factors like date flexibility and award availability make returning trips more complicated than departures.
insights INSIGHT
Award Availability Limits Returns
A key difficulty in booking returns is award seat availability, often limited except on certain Star Alliance carriers.
Some airlines like Air India and Ethiopian currently provide more options for this.
question_answer ANECDOTE
Tom's Air India Ambition
Tom wants to fly Air India once they improve under Tata ownership.
The airline is in transition, acquiring diverse aircraft and working to upgrade service quality.
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Planning the trips are getting harder and harder. The way home often becomes more challenging, with many more constraining factors. This episode we’re unpacking why. We begin with our examples of going on trips without planning the route home before exploring the limiting factors that make the trip home a daunting prospect. We throw some tangents in along the way including a discussion of Fifth Freedom Flights, the current state of airline alliances, the merits of flying non-premium over the Atlantic, and why “unicorn” destinations are harder to visit now than ever before. We also look inward to see how our miles and points behavior limits our choices, how procrastination paralysis leads to incomplete bookings, why alternative routes home when flying may not be an answer, and TK’s troubling cruise moment when looking for a way back home. We end with an oddity that Tom has latched onto and how this may affect your September travel plans, and we discuss why a lack of airport arrival lounges compounds the woes of traveling home.
Key Points From This Episode:
[00:00] Our conclusion: Planning the trip home is much harder than it should be.
[01:30] Examples of our partial trip syndrome – travelling without a way back home.
[04:01] Limiting factors: Analysis paralysis, and more reasons why going home is harder.
[08:35] Unpacking Freedom Flights and why we’ll dedicate an entire episode to these.
[11:06] Why the world, in all its expanse, is still widely unattainable for travel.
[12:29] The current state of airline alliances, and the airlines we’d like to try for the first time.
[18:09] Revisiting the merits of flying economy on transatlantic flights.
[19:23] Why it’s becoming even more difficult to visit “unicorn” destinations.
[22:02] How our miles and points experience makes it harder to make decisions.
[23:40] Procrastination paralysis, our upcoming trip to Spain, and incomplete bookings.
[27:39] How pushing hard for the exact travel experience you want limits your other options.
[29:32] What to do when you’re stuck; exploring alternatives to finding your way home.
[31:08] How TK was almost thwarted from a cruise back home.
[37:52] An oddity TK has picked up on, and what this means for September travel.
[44:30] The role of airport lounges in making decisions about going home.
Quotes:
“This has been an unspoken rule, where we’re always seeming to have a lot more difficulty figuring out how we’re getting home than how we get there.” — @TktweetsKim[01:16]
“The world is our oyster, but it’s really not when you think about it. South America is almost unattainable at this time.” — @tmount[11:08]
“It’s possible to fly non-premium over the Atlantic.” — @TktweetsKim[19:04]
“On your way home, you want that experience. You really want that enjoyment to continue. That’s why I prefer not to fly economy over the Atlantic because I feel like the flight home is an extension of the vacation.” — @tmount[21:31]
“A guy can dream. If we don’t dream, then we have nothing to aspire to.” — @tmount[24:39]