ski-air travel stories

I have flown both Spirit and Frontier wearing a suit and tie for business meetings.
Pics or it didn't happen :troll:

However, we did abolish the use of Spirit due to its unreliability or lack of redundancy.
I refuse to fly Spirit. Very occasional on Frontier but circumstances have to be just right.

I am only interested in a larger seat when you are supposed to be sleeping, never on the way back.
Ditto for me. I'm interested for to-Europe, but not back for example (and only at the right 'price'). Though I sleep a fair bit both ways over the Pacific pond...
 
JetBlue is still very high on my list, though!
It's a small sample size but I've always had good experiences with Jetblue and they have a nice setup at their JFK hub.

Interesting to see that they're now in a partnership with United (similar to the one they had with AA earlier) that included slot swaps at JFK and Newark. Following a report from an Italian newspaper that the partnership was part of a three-phase merger plan -- a basic commercial partnership (which would receive less scrutiny from regulators), then a strategic partnership, and finally an acquisition -- both airlines' CEOs issued denials.
 
The various 'classes' of service have been interesting to watch over the past ~25 years that I've been travelling a ton. (On US carriers) what used to be first class is now the equivalent of business class level of service, while the brand new premium economy service for international is rapidly moving toward what business class used to be (not there yet, but I bet it continues to get better), etc... And on the ends, 1st class has turned into a ridiculous cubicle land today (international) and economy has gone backwards to worse than it used to be. It's been fascinating to watch.

Question is does anyone on these boards travel above economy class for personal travel? I assume some are getting upgrades from status to at least premium economy. But anyone find it worth paying real money to upgrade?
No, not really. Upgrades are never more than Premium Economy, if that's the case. However, upon Check-in, I was offered the opportunity to upgrade to Business Class for $350 for a redeye to Europe, which I took advantage of. I am only interested in a larger seat when you are supposed to be sleeping, never on the way back.

The $k's they want for a Business Class?!?! I would rather invest that money on the ground: ski guides, a better car, well-located lodging, perhaps a view at a beach resort or Airbnb (skiing - I'm never in my room), etc. A few hours on a plane is relatively meaningless.
Yea, I would normally never pay the extra cost to upgrade to business class when flying (although I'm tall - 6'3" - so sitting in an economy seat for any length of time is almost (pure) torture for me); I too would rather spend that extra money on better hotels; nicer meals, etc. But my wife and I flew from Boston to Paris last Fall to go to a wedding in the south of France and my wife said I'm past the age (we're in our late 60's) of flying in coach overseas, so she bought two business class tickets on Jet Blue (their "Mint" service) for the round trip flights. I think the cost was in the range of $2,500 to $3,000 per roundtrip ticket, which is considerably more than coach fare for that flight but was cheaper than business-class fare on the other available airlines. I have to say, if you ignore the much higher cost, it was a nice way to fly. On JetBlue Mint, each passenger gets their own enclosed "pod" - one on each side of the center aisle (these are narrow body planes) that angle towards the center aisle and has a lie-flat seat (and I could fully stretch out horizontally, even at 6'3", to try to sleep), plus there was definitely upgraded food options (although nothing super gourmet), free drinks, a large-screen video with many different viewing options and better service. Plus, you get to board first and get off first; you also get a "goody" bag of various trinkets and a pillow and blanket and slippers for sleeping. Frankly, I didn't think it was worth the extra money and that flight from Boston to Paris is not that long - 6.5 to 7 hours, depending on the winds. It's not even enough time to utilize the lie-flat seats to try to sleep for any length of time (and I don't sleep well on planes anyways). But if someone else is paying for it (like your employer) or money is of no concern to you or you can use airline points to upgrade, I would do it again. It is definitely a more civilized way to fly.
 
I've had the lie flat business class once, as a Delta free upgrade LAX - Tokyo in 2016. I slept as soundly as in a bed for 5 hours, deliberately not trying to adjust into the new time zone because I planned to visit the 5AM Tokyo fish market Liz had visited 4 days earlier. But my day was a Wednesday, the day of the week it was closed. :icon-evil: I was in Tokyo about 12 hours before the ensuing flights into Indonesia.

A year ago we paid Lufthansa $200 each for lie flat from Frankfurt to Johannesburg. But that was not business class; we each got an empty row of 4 seats in the back of coach. Liz said it helped her a lot; I didn't think it was that comfortable, only slept 3 hours. It was easier for me to sleep in the Emirates A380 coach seats this March, and Liz slept well on that one too. In standard coach seats Liz rarely sleeps much at all; I sleep erratically, some flights much better than others.
 
I've had the lie flat business class once, as a Delta free upgrade LAX - Tokyo in 2016. I slept as soundly as in a bed for 5 hours, deliberately not trying to adjust into the new time zone because I planned to visit the 5AM Tokyo fish market Liz had visited 4 days earlier. But my day was a Wednesday, the day of the week it was closed. :icon-evil: I was in Tokyo about 12 hours before the ensuing flights into Indonesia.

A year ago we paid Lufthansa $200 each for lie flat from Frankfurt to Johannesburg. But that was not business class; we each got an empty row of 4 seats in the back of coach. Liz said it helped her a lot; I didn't think it was that comfortable, only slept 3 hours. It was easier for me to sleep in the Emirates A380 coach seats this March, and Liz slept well on that one too. In standard coach seats Liz rarely sleeps much at all; I sleep erratically, some flights much better than others.
on my 16 hr flights to HK and Capetown, i think i slept a total of 2 hrs combined... just can't sleep on a plane...
 
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