Flying during COVID-19; YOW – YYZ

It’s been a crazy year. I usually rack up about 50,000 miles of flying each year – some of it being business travel, mostly to conferences, and some of it being leisure travel. I’m usually on at least 2 different continents each year and I spend a significant time inside an aircraft.

That ended abruptly in February. I remember the last flight. I was in Savannah, GA visiting a client after attending a conference in Atlanta. There was talk about COVID-19 but it seems to be a long way away from where I was. Upon entering the United States a week before I was only asked if I had recently traveled to China. Other than that it was pretty normal stuff, a little chit chat with the immigration agent as to why I was flying to Atlanta and that was it. I’d done this all before.

Once I returned back home, Canada – the world – went into lockdown. Everybody switched from working on site to working remotely. My day to day clients are now seem via video link or conference call. My home office is now my office. And this would seem to be the way for the foreseeable future.

So – getting slightly stir crazy I began to contemplate somewhere that I could travel to. Perhaps not as easily and freely as I was used to, but as least somewhere new. I decided on Mexico (via Washington DC) which is how I ended up back in YYZ today. I wanted to write a bit about the flight experience and how it differs these days from the pre-COVID days.

The Ottawa International Airport (YOW) arrivals area. Check in desks on the upper level. Suffice to say I did not need to show up that early

I had booked a 10AM flight out of Ottawa since there are now limited connections I did not want to cut things too close in YYZ. I arrived at YOW just before 08:30 to be greeted by a very empty airport. The line at Tim Horton’s on the third level (the only one open) just had employees standing in line. It made it very quick to get through security and to the gate.

A new Airbus A220-300 arriving from YYZ on a mild December morning parking at gate 17.

Suffice to say that since I booked this flight there have been a lot of changes and cancellations. Eventually it was decided that this flight would be operated by an Airbus A220. I really like this as I have been trying to fly this aircraft for a while now. It’s very quiet and quite roomy (at least in business class). The inflight entertainment is much better than the old systems that they use on the E90 / E75 and is much more like the B787.

Face coverings are required on all flight within Canada as per Transport Canada regulations

I hardly ever take a selfie when flying but this felt like a unique situation as I have not been on an aircraft in so long. Face coverings are required at all time unless eating or drinking. The flight was fairly empty – 15 people sat in economy and 5 people sat in business. Since there were so few people it was socially distanced. However, this is not the policy for Air Canada, so you could be sat next to other people on your flight.

One of the treats to the business class cabin is that they serve food. Pre-COVID Air Canada served quite a nice breakfast on a plate with real cutlery and a nice coffee mug. When the pandemic first started they switch to serving nothing except a bottle of water on short haul routes. Now we have something in between. These are pre-packaged meals and for this reason they are considered safer than somebody preparing your food in the forward galley.

Bangkok to Istanbul

Hello readers … I haven’t forgotten about you, it’s just been a busy couple of days!

I flew from Bangkok to KL on Thai and then connected to Istanbul on Turkish earlier this week.  It’s funny, I don’t remember that much jet lag flying into Seoul from Ottawa, but adjusting from Bangkok time to Istanbul time seems to have been more difficult!  Maybe landing at 5am in Istanbul did not help so much 🙂
Istanbul has a mess of transit systems, with some of them currently being upgraded.  Depending where you want to go, you will probably end up using more than one.  Getting from the airport involved the metro, a tram, and then a ferry.  There are no transfers so you pay for each trip.  I like the ferries the best, they are not the quickest, but they are scenic.
This ferry is terminating on the European side.  It costs 4 lira ($2) to cross between the continents and takes about 20 minutes.  Some ferries carry cars and some are just pedestrian.  Most are quite busy, especially in rush hour.
Most of the famous attractions are on the European side.  I’m finding museum admissions and food to be quite expensive on the European side in Istanbul.  The prices are considerably more than the lonely planet book published just one year ago.  Still, there are some free attractions too.  The blue mosque being the most common.

You need to cover your shoulders and legs to go in and it is closed when they have prayer times.  The mosque (and several others) is huge and the architecture is quite stunning.
Around the same area is a cistern which is an underground lake to hold drinking water.  The water was brought in by an aqueduct.  They have installed platforms so you can walk around it.  It’s 20 lira to get in.
Later this week I will head to Cappadocia.  I have reserved a cave hotel which should be interesting!  I will then do a loop counterclockwise around the Mediteranean coast to Izmir before flying out of Istanbul in early July.

Seoul to Bangkok

I am flying Asiana to Bangkok.  After flying with Cebu Pacific and Peach, Asiana may be a nice change.  I had started to forget that I had Aeroplan flights in business class.  This leg is Seoul to Bangkok, leaving at 6:30 this evening.

It seems to give me a priority immigration line in Bangkok, which should help with my late arrival in Bangkok at 10pm.
As I arrived this morning from Osaka, I checked in with Asiana and then took the train to the city to meet up with some friends for lunch.  The early morning flight only happened because Peach cancelled their noon flight, but it worked out well.  With the noon flight there would of been no time to come into town.
Because of the curfew in Bangkok and the continuing civil unrest, I have booked a hotel about half way from the airport to the city.  It still looks well connected so if all is well tomorrow morning I can spend the day in town.  I just have one full day before flying to Myanmar, which is probably just the right amount of time to spend in a Bangkok right now.